Parroquia_(Spain)
Parroquia (Spain)
Subdivision of Spain
A parroquia (Galician: [paˈrɔkjɐ], Asturian: [paˈrokja], Spanish: [paˈrokja]) is a population entity or parish found in the autonomous communities of Galicia and Asturias in northwestern Spain. They are entities with a territorial scope lower than municipality and have their own legal personality.[1][2] They usually, but not always, coincide with the ecclesiastic divisions, as they originated on par with them.[3]
In Galicia there are 3,771 parroquias, each comprising between three and fifteen or more villages. They developed over time as de facto entities up until the Galician Statute of Autonomy of 1981 recognized them as territorial entities below the concello (municipality).[4][5]
In Asturias there are 857 parroquias integrating the 78 concejos or conceyos (municipalities) in the region.[6]
Parroquias have their roots in the entry of the Catholic Church during the Roman and late Roman empire, similar to British parishes. From the late Roman empire on, a dispersed network of parishes and private churches emerged.[3][7] Those founded the base of a religious and social interaction network, with a clear administrative role over a territorial area too, that consolidated during the 10th to 13th centuries.[8][9][10][11] Since then, and in particular from 15th century on, the concept formed a very settled part of the popular consciousness and culture of Asturias and Galicia.[12] Spanish reforms from the 18th century on tried to reduced their number, but unsuccessfully due to the deep roots they have in these territories. The creation of Spanish municipalities that started in 1835 eliminated their function. With the entrance of democracy and creation of the autonomous communities in the 1980s, Asturian and Galician parishes were recognized legally as administrative divisions.