Camaleño

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Camaleño is a municipality located in the autonomous community of Cantabria, Spain. According to the 2007 census, the city had 1,096 inhabitants.

History

According to the chronicle of Alfonso III of Leon, the surviving Arabs of the Battle of Covadonga (722) succumbed in Cosgaya, a village belonging to Camaleño under an avalanche of stones. In this valley the second Asturian king Favila of Asturias died 739, killed by a bear. At that time there was already a monastery in Turieno, dedicated to San Martín, where a large reliquary of the Cross of Christ and the body of Santo Toribio, who apparently brought it from Palestine, was kept. Over the years, it became a center of pilgrimage, with the privilege of recognition by different popes. The monastery came under the Oña in the twelfth century, and the process of seigneurization subjected the valley to the jurisdiction of the Marquises of Santillana and Duke of Infantado.[1]

Camaleño belonged to the judicial district of Potes until the late 1970s, then it became part of San Vicente de la Barquera.[1]

See also

References

  1. a b Historia Copyright © 2018 e-MAGNETRÓN, retrieved 3 July 2018

External links

File:Santo-Toribio.jpg
Monastery of Santo Toribio de Liébana in Camaleño.
File:Teleferico de Fuente De.jpg
Aerial tramway of Fuente Dé, Camaleño.
File:Cantàbria 64.jpg
Fuente Dé, in the Picos de Europa.

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