Catalonia's 300-year-old internal debate on whether it wants to remain part of Spain or gain full independence enters a crucial phase today in regional elections that could see the region's 7.5 million people take their first steps towards forming a new European state.
Polls this year have indicated pro-separatist feeling in Catalonia is running at its highest since Spain returned to democracy in the mid-1970s, with up to 57 per cent of Catalans saying they want their own country - a figure that has nearly doubled since Spain's current economic turmoil began in 2008.
And Catalonia's regional Government, run by the conservative nationalist Convergence and Union (CiU) party, has centred almost its entire election campaign on the promise of a referendum on independence within the next four years.
Although polling is not permitted in the week leading up to elections in Spain, pro-independence parties are expected to take the majority of the Catalan Parliament's 135 seats by a comfortable margin, with the CiU retaining its position as the biggest party.
The largest left-leaning nationalist party, the Republican Left (ERC), is predicted to make the biggest gains of any grouping, doubling its seats to around 18.