
Last modified: 2020-11-02 by ivan sache
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Flag of Jumilla, two versions - Images by Ivan Sache, 5 May 2015
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The municipality of Jumilla (25,478 inhabitants in 2014; 97,200 ha, therefore the 2nd biggest municipality in the Region by its area; municipal website) is located in the north of the Region of Murcia, on the border with Castilla-La Mancha (Province of Albacete) and the Valencian Community (Province of Alicante), 70 km of Murcia.
Jumilla was the site of several Roman villae, such as the Cypress'  
Villa (4th century), which yielded beautiful mosaics exhibited in the  
Jerónimo Molina municipal museum. The Casón (Big House), a funerary  
pantheon, is among the best preserved paleochristian monuments (5th  
century) in Spain; it was proclaimed a National Monument in 1931. The  
statue of god Hypnos found nearby is exhibited in the National Museum  
of Berlin.
The place was definitively settled by the Moors, who erected a  
fortress on the hill dominating the town. Jumilla was first documented  
during the Aragonese rule over the Kingdom of Murcia, by a charter  
dated 1327. The town was eventually incorporated to the Kingdom of  
Castile on 27 April 1358. Jumilla was transferred in 1445 to the  
Marquis of Villena, who would rule the town until the suppression of  
the feudal system, and rebuilt the castle, as it stands now, in 1461.
Jumilla is the birth town of Juan Lozano (c. 1610-1679), Bishop of Tropea (1646), Mazara del Vallo (1656), Archbishop of Palermo (1669) and of Plasencia (1677), and of the historian Juan Lozano y Santa (1731-1808), author of Bastitania y Contestania del Reino de Murcia (1797), for long the main source of information on the Kingdom of Murcia.
Ivan Sache, 5 May 2015
The flag of Jumilla (photo, photo, photo, photo, photo, photo)
 is horizontally divided in nine stripes, in turn  
blue and white, with the municipal coat of arms in the middle.
The flag hoisted on the Town Hall in 2013-2014 had lighter blue  
stripes than the regular flag (photo, photo, photo).
The coat of arms of Jumilla was granted to the town on 27 April 1358  
by King of Castile Peter I the Cruel, together with a charter. The  
arms feature the events that ended with the re-incorporation of  
Jumilla into the Kingdom of Castile.
Reconquerred from the Moors in 1248 by King Ferdinand III the Saint,  
Jumilla was subsequently ruled by Infante Alonso de la Cerda, a  
nephew of Alfonso X the Wise. After the transfer of the Kingdom of  
Murcia to Aragón, Jumilla became an Aragonese border town. Not pleased  
with the new situation, the nobles of the town plotted for the return  
to the Castilian rule, secretly approaching Peter I in 1357. The next  
year, the king ordered his brother Fadrique, Master of the Order of  
St. James, to seize Jumilla, which was achieved in April 1358.
The 1st quarter of the arms feature a castle and a church, the two  
main buildings of Jumilla at the time. On the 2nd quarter,
the lion climbing the mountain represents Fadrique assaulting the  
town. The 3rd quarter, with a Castilian-Leonese bordure, features
the ladders used by the Castilians to enter the fortress where the  
last defenders of the town had entrenched themselves.
[Descumbriendo Murcia, 24 May 2013]
Ivan Sache, 5 May 2015