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Old Castile
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{{Use American English|date = March 2019}} {{Short description|Former region of Spain}} {{Use mdy dates|date = March 2019}} {{Other uses|Castile (disambiguation){{!}}Castile}} [[Image:Castilla la Vieja.png|thumb|275px| The region of Old Castile, as defined in the [[1833 territorial division of Spain]].]] '''Old Castile''' ({{langx|es|Castilla la Vieja}} {{IPA|es|kas藞ti蕩a la 藞尾jexa|}}) is a historic region of [[Spain]], which had different definitions across the centuries. Its extension was formally defined in the [[1833 territorial division of Spain]] as the sum of the following provinces: Santander (now [[Cantabria]]), [[Burgos (province)|Burgos]], Logro帽o (now [[La Rioja (autonomous community)|La Rioja]]), [[Soria (province)|Soria]], [[Segovia (province)|Segovia]], [[脕vila (province)|脕vila]], [[Valladolid (province)|Valladolid]] and [[Palencia (province)|Palencia]]. As the rest of ''regions'' in that division, Old Castile never had any special administrative agency; only the individual provinces had their own management. The name ''Old Castile'' reflects the fact that this territory corresponds very roughly to the extension of the [[Kingdom of Castile]] around the 11th century, before it expanded to the south. This kingdom had its origins in the 9th century in an area now comprising Cantabria, [[脕lava]], and Burgos province. {{Citation needed|date=June 2019}} In the 18th century, [[Charles III of Spain]] assigned to Castilla la Vieja the provinces of Burgos, Soria, Segovia, 脕vila, Valladolid, and Palencia. {{Citation needed|date=June 2019}} The royal decree of 30 November 1833, the reform of [[Javier de Burgos]] (''see [[1833 territorial division of Spain]]''), established the basis for [[Provinces of Spain|the division of Spain into provinces]] which, with very few modifications, continues down to the present day. [[Image:Arenassanpedrocastle.jpg|thumb|left|230px|Castle in [[Arenas de San Pedro]] ([[脕vila, Spain|脕vila]]), built in 1393]] Another royal decree, on 30 November 1855, divided Spain into 49 provinces, and assigned the provinces of Valladolid and Palencia to the Kingdom of Le贸n, leaving to Castilla la Vieja the provinces of Santander, Burgos, Logro帽o, Soria, Segovia, and 脕vila. Although there were further reform efforts in the 19th century, this division is reflected in the encyclopedias, geographies, and textbooks from the mid-19th century until it was superseded in the second half of the 20th century. For example, early editions of ''[[Enciclopedia Espasa]]'', of the ''[[Encyclop忙dia Britannica]]'' and the popular student encyclopedia ''脕lvarez'' all follow this division of provinces into ''Castilla la Vieja'' and the [[Region of Le贸n]]. With the establishment of the [[Autonomous communities of Spain|autonomous communities]] in Spain in 1983, Old Castile disappeared as a legal entity: most of its provinces were integrated politically with the Region of Le贸n into a larger entity ([[Castile and Le贸n]]), and two of its provinces became autonomous communities in their own right (the province of Santander became [[Cantabria]] and the province of Logro帽o became [[La Rioja (autonomous community)|La Rioja]]).
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