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Rincón de la Victoria
| AREA |
27.50 Km² |
| ALTITUDE ABOVE SEA LEVEL |
5 m |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL |
480 l/m² |
| WHAT THE NATIVES ARE CALLED |
Rinconeros |
| MONUMENTS |
The Bezmiliana fortress, the churches of Nuestra
Señora del Carmen and Nuestra Señora
de la Candelaria (Benagalbón), El Cantal and
Benagalbón watchtowers, and the caves of El
Tesoro and La Victoria. |
| GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION |
In the south-western part of La Axarquía,
on the Eastern Costa del Sol, 12 kilometres from Málaga. |
| POPULATION CENSUS IN 1994 |
16,116 |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMPERATURE |
18 ºC |
| TOURIST INFORMATION |
Town
Hall, Plaza Al-Andalus, 1 (29730). Telephone: 952
402 300; Fax: 952 402 900 |
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The municipal
territory of Rincón de la Victoria is bordered
by the Totalán stream on the west and by that
of San Millán on the east, and there are two
other streams, the Granadillas and Benagalbón;
all of these have only seasonal flow. Moving inland
from the coastal strip, there are numerous elongated
hills on which olive, almond, and carob trees and
vineyards predominate in a landscape that is typical
of La Axarquía but without great elevations,
the highest peak being the Salazar hill at 512 metres.
On crossing the Totalán
brook, the traveller perceives a different world,
where the mountains have rounded and lengthened
their forms. Here they are not covered in pines
as with the neighbouring municipality. A territory
which has a small nucleus in the purest style
of this region in its interior: Benagalbón. On
the coast, which only a few decades ago was a
small fishing village, it has grown spectacularly
with its gastronomy almost exclusively based on fish,
emphasizing the sardine kebabs, as well as "boquerones
victorianos" anchovies from the local bay.
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This municipality is made up of several population
centres: Benagalbón, five kilometres into
the interior; La Cala; Torre de Benagalbón;
Aguirre; Los Millares and several others with less
population. In the last 20 years, practically all
of these communities, especially Rincón de
la Victoria and La Cala, have experienced spectacular
growth due mainly to their proximity to the city
of Málaga and to improvements in their transportation
links. What were originally second homes for many
residents of the capital have thus become their main
residences.
This does not make Rincón de la Victoria just
an extension of Málaga, although its proximity
is an advantage. It has a life of its own and also
very dynamic tourism and commerce.
This was one of the first territories in the province
of Málaga to be settled by humans, at least
judging by the data that is available to date, and
is one of the best documented in La Axarquía
due to the Paleolithic paintings and fossil remains
that have been found at the El Tesoro cave and the
no less interesting Bronze Age relics found at the
La Victoria cave.
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around the year 550 B. C. a Punic-Phoenician settlement
was established on the Loma de Benagalbón
(Hill of Benagalbón), and later the Romans
also established themselves in this area as is shown
by the mosaics and ruins of bathhouses discovered
here. This tends to corroborate the description of
the historian Pliny in the first century, who took
note of the existence of a fortress built as a defence
against possible invasions from the sea. It is more
than probable that around this fortress the Arabs
founded what is today Rincón de la Victoria
and called it Bezmiliana, which would have been the
name given to it by the Romans with some variation
by the Arabs.
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According to the description
of the eleventh century Muslim El Idrissi, ancient
Bezmiliana (Bizilyana), of which practically nothing
remains today, had a fishing port, a medina (central
village district), a mosque and a wall protecting
the town. The scant remains of the town are still
visible in the area known as El Castellón,
on the Benagalbón road.
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According to some Christian
accounts, it seems that the inhabitants of these
districts abandoned the place ahead of the advancing
Christian troops, since when they were en route to
Málaga from Vélez Málaga they
found the village depopulated. Towards the end of
the fifteenth century or the beginning of the sixteenth,
some 120 persons arrived in this area with the objective
of repopulating it, but these new villagers also
abandoned the area even before the Moorish rebellion
of 1569. According to some historians, this was due
to a plague epidemic, to which might be added the
bad relations with the Moorish population, constantly
more oppressed by the Christians, and the continual
invasions from the sea.
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Construction was begun
in 1776 near the ruins of Bezmiliana on the Bezmiliana
fortress or castle that was intended to defend this
entire section of the coast, in this case from the
English. Under the shelter of this huge project small
structures began to spring up that would shortly
form a population centre, whose inhabitants devoted
themselves to fishing. It would be considered a sub-district
of Benagalbón, the community that would continue
to be the municipality’s nucleus of population
until 1906 when the population of Rincón de
la Victoria was much greater than that of Benagalbón.
Nevertheless, it was not until 1950 that the Town
Hall was officially located in Rincón de la
Victoria. The origin of the name is that the territory
occupied by the village belonged to the La Victoria
convent.
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How to Get
There
Due to its coastal location, the only
route to Rincón de la Victoria
is the Mediterranean Expressway (A-7;
N-340). When it gets to the village it
splits into two branches but either can
be used. If you are coming from the Western
Costa del Sol you should go towards Motril-Almería,
and if coming from the Eastern Costa
del Sol you should go towards Málaga-Cádiz.
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