- for
baserri construction,
which enabled Basque farmers to
develop swathes of
common land into
privately owned baserris.
Several of
these new
baserris were...
- of many
baserris. In
practice the
tradition of not
breaking up
baserris meant that the
remaining children had to
marry into
another baserri, stay on...
-
traditional dances and singing, bertsolaritza,
trikiti and
txistu music,
baserris dotting the
rural landscape, town festivals, and its
signature heavy sculptures...
-
architectonic elements, and
specific flora and fauna.
Former area of
baserris or
farmsteads on the
outskirts of San Sebastián, the
establishment in 1900...
- family-run farm or
baserri(a). Home in this
context is
synonymous with
family roots. Some
Basque surnames were
adapted from old
baserri or
habitation names...
- family's etxea, the
historically all
important family home. When a farm (
baserri) was
rented to
another family,
often the new
tenants were
known locally...
- is Mari
Teilatukoa ("Mary from the roof"), who
lives in the roof of the
baserri and
catches the
teeth thrown by the children. In Cantabria, he is known...
-
respect for the
principles of
traditional half-timbered building.
Inharri baserri in
Ibarron (Lapurdi)
Aranguren dorretxea (Orozko, Bizkaia) Half-timbered...
-
Country and
showing similar Romanized variants in Aragon. It
refers to
baserris, neighbourhoods, villages, and towns: Etxeberri, Arakil, a
village in Navarre...
- (Biscay) in Spain, 2 km from the
centre of the
neighbouring town. With few
baserris, its po****tion
began rising after the
railway station was
built in the...