Grundtvig project

PM in Linares, Spain (April 2009)

Project Meeting in LINARES, Spain

22nd – 29th April 2009

Welcome in out PM at Escuela Oficial de Idiomas Carlota Remfry in Linares.

Beforehand we invite you to watch this video about our town:


About the school:

http://www.juntadeandalucia.es/averroes/eoilinares/

We are a School of Languages where students can learn English, French and German (from beginners to advanced levels). You need to be over 16 to join our courses (average students’ age: about 30) and be highly motivated to meet new people and practise languages. Our pupils attend lessons twice a week and need to take official exams in order to obtain their Language Certificates (A2, B1 and B2). Our centre is located in the old part of the town, Linares being quite new, though. We also offer English refreshing courses for Primary and Secondary teachers and take part in an E-Twinning Project with a French institution.

PROJECT MEETING PROGRAMME:

Educational side:

There will be meetings at school with all the project coordinators and with students from the partnership. Students and teachers will participate in some curricular lessons and in special workshops.

Social side:

Meeting people, visiting Linares etc. Study visits to a nearby town or city: Úbeda, Baeza or maybe Granada, if possible.

Farewell dinner offered by our school.

WE ARE LOOKING FORWARD TO WELCOMING YOU ALL!!!

The Spanish team

More info about Linares here:

www.linares.net (vist also the “Photos” page)

Linares is a city located in the Andalusian province of Jaén, Spain. It is considered the second most important city in that province and had a population of 60,622 in the most recent census. The altitude is 419 meters and the total area of the municipality is 195.15 sq. km. It is located on kilometer 120 on the Valencia-Córdoba highway (N-322) and is 51 kilometers from the capital, Jaén.

The city is well connected to the rest of Spain. The Autovia de Andalucia, NIV Madrid-Cádiz, is located 12 kilometers to the west at Bailén. There is a railroad station at Linares-Baeza, with lines connecting Madrid and Cádiz, and Madrid-Granada-Almería.

Linares dates to antiquity and earned much of its revenue from the lead mines located there. It was also at Linares that Carthaginian general Hannibal married the local Iberian princess Himilce on the eve of the Second Punic War.

Around the middle of the nineteenth century Linares became an important mining center with lead mines nearby. The smelting of lead, the manufacture of lead sheets and pipes, and the production of by-product silver from the lead ores led to a significant population increase. The 6,000 inhabitants in 1849 became 36,000 in 1877. This commercial and industrial growth brought the concession of the title of city in 1875.

Glazed ceramic tile tableau celebrating the apparition in 1227 of the Virgin Mary in Linares.

Glazed ceramic tile tableau celebrating the apparition in 1227 of the Virgin Mary in Linares.

Until recently Linares was heavily involved in the mining and smelting of lead and the production of gunpowder, dynamite and rope were staples of the local economy. The last mine closed in 1991. Today the mines have been abandoned but Linares is home to Santana Motors which produces all-terrain vehicles for the Spanish Army such as the Anibal model. There is also a factory producing trains (CAF), another one producing components for wind turbines (Grupo Daniel Alonso y Gamesa, and a beet sugar plant (Azucareras Reunidas de Jaen S.A.), which now produces biodiesel from colza oil, palm oil, soybeans, and sunflower oil.

Linares is also the place where the annual Linares chess tournament is held.

The bull ring in Linares is famous for the death of bullfighter Manolete (Manuel Rodríguez). On the 28th of August every year, people place flowers on his statue in Linars. Manolete’s death is remembered in the ring by putting a bunch of roses in the place where he fell.

Linares is the birthplace of classical guitarist Andrés Segovia and the singer Raphael.

 

No Comments Yet »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Blog at WordPress.com.