Valtablado de Beteta, is one of the seven villages that formed the old Señorío de Beteta. Founded in the 12th century, with little arable land and reduced services, it was one of the most fragile villages in the region.
Beginning in the 1950s, national policies encouraged the displacement of the rural population to growing cities, offering factory jobs and opportunities in urban areas that contrasted with the lack of resources and services in the countryside. This “modernization” resulted in a massive migration that left small towns, such as Valtablado, virtually empty. By the 1970s, the rural exodus had intensified, and the town had barely 117 inhabitants.
The lack of investment and the inequality in development between rural and urban areas accelerated this process. In 1972, the inhabitants of Valtablado, most of whom had emigrated, decided to accept the sale of their land to the Forestry Administration. In exchange for a little less than 8 million pesetas, the State acquired the municipality in a process of forced expropriation, culminating the history of this town as an independent entity. After being annexed to Beteta, Valtablado became an empty space, where only its ruins remain standing.
Today, however, Valtablado has not been forgotten. The Association El Rinconcillo de Valtablado fights to keep the history of its people alive by making known its traditions, customs and its past through the installation of interpretive panels that tell the history of each corner.
Today, walking through its streets is an experience that goes beyond the visual; it is to enter into a silence that tells the story of a village forced into oblivion. Strolling through Valtablado, visiting its fountain and washing place, is to feel the weight of an era in which unequal development turned its back on the villages, and an invitation to reflect on the impact of rural abandonment on our roots.



