Last Update 2009/10/24 6:36
Description
In the proximities of the current town and inside the municipality, a tract of Roman roadway that united the old towns autrigonas of Virovesca (Briviesca) with Segisamunculum (Cherry tree of River Tug) that was part of the roadway that Tarraco (Tarragona) united with August (Astorga) Asturica exists. It is also possible that an area populated in times of the Roman dominance in one of the water-courses exists, from where the small river that crosses the town, arrives flowing of the Tug and call in the antiquity Pecesorios that comes from the town of Bañuelos of which today takes its name, since has been small remains in some occasions as currencies, metallic objects and remains of ceramic. It could be about an area of farms, a small camp for a garnish that watches over the step of the roadway or a small town. According to some historians this area has been inhabited from before the arrival of the Romans.
The town is mentioned documentalmente for the first time in a manuscript of S. XI as place among the possessions that Rodrigo Ordóñez, Second lieutenant of Alfonso VI that it donates to the bishop of Burgos, Don Gómez, and to the town council Quintanilla's figure San GarcÃa.
In the proximities of the current town and inside the municipality, a tract of Roman roadway that united the old towns autrigonas of Virovesca (Briviesca) with Segisamunculum (Cherry tree of River Tug) that was part of the roadway that Tarraco (Tarragona) united with August (Astorga) Asturica exists. It is also possible that an area populated in times of the Roman dominance in one of the water-courses exists, from where the small river that crosses the town, arrives flowing of the Tug and call in the antiquity Pecesorios that comes from the town of Bañuelos of which today takes its name, since has been small remains in some occasions as currencies, metallic objects and remains of ceramic. It could be about an area of farms, a small camp for a garnish that watches over the step of the roadway or a small town. According to some historians this area has been inhabited from before the arrival of the Romans.
The town is mentioned documentalmente for the first time in a manuscript of S. XI as place among the possessions that Rodrigo Ordóñez, Second lieutenant of Alfonso VI that it donates to the bishop of Burgos, Don Gómez, and to the town council Quintanilla's figure San GarcÃa.
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