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Vélez-Málaga &
Torre del Mar
| AREA |
156.40 Km² |
| ALTITUDE ABOVE SEA LEVEL |
60 m |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL |
470 l/m² |
| WHAT THE NATIVES ARE CALLED |
Veleños |
| MONUMENTS |
The Royal Convent of Santiago or of San Francisco,
Beniel Palace, Casa de Cervantes (Cervantes House),
Nuestra Señora de los Remedios hermitage, Cruz
del Arrabal (El Arrabal cross), San Sebastián
hermitage, San Juan Bautista parish church, the “Pósito” (old
granary), fountain of Fernando VI, Virgen de la Piedad
chapel, Nuestra Señora de Gracia monastery,
the Jesús, María y José monastery,
medieval city walls, Puerta Real de la Villa (La Villa
Royal Gate), Santa María de la Encarnación
church, the Fortress or Alcazaba, the hospital of San
Juan de Dios or of San Marcos, Cruz del Cordero (El
Cordero cross). |
| GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION |
in the La Axarquía region, of which it is
the capital. The urban district is is 28 kilometres
from the city of Málaga. |
| POPULATION CENSUS IN 1994 |
54,327 |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMP. |
18 ºC |
| TOURIST INFORMATION |
City Hall, Plaza de las Carmelitas (29700). Telephone:
952 559 100; Fax: 952 504 616. Office of Tourism: Avenida
de Andalucía (Torre del Mar). Telephone: 952
451 104 |
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| The municipality
of Vélez-Málaga, the largest and most
populous in the La Axarquía region, lies mainly
within the watershed of the River Vélez, which
is formed by the Rivers Benamargosa and El Guaro and
irrigates, a broad and rich lowland. This territory as
a whole, however, with its terrain of medium elevation
(the highest peak is Veas on the
eastern slope, at 703 metres) exhibits the typical
characteristics of the La Axarquía region. |
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The large
extension of the municipal district of Vélez Málaga
and its geographical situation in the centre of the
Axarquía region, as well as its coastal position,
gives it a large variety of panoramas.
It has earned fame for the pottery, two-handled jars, Vélez earthenware pitcher,
and Veléz jug. There are also craftsmen who work with tin, cane, wicker, forging...
They also have canvas shoe making, and reed mace chairs for which knives and
spring wheels are used. There are also cellars and warehouses for raisins. In
the commerce’s of Vélez-Málaga and Torre del Mar there are products made by craftsmen
who work with various materials.
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Due to its large area, one seventh of the entire
La Axarquía region, and to the fact that it
possesses the most fertile land in the region, the
municipality of Vélez-Málaga includes
several centres of population. They include Torre
del Mar (the most tourist-oriented and highly developed),
Benajarafe, Triana, Trapiche, Almayate Bajo and Almayata
Alto, Cajiz and Chilches, among others, as well as
numerous tourist developments in the coastal zone
and scattered farm communities in the interior. Thus,
only half the population of the municipality is concentrated
in the town of Vélez-Málaga.
This, the main municipality in La Axarquía –a
name that comes from the Arabic “as-Sarqiyya” (the
East, or the east side)- has a long and complex history
beginning with the first Phoenician settlements on
the Toscanos hill on the right bank of the River
Vélez in about 800 B. C. It should be pointed
out that the mouth of the River Vélez, in
olden times, formed a bay between the Peñón
and El Mar hills that served as an anchorage, and
that communications from there with the interior
of Andalusia were relatively easy by way of the Boquete
de Zafarraya (Zafarraya Gap).
At the foot of the Toscanos slope, next to the former
bay that is now covered by a mud flat, a warehouse
with Phoenician, Greek and Etruscan ceramics was
discovered. This confirmed the commercial activity
at the Toscanos trading post, whose population has
been estimated at 1,500, a considerable size at that
time. Some historians contend that this enclave may
have been the ancient Mainake that was founded by
the Greeks.
Smelting ovens and metal slag, materials confirming
that minerals were exploited here, have been found
at the nearby El Peñón hill. A little
farther north, at the Alarcón hill, a rectangular
building has been discovered that well may have been
a fortress, while at the El Mar hill more than 30
tombs from the seventh century B. C. have been found.
Likewise, the Necrópolis del Jardín
(El Jardín necropolis) north of Toscanos has
more than 100 tombs from the sixth to fourth centuries
B. C.
At the El Mar hill, site of the ancient seafaring
city of Maenoba in front of Toscanos, research that
has been conducted so far has confirmed the existence
of a trading post for the dried fish industry. In
this area, the industry consisted of producing garum,
a sauce that was introduced by the Phoenicians and
extensively used by the Romans.
Nevertheless, the city of Vélez-Málaga
was founded in the tenth century, at the height of
the Muslim domination. The town grew up around the
fortress-alcazaba and immediately spread towards
the La Villa neighbourhood, which would become the
ancient Muslim “medina” or city centre.
