Zamora (province)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
|||||
| Capital | |||||
| Official language(s) | Spanish, Castilian | ||||
| Area – Total – % of Spain |
Ranked 22nd 10.561 km² km² 2.2% |
||||
| Population – Total (2007) – % of Spain – Density |
Ranked 45th 200,678 0,45 18,72 hab./km²/km² |
||||
| Demonym – English – Spanish |
Zamorano, -a Zamorano, -a |
||||
| Statute of Autonomy | June 9, 1982 | ||||
| Parliamentary representation – Congress seats – Senate seats |
4 |
||||
| President | Fernando Martínez Maillo | ||||
| ISO 3166-2 | ES-ZA | ||||
| http://www.zamoradipu.es/ | |||||
Zamora is a leonese province of western Spain, in the western part of the autonomous community of Castile and León.
It is bordered by the provinces of Ourense, León, Valladolid, and Salamanca, and by Portugal.
Of the 200,678 people (2002) in the province, nearly a third live in the capital, Zamora.
|
Torre del Caracol, Benavente, Zamora |
|
|
|
|---|---|
|
A Coruña / La Coruña · Álava · Albacete · Alicante · Almería · Asturias · Ávila · Badajoz · Balearic Islands · Barcelona · Biscay · Burgos · Cáceres · Cádiz · Cantabria · Castellón · Ceuta · Ciudad Real · Córdoba · Cuenca · Gerona / Girona · Granada · Guadalajara · Guipuscoa · Huelva · Huesca · Jaén · Las Palmas de Gran Canaria · León · Lérida / Lleida · Lugo · Madrid · Málaga · Melilla · Murcia · Navarre · Orense / Ourense · Palencia · Pontevedra · La Rioja · Salamanca · Santa Cruz de Tenerife · Segovia · Seville · Soria · Tarragona · Teruel · Toledo · Valencia · Valladolid · Zamora · Zaragoza |
|