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Guernica

Guernica or Guernica y Luno (Basque Gernika-Lumo, pronounced in SAMPA [ger"nika]) is a small city in the Spanish Basque Country that was the meeting place of the Biscayne assembly under an oak tree, the Gernikako Arbola, which was a symbol of traditional freedoms of the Basque people. Later a hermitage was build besides the tree to double as an assembly place.

The Lords of Biscay, upon receiving their title, would come to Guernica to swear that they would respect the Biscayne freedoms. Later the lordship became attached to the title of King of Castile.

The city is best known as the scene of an early instance of aerial bombing by the German Luftwaffe (Condor Legion) on April 26, 1937, during the Spanish Civil War (see Bombing of Guernica). The Germans were attacking to support the efforts of Francisco Franco to overturn the Spanish Republicanan government. The town was devastated, though the Biscayne assembly and the Gernikako Arbola miraculously survived. Because of its symbolic value, the current Autonomy Act of the Basque Country was approved in Guernica and every Lehendakari is taken his oath there.

The Guernica estuary or Urdaibai is a Biosphere Reserve.

It is also home to the Gernika Jai Alai, one of the main courts for the jai alai sport.

Table of contents
1 The painting
2 See also
3 External links

The painting

"Guernica" is also the name of a famous painting by Pablo Picasso, depicting the bombing of Guernica. Picasso, commissioned by the Spanish Republican government to paint a picture to decorate the Spanish Pavilion during the 1937 World's Fair in Paris, created a Cubist painting depicting the event and called it Guernica.