Provinces of Spain
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In addition to its autonomous communities, Spain is divided into fifty provinces.
Formerly of greater importance, since the arrival of the autonomous community system the provinces have had fewer powers. They are still used as electoral districts, in postal addresses, and as geographical referents. (A small town would be identified as being in Valladolid province sooner than as being in Castile-Leon, for example.)
Most of the provinces are named after their principal town with the exception of Araba/Álava, Asturias, Bizkaia/Vizcaya, Cantabria, Gipuzkoa/Gipúzcoa, Illes Balears, La Rioja and Navarra. There are only two cities that are capitals of autonomous communities without being capitals of provinces: Mérida in Extremadura and Santiago de Compostela in Galicia.
Seven autonomous communities are composed of only one province: Asturias, Illes Balears, Cantabria, La Rioja, Madrid, Murcia, and Navarre.
The table below lists the provinces of Spain. For each, the capital city is given, along with the autonomous community it is a part of, and a link to a list of municipalities in the province. Where local place-names differ from the Spanish, both are given, with the Spanish form first.
| Provinces of Spain |
|
|---|---|
| Álava / Araba | Albacete | Alicante / Alacant | Almería | Asturias | Ávila | Badajoz | Islas Baleares / Illes Balears | Barcelona | Burgos | Cáceres | Cádiz | Cantabria | Castellón / Castelló | Ceuta | Ciudad Real | Córdoba | A Coruña | Cuenca | Gerona / Girona | Granada | Guadalajara | Guipúzcoa / Gipuzkoa | Huelva | Huesca | Jaén | León | Lérida / Lleida | Lugo | Madrid | Málaga | Melilla | Murcia | Navarra / Nafarroa | Ourense | Palencia | Las Palmas | Pontevedra | La Rioja | Salamanca | Santa Cruz de Tenerife | Segovia | Sevilla | Soria | Tarragona | Teruel | Toledo | Valencia / València | Valladolid | Vizcaya / Bizkaia | Zamora | Zaragoza | |
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