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Basque Country

This article is about the traditional Basque domain. For the Spanish autonomous community, see Basque Country (autonomous community). \nThe Basque Country (Euskal Herria in Basque) straddles the western Pyrenees mountains that define the border between France and Spain, extending down to the coast of the Bay of Biscay. It corresponds more or less with the historical area of the Basque people and language.

Table of contents
1 Geography
2 Today's borders
3 History
4 See also

Geography

The Basque Country is made up of seven traditional regions, giving rise to the Basque slogan Zazpiak Bat (“seven make one”). The four regions to the south, within Spain, form Hegoalde (“south zone”), while the three to the northeast, within France, form Iparralde (“north zone”). in Guipúzcoa]]\n Southern Basque Country\n* Álava\n* Guipúzcoa\n* Navarre\n* Vizcaya Northern Basque Country\n* Basse-Navarre\n* Labourd\n* Soule Some count both Navarres as one.

Today's borders

Today, the Southern Basque Country falls within the Spanish
autonomous communities of Basque Country and Navarre and the Northern Basque country forms part of the French département of Pyrénées Atlantiques. These territories have a combined area of 20,664 km² and population of about 3 million (2.5 million in Spain). Less than a third of that population speak the Basque language.

History

See the article on the
Basque people for their full history. The Kingdom of Navarre was the only political entity to encompass the Basque Country on both sides of the Pyrenees. The kingdom reached its greatest size under Sancho III of Navarre (c. 9851035). It incorporated most Basque-speaking lands, among others, but was divided repeately after his death. In 1511, the Southern part was incorporated into the Spanish crown, but Basse-Navarre, north of the Pyrenees remained independent to be later incorporated into the French crown, and ceased to have a unifying significance. Since the time of Sancho III, there has been no single government over all seven territories. Basque nationalism emerged in the early 20th century as the aspiration for such a nation state. In the 1980s, the Spanish state devolved into autonomous communities, of which the Spanish Baque Country became two: Basque Country and Navarre. Against the wishes of Basque nationalists, Navarre established itself separately with little cultural collaboration.\nMore recently, cross-border meetings among the Basque regions have been sponsored by the Atlantic Arc Commission of the European Union.

See also

\n*
Basque Country (autonomous community).\n*Basque people\n*List of not fully sovereign nations \n\n\n\n\n\nsimple:Basque Country

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