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Xàtiva
Hábitat concentrado Játiva.jpg
Xátiva from the air
Flag of Játiva Coat of arms of Xàtiva
Flag Coat of Arms
Location
Localització de Xàtiva respecte del País Valencià.png
Coordinates : 38°59′25″N 0°31′16″W / 38.99028°N 0.52111°W / 38.99028; -0.52111
Administration
Country Spain
Autonomous Community Valencian Community
Province Valencia
Comarca Costera
Geography
Land Area 76.56 km2
Altitude 115 m AMSL
Population
Population 28,474 (2006)
Density 372 hab./km2 (2006)
General information
Native name Xàtiva (Valencian)
Spanish name Játiva
Time zone CET (GMT +1)
- summer CEST (GMT +2)
Drawing by Anton van den Wyngaerde in 1563, commissioned by Philip II.

Xàtiva is a town of eastern Spain, in the province of Valencia, on the right bank of the river Albaida and at the junction of the ValenciaMurcia and Valencia Albacete railways. Xàtiva is built on the margin of a fertile and beautiful plain, and on the southern slopes of the Monte Bernisa, a hill with two peaks, each surmounted by a Castle of Játiva. With its numerous fountains, and spacious avenues shaded with elms or cypresses, the town has a clean and attractive appearance. Its collegiate church, dating from 1414, but rebuilt about a century later in the Renaissance style, was formerly a cathedral, and is the chief among many churches and convents. The town-hall and a church on the castle hill are partly constructed of inscribed Roman masonry, and several houses date from the Moorish period. There is a brisk local trade in grain, fruit, wine, olive oil and rice. The leading football club is CD Olimpic Xàtiva

Xàtiva (Saetabis in latin) was famous in Roman times for its silk fabrics, mentioned by the Latin poet Ovid. Xàtiva is also known as an early European center of paper manufacture. In the twelfth century, Arabs brought the technology to manufacture paper to Xativa.

Birthplace of two popes, Callixtus III and Alexander VI, as well as the painter José Ribera spagnoletto, it suffered a dark moment in its history at the hands of Philip V of Spain, who, after his victory in the Battle of Almansa in the War of the Spanish Succession, ordered the city to be burned, changing its name to San Felipe. In memory of the insult, the portrait of the monarch hangs upside down in the local museum of L'Almodí. [1]

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This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.




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