Historical changes in Mediterranean rural settlements (southern Spain, 1787–2019)
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Demography Rural geography Environmental History
Fecha
2024-01-28Referencia bibliográfica
de la Fuente, Juan Luis Martínez, Juan Infante-Amate, and Emiliano Travieso. Historical changes in Mediterranean rural settlements (southern Spain, 1787–2019). Journal of Rural Studies 106 (2024) 103217 [10.1016/j.jrurstud.2024.103217]
Patrocinador
Spain’s Agencia Estatal de Investigación (grant numbers AEI/PID2021-124394NB-I00 and AEI/PID2021-123220NB-I00)Resumen
In modern societies, changes in population patterns are often studied based on a rural vs urban duality. This
dichotomous simplification overlooks the existence of a broad range of human settlements, especially in the rural
world. In this work, we quantified and analysed southern Spain’s population and rural settlements from the late
eighteenth century to the present, distinguishing three types of settlements: agrotowns, the villages and dispersed
settlements. To do this, we drew on a littleused source, Spanish property censuses, published since the midnineteenth
century, as well as other historical sources. We observed that in southern Spain, characterised by a
large number of agrotowns and scattered settlements, the method selected to estimate the rural population
largely determined the settlement results obtained. We found that since the mid-twentieth century, the rural
population had fallen not only in numbers but also in diversity. Historically, the rural population was heterogeneous,
adapting to the territory in a context of organic economy and a reduced amount of trading. Especially
notable was the weight of dispersed settlements, which accounted for almost two-thirds of rural population
growth until the mid-twentieth century and for almost half the rural population