Comarca

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A comarca (Spanish and Portuguese plural comarcas, Catalan plural comarques) is a traditional region or local administrative subdivision found in parts of Spain, parts of southern France, the Central American republic of Panama, Portugal, and Brazil.

The comarca is also known in Aragonese as a redolada.

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The term comarca is used in several regions of the Iberian Peninsula.

  • In Catalonia and Aragon, the comarca exists as a local government area, and has a representative comarcal council.
  • In the Valencian Community, the comarca exists only as a traditional region with no administrative competences. They are legally referred as homologated territory demarcations instead of as comarques.
  • In Galicia the comarca or bisbarra are tradional divisions of the land and enjoy limited official recognition, but has no administrative entity.
  • In Northern Catalonia, in France, the comarca has not any kind of legal or official recognition, but its usage is common especially among Catalan-speaking community.

In other places, such as Extremadura, the comarca may be simply a loosely-defined region.

Because of the comarca's long-standing use, it is sometimes used as the basis for the promotion of tourism, with emphasis on local cultural tradition and history.

In Panama, the comarca indígena is an administrative region for an area with a substantial Indian population. Three comarcas exist as equivalent to a province, with two smaller comarcas subordinate to a province and considered equivalent to a corregimiento (municipality).

In Brazil, the comarca is a territorial division in the judicial system. It indicates the area covered by a lower level court. It may correspond to a municipality, or group together several small municipalities under one court.

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