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| Arse | |
|---|---|
| Name | Arse |
| Settlement type | Hamlet |
| Country | Spain |
| Autonomous community | Aragon |
| Province | Huesca |
| Comarca | Sobrarbe |
| Municipality | Aínsa-Sobrarbe |
| Coordinates | 42°32′N 0°12′E |
| Population total | 28 |
| Elevation m | 620 |
Arse is a small hamlet in the comarca of Sobrarbe in the province of Huesca, Aragon, Spain. The locality lies within the municipality of Aínsa-Sobrarbe and is noted in regional toponymy and historical records. It has been mentioned in cartographic works, local censuses, and travel guides relating to Pyrenees settlements and Sobrarbe heritage.
The toponym as recorded in provincial archives and cartographic collections aligns with patterns found in medieval Latin and Aragonese place-naming traditions. Scholarly treatments in studies referencing Real Academia Española lexicography, Archivo Histórico Provincial de Huesca inventories, and onomastic surveys that include works by researchers associated with Universidad de Zaragoza analyze phonetic evolution, orthographic variants, and linkage to nearby toponyms such as Aínsa, Boltaña, and Torla. Comparative toponymy draws on medieval charters preserved alongside records from Kingdom of Aragon and administrative maps produced by the Instituto Geográfico Nacional.
In anatomical and physiological discourse, the term that shares phonetic form with this place name is treated in comparative studies of human morphology by institutions such as Royal Society, Max Planck Society, Johns Hopkins University, Harvard Medical School, and University College London. Research articles indexed in journals published by Elsevier, Nature Publishing Group, Wiley-Blackwell, Springer Nature, and Oxford University Press detail musculature, integumentary structure, adipose tissue distribution, and biomechanical function as analyzed through imaging techniques developed at Mayo Clinic, Cleveland Clinic, Karolinska Institutet, Imperial College London, and Massachusetts General Hospital.
Regional literature, lexica, and collections of idioms produced by institutions such as Real Academia Española, Instituto Cervantes, Biblioteca Nacional de España, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, and Universidad de Salamanca document variations, euphemisms, and registers in Romance languages found in Iberian Peninsula communities including Aragonese language, Castilian Spanish, and Catalan language. Ethnolinguistic fieldwork published by scholars at University of Barcelona, University of Valencia, Autonomous University of Barcelona, and University of Navarra explores dialectal variation, pragmatic usage, and lexical borrowing observed in rural Sobrarbe speech repertoires featured in regional folklore festivals, municipal archives, and oral-history projects archived by Museo de Zaragoza.
Historical documentation linking localities in the Pyrenees appears in chronologies covering medieval and early modern periods preserved in collections at Archivo General de Aragón, Archivo Histórico Nacional (Spain), and ecclesiastical registers of dioceses such as Diocese of Barbastro-Monzón. Place names in the region feature in travel narratives by authors associated with the Romantic movement, in military maps produced during campaigns involving the Peninsular War, and in cadastral surveys under the auspices of institutions like the Catastro de Ensenada. Cartographers from the Instituto Geográfico Nacional and historians at Universidad de Zaragoza and Universidad de Barcelona have published maps and studies referencing settlements across Sobrarbe and neighboring counties such as Ribagorza and Jacetania.
Clinical literature addressing conditions affecting the gluteal region has been published by medical centers and journals linked to World Health Organization, American Medical Association, European Society of Coloproctology, British Medical Journal, and The Lancet. Research from academic hospitals including Hospital Clínic de Barcelona, Hospital Universitario La Paz, Johns Hopkins Hospital, and Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust examines topics such as pressure ulcer prevention, soft tissue infections, surgical approaches employed in colorectal procedures, and rehabilitation protocols. Guidelines and consensus statements by professional bodies like the European Wound Management Association and American College of Surgeons inform clinical practice and public-health advisories.
References and representations appear in works of visual art, literature, and performance catalogued by institutions such as the Museo del Prado, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Biblioteca Nacional de España, and international archives like the British Library and Library of Congress. Literary and cinematic treatments produced by creators associated with movements documented in festival programs at San Sebastián International Film Festival, exhibitions at Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, and retrospectives covering authors linked to Generation of '27 examine bodies, landscapes, and cultural signification. Popular-media discourse in periodicals such as El País, ABC, The Guardian, The New York Times, and broadcasting institutions like Radiotelevisión Española and BBC engages with linguistic registers and representations found in regional and global contexts.
Category:Populated places in the Province of Huesca