Jódar is a city in the province of Jaén, Spain. The 2008 census (INE) counted 12119 inhabitants.
The region is agricultural, and produces extra virgin olive oil, green and white asparagus, and cotton.
Jódar is the largest European producer of handcrafted esparto grass arts and crafts, mainly parasols for beach use.
The climate is Mediterranean, with warm and dry summers and cold winters.
The creation of the town dates back to the 3rd century BCE.
During the al-Andalus period it was called Galdur y Xauda. Its castle is among the oldest in the province, documented since the year 860. In the 10th century the Arab governor Jair Aben Xaquir declared it independent and joined the rebellious Omar Ben Hafsun, later to betray him. One of Omar Ben Hafsun's deputies beheaded him and sent his head to Córdoba. The Christian conquest was carried out by Sancho Martínez de la Torre in 1231, by order of King Fernando III, as a starting point in the battle for Ubeda. In 1485, Diaz Sanchez de Carvajal founded an estate over Jódar, with the approval of the Catholic Monarchs, until the abolition of estate privileges in the 19th century.
https://www.andalucia.org/en/jodar
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