-
12th–16th Centuries: The Middle Ages
During
this period, Barcelona was the capital of a Catalan empire that
included much of modern Spain and parts of the Mediterranean. The city’s
fortune was built on commerce, but as neighbouring Castile expanded
into the New World, trading patterns shifted and the Catalan dynasty
faltered. Barcelona fell into decline and came under Castilian
domination. -
19th Century: Industry & Prosperity
Booming
industry and trade with the Americas brought activity to the city.
Immigrants poured in from the countryside, laying the foundations of
prosperity but also the seeds of unrest. The old city walls came down,
broad Eixample avenues were laid out and workers crowded the old city
neighbourhoods left behind by the middle classes. -
1909–1931: The Revolutionary Years
But
discontent brewed among workers, Catalan nationalists, communists,
Spanish fascists, royalists, anarchists and republicans. In 1909,
protests against the Moroccan war sparked a brutal riot, the Setmana Tràgica (Tragic Week). Lurching towards Civil War, Catalonia passed under a dictatorship before being declared a Republic in 1931.
