The graphics are just that, graphics, but there are some that reflect reality better than the most polished of mirrors. The INE has just demonstrated it with an infographic which summarizes the key ideas of his last gazetteerits detailed catalog of “towns”, a broad and diverse label that includes both municipalities (from capitals to towns) and smaller and more isolated nuclei.
It may seem like a simple statistical curiosity, but it reveals questions about the history, demographics, and the social and economic challenges of each community.
One country, a thousand strays. If you walk around your municipality and pay attention to the license plates that identify each neighborhood, you will see that there are certain words that are repeated over and over again: road, place, valley, cove, path… If you take the car and go to the other side of the country, it is likely that this list of terms will change completely. The reason? A cocktail of linguistic, demographic, social and historical factors. The topic is so interesting that the INE dedicates it a whole section.


The Spain of urbanizations. What does it show the database from the INE? That there is a part of Spain in which the most used word is not ‘vega’, nor ‘valley’, nor ‘source’, nor ‘cove’, but a term that has more to do with the hand of man than with geographical features: ‘urbanization’.
To be more precise, what the INE analyzes is the most repeated word in the names of the singular entities of each autonomous community. That is, all that “habitable area” of a municipal area that is clearly differentiated from its surroundings. So to speak, it is the most basic unit, formed by nuclei and which are then grouped to make up parishes, councils and towns.
Going down to detail. When analyzing each region, INE technicians verified that the most repeated term to designate these nuclei varies greatly from one point to another in the country. For example, in Galicia it is ‘outeiro’in Asturias ‘riba’, in Castilla y León ‘vega’, in Extremadura ‘vera’, in the Balearic Islands ‘cala’, in the Canary Islands ‘lomo’ and in Andalusia ‘fuente’. If we look at Catalonia the most frequent word is ‘can’ (house of), in the Basque Country ‘elexalde’ (a reference to the antechurches) and in the Community of Madrid the most used term is ‘valley’.
The surprise comes when we look at Murcia, Castilla-La Mancha, Aragón and the Valencian Community. In these four regions, the most frequent name does not refer to geographical features or natural enclaves, such as ‘sources’. No. The majority word is ‘urbanization’, which tells us about its nomenclature, but also about development at an urban, historical and socioeconomic level.


Does it show anything else? Yes. The INE graphs reflect that the population is not distributed equally throughout the Spanish territory. What’s more, there are profound differences between one region and another. The clearest case is made by the comparison of Galicia and Castilla y León. Although the latter is the largest community in the country, with about 94,244 km2‘only’ 6,181 unique population entities are distributed throughout its territory. They may seem like many, but they pale when compared to the 30,518 in Galicia, which does not reach 29,600 km2.
The data is interesting because it gives us a clue about the territorial structure of each region and its level of fragmentation. After all, and in the words of the INE itselfa singular entity is a “clearly differentiated” inhabited area within a municipality, to such an extent that it has its own specific name. After Galicia, the region with the highest number of settlements of this type is the Principality of Asturias (6,983), Castilla y León (6,181) and Catalonia (3,910). Despite its size, Castilla-La Mancha has ‘only’ 1,708 and Aragón does not reach 1,600.
More than just curiosity. The data is striking, but if the INE calculates it it is not out of statistical curiosity. Their tables demonstrate that singular entities tell us a lot about the population structure of a territory… and its aging, with all the challenges that this implies. The smaller the settlement, the older its neighborhood appears to be on average.
For example, in singular entities with less than 50 residents the average age is 54.4 years, but the figure drops to 46.6 if we talk about entities where between 500 and 1,000 people live. If we go to those of more than 10,000, the average age drops to 44.1 years. Although in Spain there are thousands and thousands of unique entities made up of only a few dozen people, their weight at the population level is very low: they host only 1.2% of Spaniards.
Images | Google Earth and INE
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