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Pedrajas de San Esteban (Municipality, Castile and León, Spain)

Last modified: 2013-10-11 by ivan sache
Keywords: pedrajas de san esteban | valladolid |
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Presentation of Pedrajas de San Esteban

The municipality of Pedrajas de San Esteban (3,639 inhabitants; 3,070 ha) is located in the southeast of Valladolid Province, on the border with Segovia Province, 50 km from Valladolid.

Pedrajas de San Esteban was resettled at the end of the 11th century, as part of the Community of the Village and Land of Íscar; the tradition says that the first resettler was named Alvar Fáñez de Minaya. In 1371, Pedrajas and the other villages of the Community were transferred by King Henry II to Juan González de Avellaneda. In the middle of the 15th century, Aldonza de Avellaneda married Diego López de Zúñiga, so that Pedrajas was transferred to the Counts of Miranda del Castañar, who would rule the village until the abolishment of the feudal system in the 19th century.
Pedrajas was granted in 1732 the title of villa by Philip V and got rid of the administrative supervision of Íscar; from this year onwards, the name of the village's patron saint, St. Stephen (San Esteban) was added to the village's name. When the modern provinces were set up in 1833, the village was transferred from Segovia Province to Valladolid Province.

Pedrajas de San Esteban is the birth place of the poet César de Medina Bocos (1873-1959), awarded on 25 March 1915 the title of Poeta Cantor de Castilla (Castile Cantor Poet) by the Madrid Ateneo.

Ivan Sache, 28 May 2011


Symbols of Pedrajas de San Esteban

The flag of Pedrajas de San Esteban, validated by the Royal Academy of History, is prescribed by a Decree adopted on 20 August 1987 by the Government of Castile and León and published on 27 August 1987 in the official gazette of Castile and León, No. 140 (text).
The flag is described as follows:

Flag: Green charged with a bend or itself charged with the local coat of arms.

The coat of arms of Pedrajas de San Esteban, adopted on 13 September 1984 by the Municipal Council and partially validated by the Royal Academy of History, is prescribed by a Decree adopted on 24 February 1986 by the Government of Castile and León and published on 3 March 1986 in the official gazette of Castile and León, No. 22 (text).
The Decree, unfortunately, does not provide a description of the arms; it only states that the "suppression proposed by the Royal Academy of History" was made, whatever it was.

Ivan Sache, 28 May 2011