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Frigiliana
| AREA |
40 Km² |
| ALTITUDE ABOVE SEA LEVEL |
435 m |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL |
590 l/m² |
| WHAT THE NATIVES ARE CALLED |
Frigilianenses. Nickname: Aguanosos |
| MONUMENTS |
The San Antonio church, former granary, Palacio
de los Condes de Frigiliana (Palace of the Counts of
Frigiliana), Ecce Homo hermitage, walls of the Castillo
de Lizar (Lizar castle), Palacio del Apero (El Apero
palace), Algar culture menhir (standing stone), and
the Phoenician necropolis |
| GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION |
In the eastern part La Axarquía, in the foothills
of the Almijara mountain range. The village is more
than 430 metres above sea level. It is 56 kilometres
from the provincial capital and only 6 from Nerja. |
| POPULATION CENSUS IN 1994 |
2175 |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMP. |
18 ºC |
| TOURIST INFORMATION |
Town Hall, Calle Real, 80 (29788). Telephone: 952
533 002; Fax: 952 533 43 |
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There
are many towns in the province of Málaga which
enter the group of those said to the the prettiest
in Spain. Well, one of
them is without doubt Frigiliana.
With its
Moorish influence of narrow streets, passages
and hallways,
walk the same paths as the ancient Moors,
in order
to climb to the top of the mountain where
the town stands, and discover an
impressive panorama of the valley and the nearby
coastal area.
Apart from the tourist shops
where you can buy anything you can find on
the coast, they also make ceramic objects and
derivatives of vegetable fibres, olive branches,
tiles, painted glass, etc. The local Muscatel
wine can also be bought.
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The south
slope of the Almijara mountain range takes up a large
part of
the municipality of Frigiliana and its topography
is complex and rich in contrasts, with peaks that,
without reaching the heights of that mountain mass,
do easily exceed 1,000 metres, such as Sierra de
Enmedio (1,164 metres), or that are close to that
height as in the case of El Fuerte (976 metres).
The
River Chillar marks the boundary of this municipality
and that of Nerja, and its tributary the Higuerón
provides, with its so-called Hoces del Río
Higuerón (Gorges of the River Higuerón),
one of the most striking natural sites in the entire
area. It, and the cliffs and gorges of the River
Chillar itself, form an incomparably scenic landscape.
The terraced market gardens that, at the village,
begin their descent toward the coast, between the
dazzling white of the houses and the blue Mediterranean
in the background, are another feature of an area
whose image will remain engraved in the traveller’s
memory for a very long time |
| Travellers coming
to Frigiliana for the first time will probably
have a preconceived idea about the village, since
many different clichés have been used to
describe it. In fact, these same clichés
could describe any of the typical Andalusian mountain
villages that look out over the sea. In this case,
however, all the clichés are true,. and
are even surpassed by an ineffable sensation that
is as hard to describe as it is easy to perceive
and that perhaps no one can accurately identify
except by resorting to another cliché -
bewitching!
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Clichés aside, the historic quarter of Frigiliana,
of all those in the entire province, is considered
to be one that has best preserved its original
Moorish form. Its anarchic street plan-anarchic
from the twenty-first century perspective-leads
the visitor from one surprise to another: unexpectedly
massive architecture, streets, alleys, covered
passageways, stairways, plants and flowers in the
most unlikely places, a mixture of fragrances from
hidden sources, ancient history in new whitewash… And
once you leave the intimacy and constriction of
its streets, the breadth of a superb landscape
above the Eastern Costa del Sol.
Remains found in 1987 in the Cueva de los Murciélagos
(The Bat cave) attest to the presence of man in
this territory from the late Neolithic period (3,000
B. C.) until the Calcolithic or Copper Age (2.000
B. C.). There is a menhir (standing stone) from
the late Algar culture that provides evidence that
man was present in this area in that era, and very
near the village is the Cerrillo de las Sombras
necropolis from the Phoenician epoch (700-600 B.
C.).
The Romans occupied this territory in 206 B.C.
through treaties with the native population and,
Frigiliana was included in the Conventus de Gades.
The name of the village comes from the Romans.
It derives from Frexinius (a personage about whom
nothing is known) and the suffix “ana”,
which means source, that is to say the place or
villa of Frexinius.
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Little is known about the history of Frigiliana
from the arrival of the Arabs to the Peninsula
in 711 A. D. until the late ninth century, when
the fortress was built, except that it was under
the leadership of Omar Ben Hafsun.
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During the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries,
it formed part of the Nazarite Kingdom. The village
surrendered to the Christian troops in 1485 without
bloodshed.
Bit by bit, however, the Moors were stripped of the few rights that they had
(they farmed the worst soil and were forbidden to speak and write their language
or wear their traditional dress) until the Moorish rebellion broke out in the
Alpujarras mountains and was brutally put down by the Christians. The Moors from
La Axarquía and the Málaga mountains, expecting the aid promised
by Aben Humeya from the Alpujarras and also aid from North Africa, sought refuge
in El Fuerte de Frigiliana (the Fort of Frigiliana), where some 7,000 of them
gathered
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On 28 May 1569, the
corregidor (magistrate) of Vélez began the
first assault with the ominous outcome of 20 dead
and 150 wounded among the Christian troops. At
that time, 25 galleys of the Italian fleet were
sailing in the Mediterranean and the corregidor
of Vélez asked for assistance in squashing
the Frigiliana insurgents. On this occasion, it
was 6,000 men who confronted the Moors, who were
defeated despite their resistance on 11 June 1569.
There were 2,000 killed and 3,000 captives among
the defeated forces (some 2,000 escaped) and 400
dead and 800 wounded among the victors.
The Battle of El Peñón de Frigiliana has been reproduced by Amparo
Ruiz de Luna, somewhat in the manner if a “romance de ciego” ballad,
on glazed ceramic panels that can be seen at the present time in various places
in the village.
From that date until
the nineteenth century, misfortune rained down
upon Frigiliana. When it was not the plague that
decimated the population, it was a storm that destroyed
the crops, or an earthquake, or the phylloxera
pest that attacked the grapevines or an outbreak
of yellow fever that caused havoc. It would not
be until the arrival of tourism that Frigiliana,
like the rest of the Costa del Sol, entered into
a period of prosperity and social and economic
peace.
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How to Get
There
Take the Mediterranean Expressway (A-7;
N-340) towards Motril and shortly before
Nerja turn onto the MA-105, which leads
straight to Frigiliana
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