The present position of the city of Palma de
Mallorca (Majorca) is believed to have been originally occupied
by a Talayotic settlement closely associated with the sea. Later
invaded by the Romans and then by the Arabs who named it Madina
Mayurqa, the city conserves evidence of those periods in monuments
such as the Almudaina Palace and the Arab baths.
13th Century
In 1229 Palma was conquered
by King Jaime I, who founded a municipality that encompassed
the whole island, hence its name Ciutat de Majorca. As a result
of the singular layout of the city, intersected by a river,
there were two urban centres "Vila de Dalt" and "Vila
d'Avall" situated on either side of the river's banks.
Because of its privileged geographic
position, Palma was able to have important dealings with traders
from the Maghreb, Italian domains and the Turkish Empire and
they helped to make this a golden era for the city. In La Lonja
there was a busy commodity exchange market supervised by the
Consolat de Mar to ensure that all commercial transactions complied
with the laws in force at the time.
16th Century
At the beginning of the 16th
century, plague, foreign rebellions and frequent attacks by
Turkish pirates and the Berbers led to a slump in trading and
the city entered a period of decline which lasted until the
end of the 17th century.
In the 18th century, the Decree
of Nueva Planta by Philip V completely changed the island's
governmental regime and Palma became the capital of the new
province of Baleares. Also in this century, under Charles III,
freedom to trade with the Indies was established, leading to
an increase in commerce in Majorca and in our city's port.
19th Century
The French occupation of Algeria
in the 19th century brought an end to the danger of Maghrebi
attacks in Majorca, resulting in the expansion of sea traffic
and shipping lines. With this economic growth the city underwent
great development in population and size.
The beginning of the 1950's
marked the prelude of the tourist phenomenon which was to change
the physiognomy of the city and the entire island, transforming
it into a centre of attraction for visitors with a sociological
interchange of cultures.
Since then the growth of tourism
in the Balearics has been spectacular: the 500,000 visitors
to the island in 1960 rose to over 6,739,700 in 1997, with 16,562,090
passengers travelling through Palma Airport in 1997 and 143,000
by sea. This put the Balearic Islands into the top position
in Spain with respect to the gross domestic product per inhabitant
and the only community in Spain to exceed the European Union
average.
The Layout of
Palma
The Old City
Bordered by large avenues and
the sea, the old city was once surrounded and protected by medieval
walls which were demolished at the beginning of the 20th century.
Only part of the walls facing the sea has been conserved. The
old city is a reference of Palma's historic development and
a witness of all the peoples who have inhabited it and their
different cultures: talayotic, Roman, Muslim, medieval and modern.
The New Town
situated around the old city and consequently outside the medieval
walls that once protected it, the new town was established at
the beginning of the 20th century as a result of the city's
demographic growth. The new town has been subject to the regulations
of urban development planning by the architects: Calvet in 1897,
Bennàsser in 1917 and Alomar in 1943.
The ´Burbs
The suburbs are formed of districts situated in the outskirts
of the city centre and they were built from 1950-1960, the consequence
of the huge demographic growth in Palma in the wake of the island's
phenomenal tourist boom.