ANDALUSIA, a large and fertile region occupying the S. of Spain. Its shores are washed both by the Mediter ranean and the Atlantic. The name is a form of Vandalitia or Vandalusia, from the Vandals, who overran it in the 5th century. When it was a Phoenician trade emporium, it was called Tartessus; the Romans named it Btica, from the river BTtis, the modern Guadalquivir. In the 8th century, the Moors founded here a splendid monarchy, which quickly attained a high degree of civilization. The four great Moorish capitals were Seville, Cordova, Jaen, and Granada. During the darkness of the Middle Ages, Cordova was "the Athens of the West, the seat of arts and sciences." The Moorish kingdoms were finally con qugred by the Castilians in 1235-1248. Christian intolerance seriously and per manently impoverished the country; but later, under the Spaniards, painting here arose in a new form in the schools of Velasquez and Murillo. Andalusia
mainly consists of the great basin of the Guadalquivir, and the mountainous dis tricts which bound it. In the S., the Sierra Nevada attains a height of 11,657 feet. Cotton and sugar-cane flourish in the open air, and the cactus and aloe form impenetrable hedges. Wine and oil abound; but some tracts are very barren. On the whole, however, Andalusia is still one of the most fertile districts of Spain. Its breeds of horses and mules have long been celebrated. The mountains yield silver, copper, lead, iron, and coal; and some ores are extensively worked. The Andalusians speak a dialect of Spanish, manifestly tinctured with traces of Arabic. Andalusia is divided into the provinces of Almeria, Jaen, Malaga, Cadiz, Huelva, Seville, Cordova, and Granada. The chief towns are Seville, Cordova, Jaen, and Cadiz. Area, 33,340 square miles. Pop. about 4,000,000.