The first batteries documents are based on the texts of the Roman writer Pliny, who stood at Pili in Alontigicelos and Menoba the river, an area that enjoyed a certain prestige in the Roman Empire was appreciated as oil exported. Pliny himself acknowledges the existence of early prehistoric settlements, which, depending on the materials discovered pottery remains and make the point most likely possibility in this area potters were important centers. Under Roman rule, the town belonged to the Convent Legal Seville, although the final formation of the current urban enclave is defined in Arab times around a Qubba Almohad is preserved today in the Chapel of Bethlehem. Burgundy Alfonso X the Wise (Toledo, November 23, 1221 - Sevilla, April 4, 1284), king of Castile and Leon in 1248, Alfonso X is renamed to the village but in other documents of the thirteenth century appears as Tor.Due to its geographical location and its agricultural resources, Batteries, in the centuries after the reconquest, is an ever increasing population and its repopulation starting with the arrival of settlers, those of the rest of the peninsula that come with the distribution land, very divided and unequal size, and people from nearby farms, which are joining the village slowly. So can the solid core of people is formalized in the fifteenth century. The possession of a small municipality to devote to agriculture, coupled with the enterprising character of its inhabitants, results in the XV and XVI to a process of change in production structures, creating an incipient transformation activity of their products which generate a trade with the surrounding areas. The products traded (oil and tiles, mainly) are favored by landowners who brought their produce to the metropolis of Seville.In 1435, John II gave the Dehesa de la Maremma Boyal in Aznalc zar term, given the increased agricultural livestock showing the progress of the Local Council at this time. During the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries, Pilas was under the legal and administrative protection of the Order of Santiago. In those centuries are still two towers for oil or oil mills, symbols of industrialization batteries at that time. Besides oil and tiles entrepreneurship comes from soap, leaving the batteries Almondir of the first batch of this product to America in 1502. This is stated in the issuance of this game which is preserved in the House of Pilate in Seville, a document that belongs to the Marquess of Tarifa and also describes some aspects of the people, made at the time by three streets and twenty residents.The oil reappears again as a representative of products typically Batteries lands in the sixteenth century, as in Philip II's visit to Seville, the King was rewarded with these goods according to the account of Seville writer Juan de Mal Lara. In his book he did Sevilla Welcome to Philip II also describes the importance for trade to batteries, using a river port on the Guadiamar and naming a street in the town of Port Road. In 1594 part of the kingdom of Seville in Axarafe and neighbors had 176 taxpayers. An important element in the historical study of Battery, is the evolution of land tenure. The resulting spray the allotment character alfonsino going to focus on a small number of landowners, nobility, clergy, and bourgeoisie capitalist Seville town hall until disentailed processes of mid-nineteenth century, maintaining a noble character.In 1822 it handled the file sharing of communal lands, which after peasant revolts succeeded in 1839 pylene small lots affluent subsistence of a family at reasonable prices divided among poorer residents. In the 40s there disentailed land deals in anticipation of civil proceedings, 1855. However, the confiscation of the most anticipated Dehesa, with 512 lots of land, two aranzadas each. He tried the municipal corporation that the distribution would benefit the largest number of laborers, for which no system used the full ownership, so they were not sold because they could not directly access because they were laborers and Yuntero. The twentieth century is clearly marked by the grounding in Cells and Luis Medina Garvey (1870-1952), who inherits some properties of artisanal and mechanized and industrialized Basque capital, from the family of his wife, Amelia Vilallonga.Before his arrival, Pilas was a village and smallholder agriculture, after it acquires a local industrial entrepreneurship in the fields of olive dressing, the wineries, timber industry, electricity and leather.
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