Occitan-speaking unique territorial entity in Catalonia
Val d'Aran is a distinctive region in Catalonia where Occitan is spoken instead of Catalan, making it linguistically and culturally unique within Spain. It matters as an important preserve of Occitan language and culture, representing a distinct ethnic and linguistic community with its own historical identity.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
Aran ( Occitan: [aˈɾan]; Catalan: [əˈɾan]; Spanish: [aˈɾan]; often known as the Aran Valley, or Val d'Aran in Aranese Occitan; in other forms of Occitan: Vath d'Aran or Vau d'Aran; Catalan: Vall d'Aran; Spanish: Valle de Arán) is an autonomous administrative entity (formerly considered a comarca) in northwest Catalonia, Spain, consisting of 620.47 square kilometres (239.56 mi) in area, located in the Pyrenees mountains, in the Alt Pirineu i Aran region and in the province of Lleida. The capital is Vielha e Mijaran.
This valley constitutes the only contiguous part of Catalonia located on the northern side of the Pyrenees. Hence, this valley holds the only Catalan rivers to flow into the Atlantic Ocean (for the same reason, the region is characterized by an Atlantic climate, instead of a Mediterranean one). The Garonne river flows through Aran from its source on the Pla de Beret (Beret Flat) near the Port de la Bonaigua. It is joined by the Joèu river (from the slopes of Aneto mountain) which passes underground at the Forau d'Aigualluts. It then reappears in the Val dera Artiga de Lin before reaching the Aran valley, then through France and eventually to the Atlantic Ocean. The Noguera Pallaresa river, whose source is only a hundred meters from that of the Garonne, flows the opposite way towards the Mediterranean.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).