Alcalá de Henares, city, Madrid provincia (province) and comunidad autónoma (autonomous community), central Spain. Known under the Romans as Complutum, the city was destroyed in ad 1000 and rebuilt in 1038 by the Moors, who called it Al-Qalʿah al-Nahr. It was reconquered in 1088 by Alfonso VI and granted with the surrounding lands to the archbishop of Toledo. Alcalá de Henares is the birthplace of the author Miguel de Cervantes (who in his great novel Don Quixote referred to the city as the Great Complute), the emperor Ferdinand I, and Catherine of Aragon (first wife of the English king Henry VIII). The city contains the unique Gothic church of San Justo (built 1136 and called La Magistral), which was badly damaged during the Civil War (1936–39) but later restored, and the former archbishop’s palace, now a seminary that houses the General Central Archives of Spain, containing documents of the Inquisitions of Toledo and Valencia. Much of the early city was built around the original University of Alcalá de Henares, which was designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 1998. The university was moved to Madrid in 1836 and later renamed the Complutense University of Madrid. A new University of Alcalá de Henares was founded in 1977. There is also a university for technical and specialized workers (inaugurated in 1966) and a school of philosophy for Jesuits. Manufactures include chemicals, cotton goods, perfumes, pottery, electrical and domestic appliances, and the famous candied almonds of Alcalá. The city has an airfield and is the site of a military base. Pop. (2008 est.) 203,390.