
thumb|Porch of Saint Martin's church in Zamudio. An ' (), () is an early form of local government in the Basque Country which was particularly common in Biscay but also existed in the other provinces. The terms (in Standard Basque) and ' (in Biscayan) literally translate as "church door" ( "church" + "door"). The Spanish term translates as "before [the] church" or "parvise".
thumb|Porch of Saint Martin's church in Zamudio. An ' (), () is an early form of local government in the Basque Country which was particularly common in Biscay but also existed in the other provinces. The terms (in Standard Basque) and ' (in Biscayan) literally translate as "church door" ( "church" + "door"). The Spanish term translates as "before [the] church" or "parvise".
The peculiar name derives from the Basque custom where the family heads of a settlement connected to a particular parish would gather after mass at the entrance or portico of the church to make decisions regarding issues affecting their community. Their medieval history is closely linked to the emergence of the Batzar Nagusiak or "Grand Meetings", especially those of Biscay and Gipuzkoa (Juntas Generales de Vizcaya/Guipúzcoa in Spanish) and the establishment of parochial churches. Each elizate would elect a representative who would represent the elizate at a Batzar Nagusia, so the elizate represents an early form of local democracy. These enjoyed considerable autonomy in decision-making from the higher administrative authorities. thumb|right|The elizate of Bedoña near Arrasate which was only incorporated into a municipality in the 1960s
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).