Bujanda is a village in Álava, Basque Country, Spain. The parish church contains the incorrupt remains of, which has in the past given it some fame. At its largest, the village had around 150 inhabitants; but migration in the 1960s resulted in a great reduction in population. Its future is oriented towards culture, sports and ecology due to its proximity to Antoñana, the, greenways and mountain bike routes, hiking; as well as to very attractive areas such as, Treviño, Rioja and the.
Etymology
The place name appears as Buszandafor the first time in a document dated in the year 1071. Then, Buxanda appears in several records. Later the became in the modern sound j, which is the form used in the current official name. It may mean "place of boxwood" from the Latinbuxus plus the locative suffix -anda.
Bus Vitoria-Estella, Vitoria-Calahorra, stopping at Antoñana,.
Demographics
According to the census of 1960, Bujanda then had 97 inhabitants. But since that date the population has experienced a setback, falling by two-thirds in only fifteen years. The census of 1975 counted 34 people, and that was more than double the 16 of 2008: 11 men and 5 women, the lowest population to date., the latest available data, there are 19 people: 14 men and 5 women. From the late sixteenth century until the mid-nineteenth century, the population generally increased; but from then on there has been a gradual decline, accentuated during the important agricultural transformation of the 1960s:
In the late sixteenth century: 75 people
In the late eighteenth century: 100 people
In the mid- nineteenth century: 150 people
In 1900: 124 people
In 1930: 113 people
In 1960: 97 people
In 2008: 16 people
In 2014: 19 people
Administrative arrangements
Bujanda has its own mayor, elected by the village inhabitants. The latest elections took place in December 2013, and the winning candidate received four votes. Bujanda is part of the municipality of Campezo, together with Antoñana, Oteo, Orbiso and Santa Cruz de Campezo.
Festivals and customs
Prayers to San Fausto Labrador
According to chronicles of the historian, San Fausto Labrador originally came from Alguaire, Lleida, Catalonia. He devoted himself to the poor and needy from his youth. He was taken prisoner by the Saracens during a voyage in the Mediterranean, and made slave to a master who beat him whenever he prayed. One day, the master was astonished to see the farm implements labouring of their own volition while the saint was at prayer. The saint baptised him, and the two of them travelled to Alguaire. When San Fausto was near death, he said to his relatives and friends: "after my death, lay my body on my horse, and the place to where God leads it, there you shall leave me." He must have died around the year 614. Relatives and friends obeyed his request, and the horse finally stopped at Bujanda. The villages which offer prayers to San Fausto are: