
Last modified: 2020-11-02 by ivan sache
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Flag of Cespedosa de Tormes - Image by Ivan Sache, 15 January 2014
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The municipality of Cespedosa de Tormes (573 inhabitants in 2012; 4,629 ha; municipal website) is located 30 km of Béjar and 60 km of Salamanca.
Cespedosa de Tormes was part of the "sexmo" of Serrezuela, the least  
populous administrative division of the alfoz (group of villages) of  
Ávila. In 1209, the village was located on the border between the Bishoprics of Ávila, Plasencia, and Salamanca.
Cespedosa de Tormes was granted, together with Puente del Congosto, by King Henry III to Gil  
González Dávila in 1393. The new lord built the fortress of Cespedosa  
in the early 14th century, of which only a high, square tower has been  
preserved. Dávila's possessions were fiercely disputed by his two  
sons, Juan Dávila and Luis de Guzmán. After the two rivals had each  
appointed a private army, the Catholic Monarchs called them at the  
Court to settle the dispute. The archives of the Dukes of Alba keep a  
document dated 1456, which proposed to swap domains between Fernando  
Álvarez de Toledo, Count of Alba, on the one hand, and Aldonza de  
Guzmán, Gil González Dávila's widow, and her sons, respectively. The  
Count of Alba would have exchanged the towns of Galaz, Jumella and  
Corralnuevo for the towns of Cespedosa and Puente del Congosto.  
The proposal failed because the Ávila Council forbid Guzmán to sell  
towns that nominally belonged to the Crown. The sale was eventually  
cancelled in 1491. The Royal Court allocated Cespedosa to Juan Dávila  
and Puente del Congosto to Luis de Guzmán; who eventually sold his  
last possessions in Cespedosa to his brother. Juan Dávila's elder son,  
Francisco González Dávila, was made in 1494 lord of Cespedosa. The  
subsequent lords of Cespedosa belonged to the Bracamonte, Medrano and  
Sales Portocarrero lineages.
Cespedosa was transferred in 1833 to the Salamanca Province.
Ivan Sache, 15 January 2014
The flag of Cespedosa de Tormes (municipal website) is prescribed by a Decree adopted on  
27 June 2013 by the Municipal Council, signed on 30 July 2013 by the  
Mayor, and published on 16 August 2013 in the official gazette of Castilla y León, No. 157, p. 56,011 (text).
The flag, which was validated by the Chronicler of Arms of Castilla y León, is  
described as follows:
Flag: Castilian flag, in proportions 1:1. Two horizontal stripes, blue (azure) and green (vert). In the middle of the flag is placed the municipal coat of arms in full colours.
The coat of arms of Cespedosa de Tormes (municipal website) is prescribed by a Decree  
adopted on 29 April 2013 by the Municipal Council, signed on 6 May  
2013 by the Mayor, and published on 28 May 2013 in the official  
gazette of Castilla y León, No. 100, p. 35,155 (text).
The coat of arms, which was validated by the Chronicler of Arms of Castilla y León, is  
described as follows:
Coat of arms: Per fess, 1a. Or six bezants azure per pale, 2, 2 and 2, 1b. Gules a tower or with five crenels masoned sable port and windows azure, 2. Vert a holly oak argent surrounded by a jug and dancer's staffs [palos] or in base a fess wavy argent and azure. The shield surmounted by a Royal Spanish crown.
Based on the history of the village and on the coat of arms shown on the buildings, the bezants are the main ornaments of the church and of the castle. The tower is the symbol of the villa status; its heraldic representation was made as closest as possible to the real tower of Cespedosa. The holly oak, here in its simplified heraldic representation, is the most common tree on the municipal territory. The pottery tradition and the ancestral dance identifies the village; the waves represent river Tormes.
Ivan Sache, 15 January 2014