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  1. The Statute of Autonomy of Andalusia is a law hierarchically located under the 1978 Constitution of Spain, and over any legislation passed by the Andalusian Autonomous Government.

  2. Nominally, a Statute of Autonomy (Spanish: Estatuto de Autonomía, Catalan: Estatut d'Autonomia, Galician: Estatuto de Autonomía, Asturian: Estatutu d'Autonomía, Basque: Autonomia Estatutua) is a law hierarchically located under the constitution of a country and, usually, over any other form of legislation.

    #
    Name
    Adopted
    1
    18 December 1979 (LO 3/1979)
    2
    18 December 1979 (LO 4/1979)
    3
    6 April 1981 (LO 1/1981)
    4
    30 December 1981 (LO 6/1981)
    • Overview
    • Prehistory
    • Ancient Age
    • Middle Ages
    • Modern Age

    Andalusia was fully incorporated into western civilization with the conquest and Romanization of the Baetica province. This had great economic and political importance in the Imperium, to which it contributed numerous magistrates and senators, in addition to the outstanding figures of the emperors Trajan and Hadrian. The Germanic invasions of the V...

    Paleolithic

    The presence of hominids in Andalusia dates back to the Lower Paleolithic, with archaeological remains of the Acheulean culture between 700000 and 400000 years old, however the controversial finding of the so-called Man of Orce seems to point to a greater antiquity. The main areas of settlement were the Alto Guadalquivir area and the southern area of Sierra Morena, on the terraces of the great rivers, which were used as circulation axes and food supply areas (hunting and gathering). During th...

    Neolithic

    The Neolithic, characterized by a productive economy based on agriculture and livestock and with new samples of material culture such as polished stone and pottery, arrived in Andalusia around the 5th millennium BC. Being introduced by diffusion from the Eastern Mediterranean, the first Neolithic samples are located in the Levante Almeriense. This period is characterized by the existence of two types of habitat or human settlements: the villages and the caves. The villages were simple groupin...

    Metal Age

    During the Metal Age it is characterized by the invention of metal smelting, which was introduced in Andalusia by peoples from the eastern Mediterranean. The introduction of metals in technology meant an important advance in the manufacture of tools for farming, hunting and fishing, as well as for warfare. The specialization in tools was such that the division of labor was achieved, favored by the surplus of production in agriculture and which would cause the first social stratification in di...

    Eastern colonizations, Tartessos, and Turdetania

    From the 10th century onwards, the Phoenicians of Tyre exercised hegemony over the rest of the Phoenician cities. Around the 9th century, a colonization process took place with the creation of several colonies and factories in peninsular territory, among them Malaka and Cerro del Villar (Málaga), Gadir (Cádiz), Doña Blanca (El Puerto de Santa María), Abdera (Adra), Sexi (Almuñécar), Cerro de la Mora (Moraleda de Zafayona), among others. These colonists used the Andalusian territory to obtain...

    Roman Baetica

    In 218 BC, the Roman general Publius Cornelius Scipio landed in Empúries to cut off supplies to the Carthaginians. After defeating them in some battles, in 210 BC he was appointed consul, at which time the Second Punic Warand the conquest of the Iberian Peninsula by the Romans began. After the war the Carthaginians abandoned Andalusia and their presence was replaced by that of the Romans, who had to face some pockets of resistance. As a result of the Roman victory, the province of Hispania Ul...

    First barbarian invasions

    In 411, by virtue of a foedus agreed with the Western Roman Empire, the Suebi people, Vandals and Alans from the north and south settled in the Iberian Peninsula. The Vandals Silingi (led by Fredebal, more powerful than their Hasdingi brothers, received the fertile province of Baetica, where they remained for a short time before moving on to the Maghreb. It is not possible to specify in which areas of Andalusia they settled, due to their short permanence and the lack of archaeological finds.

    Visigothic Baetica and the Byzantine presence

    With the irruption of the Visigoths in the political scene of the Iberian Peninsula in 418, the Vandals were expelled. The southern character of Andalusia and its strong Romanization and consolidation of a territorial oligarchy, capable of having its own armies, gave the Baetica a special character. It was the last territory controlled de facto by the Visigoths, and the one with the greatest political instability. Proof of this is that in 521 the pontiff appointed vicar for Lusitania and Baet...

    Al-Ándalus

    In the middle of the struggle between Rodrigo and the successors of Witiza, in 711, after the military incursion of Tarik, the battle of Guadalete and the subsequent campaigns of Musa], the fall of the Visigothic power and the Muslim invasion of the Iberian Peninsula (a thesis that a small group of authors, mainly Ignacio Olagüe, consider rather an Islamic Revolution). From then until the taking of Granada in 1492, the peninsular territories under Islamic power were generically called al-Anda...

    The Kingdom of Granada survived until 1492, when the Catholic Monarchs ended the conquest. The Reconquest of Granada in 1492 put an end to Muslim rule. Since then and throughout the Ancient Regime, the territory of present-day Andalusia was constituted by the kingdoms of Jaén, Córdoba, Sevilla and Granada, all of them integrated into the Crown of C...

  3. In 1883, an assembly gathered at Antequera drafted a constitution styling Andalusia as an autonomous republic inside a federal state ( República Andaluza o Estado libre o autónomo de Andalucía, in Spanish). [4] . This constitution is known as Constitución Federal de Antequera. [5]

  4. Statutes of Autonomy. An example is the revised Statute of Autonomy of Andalusia, Ley Orgánica 2/2007, adopted 19 March 2007. The general electoral regime, currently (as of 2009) regulated by Ley Orgánica 5/1985, adopted 19 June 1985. "...others foreseen in the Constitution."