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・ Cambounès
・ Cambourne
・ Cambourne Church
・ Cambourne Village College
・ Cambozola
・ CAMBRA
・ Cambra
・ Cambrai
・ Cambrai (disambiguation)
・ Cambrai Cathedral
・ Cambrai Homily
・ Cambrai Madonna
・ Cambrai Memorial to the Missing
・ Cambrai, South Australia
・ Cambrai-Niergnies Airport
Cambre
・ Cambre House and Farm
・ Cambremer
・ Cambremer (horse)
・ Cambres
・ Cambrew Brewery
・ Cambrex Corporation
・ Cambria
・ Cambria (company)
・ Cambria (disambiguation)
・ Cambria (journal)
・ Cambria (typeface)
・ Cambria (yacht)
・ Cambria Air Force Station
・ Cambria and Indiana Railroad


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Cambre : ウィキペディア英語版
Cambre

Cambre is a municipality in the Province of A Coruña, in the autonomous community of Galicia in northwestern Spain. It is located 12 km from the capital city of A Coruña and ten minutes away from the city's airport, Alvedro.
According to the 2010 census, the municipality of Cambre includes 23,621 inhabitants spread over its 12 parishes, which occupy 41 square kilometres. The parishes are those of O Temple, Cambre, Sigrás, Anceis, San Lorenzo, Cela, Andeiro, Santa María de Vigo, Bribes, Brexo-Lema, Cecebre and Pravio. It shares municipal boundaries with the neighbouring municipalities of Culleredo, Carral and Oleiros.
The town of Cambre has many sites of interest. Among them are:
The Church of Our Lady Mary of Cambre (Spanish: ''Iglesia de Santa María de Cambre'', Galician: ''Igrexa de Santa María de Cambre''), built around the 12th century; an archaeological museum with a permanent exhibition of the remains of a Roman bathroom and latrine; and the house of Galician writer Wenceslao Fernández Flórez (1885–1964).
The town is located on the Way of St. James (''Camino de Santiago''), though on the English Way (Camino inglés), used mainly by pilgrims coming from England and Ireland via ship to A Coruña or Ferrol, and from there on foot to Santiago de Compostela.
==Name==
Cambre's name is considered to derive from "Calambre" or "Calamber", according to different sources. It is first mentioned during the construction of the Church of Santa María (12th century). The name was very possibly given to the area by Knights Templar, a Christian order created in the aftermath of the First Crusade of 1096. The Order ceased to exist two centuries later, but after they had built a fortress near the town's centre which has since ceased to exist. One of Cambre's parishes is called Temple in their honour.
However, there are other theories which give a different origin to Cambre's name. Carré Aldao suggests its name derives from "Cambria", which sounds relatively similar to Cymru (Wales). If this were true, it might suggest an early invasion of the region by Welsh vikings several centuries ago, though it may well be a semilegendary hypothesis derived from a romantic view of history to link the Celtic people with those of Galicia. Nevertheless, this theory might be supported by the fact that when the Romans arrived to the Northwestern region of the Iberian Peninsula (present day Galicia and Northern Portugal), they named the area Galicia, as they recognized the ethnic group that populated the region as different from the rest of the peninsula. The Latin derived terms Galicia or ''Galegos'', derive from ''Gales'', which in the majority of languages evolved from Latin translates to Wales.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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