It was one of the most important medinas in the Nazarite
kingdom between the thirteenth and fifteenth centuries.
It was not a very large city but it was well fortified
and defended by a solid set of walls. As the population
increased and could not fit within the walled compound,
a number of suburbs sprang up, which are now the
neighbourhood of Arroyo de San Sebastián and
the plazas of San Francisco and Constitución.
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There is documentation of the existence in the thirteenth
century of several “alquerías” (rural
population centres) whose residents were engaged
in agriculture. These alquerías included Almayate,
Benamocarra, Benajarafe, Iznate and Cajiz, among
others, and were the origins of those villages. Vélez-Málaga’s
importance between the twelfth and sixteenth centuries
is shown by records left by such writers as El Idrisi,
Abulfeda, Ibn Batuta and Abd-al-Basit, the Egyptian
historian who in the mid-fifteenth century told of
the commercial activity at the port of Mariyya Ballis
(Torre del Mar).
The course of Vélez-Málaga’s
history changed when in April 1487 Fernando the Catholic
left Córdoba for La Axarquía for the
purpose of taking its capital. Along the way noblemen
and residents of the villages through which he passed
joined his ranks and he thus arrived in the vicinity
of Vélez-Málaga with an army of 50,000
infantry and some 12,000 cavalry, according to Hernando
del Pulgar, chronicler of the War of Granada. In
the meantime, the fortress of Bentomiz, practically
the only place that Vélez-Málaga could
look to for relief, surrendered to the Christian
troops.
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Nor did the skirmishes
of El Zagal, who left Granada to come to the assistance
of the Veleños, help much. The last Muslim
castle commandant of the city, Abul Cacim Venegas,
on 26
April 1487, sent an emissary to draw up the terms
of surrender, which occurred on the following day.
The Muslims also undertook to prepare the city to
receive the Catholic Monarchs, which it did on 3
May of that same year.The new political authorities
tried to make Vélez-Málaga into a different
city from what it had been under Muslim rule, and
for this purpose planned an architectural renewal
programme that included a new arrangement of public
spaces and the construction of secular and religious
buildings. This idea was hindered by the rugged terrain
in the urban district, so the intended restructuring
of the city only got so far as a few public spaces
(Plaza de la Constitución and the suburb of
San Francisco), a few houses of the nobility and
to quite a few churches and convents. Thus, the sixteenth
century was remarkable mainly for the construction
of new religious buildings.
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The urban character
of the city remained the same during the seventeenth
century and construction of churches and convents
received even greater emphasis, resulting in what
some have chosen to call a “convent city”.
This is nothing unique to Vélez-Málaga,
however, but has happened in many Andalusian towns
in such a way that the most spacious public plazas
may also be used for staging large religious demonstrations
such as the Semana Santa (Holy Week) and Corpus Christi.
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The port of Torre del
Mar, in the meantime, experienced such an increase
in business that in the eighteenth century its expansion
was planned in order to better route the grape and
citrus harvests that were being shipped to northern
Europe.Vélez Málaga supported the Bourbon
dynasty in the War of the Spanish Succession and
it was in its waters that the naval engagement that
some call the Battle of Málaga and others
the Battle of Vélez-Málaga was fought.
This historic event occurred on 23 August 1704. On
that day, the Spanish-French fleet confronted the
Anglo-Dutch one, with the former suffering 1,500
casualties and the latter losing 3,000 men. In total
the two sides had 146 craft in combat, with 3,577
cannon and more than 46,000 men. Modern opinion is
that neither side gained anything from the battle,
but some students of the subject, point out that
the Spanish-French fleet’s losses were fewer.
The eighteenth century
was especially favourable for the city, with notable
growth in all sectors: churches and public buildings
were built or repaired, the city’ infrastructure
was improved and its accesses beautified, and the
ideas of the Enlightenment even began to be known,
due in large part to the creation in 1783 of the
Sociedad Económica de Amigos del País
(Friends of the Country Economic Society).
The next century began
on a bad note. The yellow fever epidemic of 1804
severely devastated the population, with more than
half of the residents dying. The Municipal Government
also suffered the consequences of the epidemic and
its powers were assumed by the military. The Napoleonic
invasion and the installation of a French puppet
government divided the population into two factions
that would oppose one another for control of the
government throughout the nineteenth century. Later,
there were several cholera epidemics, the phylloxera
pest destroyed the vineyards and the earthquake of
1884 completed a dismal picture whose only ray of
light was the expansion of the sugar cane fields
under the auspices of the Larios family.
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How to Get
There
From any point on the Costa del Sol take
the Mediterranean Expressway (A-7; N-340)
towards Motril-Almería, or towards
Málaga if you are coming from
Nerja or Torrox. The old N-340 passes
through the centre of Torre del Mar and
from there to Vélez-Málaga,
which is just four kilometres away; the
route is practically like driving through
a city and is very well marked. Likewise,
the signs on the Mediterranean Expressway
announcing the Vélez-Málaga
access leave no room for doubt
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