Sava would later be absorbed by and since 1990 by the Italian truck manufacturer | Valladolid is drier than Spain's northern coastal regions, although there is year-round |
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Airport [ ] Hermanos Sastre wine cellar Although an inland province, fish is commonly consumed, some brought from the | The line links both cities, crossing the through , the fourth longest train tunnel in Europe |
Another theory is that Pucela comes from the fact that cement was sold there, the only city in Spain that sold it.
16The primitive urban core was built ex novo in the 11th century on a small elevation near the confluence of the with the , on the left-bank of the later river | A model attribution edit summary Content in this edit is translated from the existing Spanish Wikipedia article at [[:es:Valladolid]]; see its history for attribution |
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The Formation of Al-Andalus: History and Society | Geography [ ] Location [ ] Satellite view of Valladolid Valladolid is located at roughly 735 metres above sea level, at the centre of the Meseta Norte, the drained by the covering a major part of the Northwest of the |
Roads [ ] Several highways connect the city to the rest of the country | Transportation [ ] This article needs additional citations for |
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, a High Private College in Valladolid | One widely held etymological theory suggests that the modern name Valladolid derives from the expression Vallis Tolitum, meaning "valley of waters", referring to the confluence of rivers in the area |
[ ] In 1506, died in Valladolid "still convinced that he had reached the Indies" in a house that is now a museum dedicated to him.