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Village
| AREA |
27.3 Km² |
| ALTITUDE ABOVE SEA LEVEL |
151 m |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL |
570 l/m² |
| WHAT THE NATIVES ARE CALLED |
Viñoleros.
Nickname: Polacos |
| MONUMENTS |
The San
José church, La Virgen de las Angustias hermitage,
Torre de la Atalaya (watchtower), archaeological
sites, and the La Viñuela reservoir |
| GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION |
In the
central part of the La Axarquía region north
of Vélez-Málaga. |
| POPULATION CENSUS IN 1994 |
approx 1500 |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMPERATURE |
17 ºC |
| TOURIST INFORMATION |
Town Hall,
Calle Vélez-Málaga, 23 (29712). Telephone:
952 519 002; Fax: 952 519 088 |
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The River Guaro valley, which has been turned
into a reservoir, is the axis of this municipality,
whose territory borders the Colmenar corridor
on the north and the La Axarquía Mountains
on the south. These two geographic features form
different landscapes. Thus, while the former
area exhibits low relief that is ideal for grain
fields and vineyards, the latter terrain, south
of the reservoir, becomes more uneven due to
the presence of hills whose plant cover is composed
mainly of brush and olives, with a few stands
of evergreen oaks.
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La Viñuela was founded, as a village, in the eighteenth century, making
it the most modern locality in La Axarquía but, paradoxically, this was
one of the first areas of human settlement, which occurred at least as far back
as the Paleolithic period. |
| This is not surprising
because this area is a natural pass to the northern
territories and has also always been rich in water.
In the central part of the municipality is the
La
Viñuela
reservoir, the largest in capacity in the province
of Málaga and one of the main tourist resources
in the region.
From its shores can be seen a broad
landscape dominated by the formidable mass of the
Sierra de Tejeda range and the whimsical shape
of the Boquete de Zafarraya mountain pass.
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Despite this, there
are no great elevations in the municipality of
La Viñuela, as its highest point does not
reach 600 metres. The most notable
peaks are the hills of Ballesteros (361 metres),
on the border
of Alcaucín, Castaño (316 metres)
and Agudo, which at 558 metres, ranks as the highest
elevation in the municipality and serves as the
dividing line with Vélez Málaga
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More than ten archaeological
sites were excavated before being covered by the
reservoir waters, but the most notable prehistoric
signs are along the River Guaro, where remains
dating from the Neolithic period to the Roman era
have been found: cane and adobe huts, a bronze
smelting oven and stone tools, as well as bell-shaped
vessels and decorative motifs. Judging from the
finds corresponding to the Roman era, there is
every indication that the economy of the time was
based on olives, grapes and grain crops, much as
in the present day.
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Apparently, this
locality sprang up around an ancient inn on the
Royal Road from
Vélez-Málaga to Granada at a place that in the early seventeenth
century was called La Viñuela (the Little Vineyard) in reference to some
small vineyards in the vicinity, and which has been converted into today’s
La Plaza bar. As time went on other buildings began to be built near the inn,
and thus the village was formed. Its first mayor, Lucas García del Rey,
took office in 1764
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In the nineteenth
century La Viñuela had some 700 residents,
most of whom were engaged in agriculture and particularly
the raising of cattle. With the phylloxera pest
of the late nineteenth century, the vineyards were
levelled and replaced, where the land was suitable,
with citrus groves.
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How to Get
There
Take the Mediterranean Expressway (A-7; N-340)
towards Motril-Almería, if you are coming
from the Western Costa del Sol, or towards Málaga
if you are coming from Nerja or Torrox. Turn towards
Vélez-Málaga on the A-335 but without
entering that town, continue on the same route
towards Alhama de Granada. Some 14 kilometres past
Vélez-Málaga the turn towards La
Viñuela will be marked.
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