El Palmar de Troya

Coordinates: 37°03′45″N 5°48′15″W / 37.06250°N 5.80417°W / 37.06250; -5.80417
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
El Palmar de Troya
Flag of El Palmar de Troya
Coat of arms of El Palmar de Troya
Country Spain
Autonomous Community Andalusia
ProvinceSeville
ComarcaBajo Guadalquivir
Government
 • MayorJuan Carlos González García (PSOE)
Area
 • Total33.16 km2 (12.80 sq mi)
Population
 ()[1]
Websitewww.elpalmardetroya.es

El Palmar de Troya is a municipality in south-west Spain in the province of Seville, in the autonomous community of Andalusia. In 2018, it became the province's 106th municipality after seceded from Utrera. As of 2019 it has a population of 2,340.

History[edit]

Although there are historical data from Roman times and from the 13th century, when it belonged to the Moorish Band, the current settlement is mainly due to the relatives of the Republican prisoners who, after the civil war, built the Torre del Águila reservoir.[2]

It was part of the municipality of Utrera until 2018, from which, after a segregation process, it became independent on 3 October 2018.[3]

Palmarian Christian Church[edit]

The cathedral of the Palmarian Christian Church

Nowadays, the municipality is particularly known for the Palmarian Christian Church, a schismatic Catholic sect founded by Clemente Domínguez y Gómez, known as "Pope Gregory XVII" in the Palmarian Christian faith since 6 August 1978 as a result of alleged apparitions of the Virgin Mary (Our Lady of Palmar) and of Jesus Christ on the site from the 1960s. He was later claimed as true Pope of whole Catholic faith, instead of the accepted Cardinal Karol Józef Wojtyła, who took the name of John Paul II. The Church is based at the Cathedral-Basilica of Our Crowned Mother of Palmar, premises that no person who is not a member of the Church can enter.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Municipal Register of Spain 2018. National Statistics Institute.
  2. ^ "History of the municipality". Ayuntamiento de El Palmar de Troya (in Spanish).
  3. ^ Jabois, Manuel (17 November 2018). "La independencia de El Palmar de Troya". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  4. ^ Lundberg, Magnus (2020). A Pope of Their Own El Palmar de Troya and the Palmarian Church (PDF). Uppsala universitet Humanistisk-samhällsvetenskapliga vetenskapsområdet (2nd ed.). Uppsala. ISBN 978-91-985944-1-6. OCLC 1183419262.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

37°03′45″N 5°48′15″W / 37.06250°N 5.80417°W / 37.06250; -5.80417