From the Latin verb premo , squeeze , overwhelm , oppress , press . Oppression, grief, distress, anguish, / haste, promptness, lightness / and also ahinco , porfía , tenacity , commitment . We can also consider that it derives from pre (he) ndo, catch, grasp, grab, seize, occupy. This presura means the model of repopulation and appropriation of barren lands at the beginning of the Reconquista in the Douro Valley during the ninth centuries, X by the poorest peasants, the occupiers of that time, as our Argentine master says well. Over time the powerful, the king, the nobles and the clergy, seized those lands for the usual pringaos to work.
1o_ It can be an attitude to oppression or also to the rush. 2o_ During the Middle Ages there was a large expanse of uneducated and abandoned land in Spain, which were occupied by peasants who cleaned them and made their orchards there; and through the Pressury Act they became owners of the place - which they also called 'presura' - proving that they had turned it into arable land. In this case it is synonymous with appropriation. See apprehension .