Mesta
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- This article is about the medieval sheep holders association in Castile. For other meanings, see Mesta (disambiguation).
The Mesta (Spanish Honrado Concejo de la Mesta, Honored Council of the Mesta) was a powerful association of sheep holders in the medieval Kingdom of Castile.
The sheep were transhumant, migrating from the pastures of Extremadura and Andalusia to Castile and back according to the season.
The no-mans-land (up to 100km across) between Christian Spain and Moorish-occupied Spain was too insecure for arable farming and was only exploited by shepherds. When the land was reconquered by the Spanish, farmers began to settle and disputes with pastoralists were common. The Mesta can be regarded as the first, and most powerful, agricultural union in mediaeval Europe.
The exportation of merino wool enriched the Mesta members (nobility and church orders) who had acquired ranches during the process of Reconquista.
The kings of Castile conceded many privileges to the Mesta. Even today, herds of sheep may be transported by rail, but the cañadas (traditional rights-of-ways for sheep) are legally protected "forever" from occupation and barring.
Some Madrid streets are still part of the cañada system, and there are groups that organize sheep transportation across the modern city as a reminder of old farming.
[edit] Etymology
The word comes from Latin animalia mixta ("mixed animals"), beasts without a known owner. The coming together of animals to attribute them became a meeting of shepherds. When the council was established, it was also called mesta.
The word mustang comes from mesteño or mestengo ("a mesta [i.e. ownerless] beast").
Mesta is also a medieval village in Chios, a Greek island in the northern Aegean.
[edit] References
- Diccionario Crítico Etimológico Castellano e Hispánico, by Joan Corominas and José A. Pascual, vol IV, Editorial Gredos, 1989, Madrid, ISBN 84-249-0066-9