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Parauta.
This
municipality’s territory lies in the southern Oreganal mountain
range, from which it stretches into the River Genal valley,
and on the east extends into the Parque Natural de la Sierra
de las Nieves (Sierra de las Nieves Nature Park), the location
of the Parauta Spanish fir forest.
It
is a very varied territory, in which areas of rocks and sparse
plant cover, alternate with others with abundant vegetation
(chestnut trees, live oak groves, pine and olive trees). In
addition, there is the area of exceptional ecological interest
that is included in the Sierra de las Nieves.
According to some historians Parauta was formed by the joining
of two villages, Parauta proper and Benahazín, which
was located near Cartajima and for reasons that have not been
explained added its territory to Parauta and ceased to exist
as a village. Due to the scarcity of historical documentation
about the village’s origin, everything about it is conjecture.
Some of it has a solid base-such as the theory that the village
was founded by the Arabs, which is hardly open to question
when one looks at the street plan of the locality-and some
of it more tenuous, such as the assertion that this village
was the birthplace of the Muladí chieftain Omar Ben
Hafsun, who gave the Caliphate of Cordoba so many headaches
in the tenth century. This theory is considered increasingly
unlikely.
Otherwise,
it is reasonable to believe that the history of Parauta must
have been tightly linked to that of the closest villages,
as there is no chronicle of any kind of any special event
that occurred in this locality.
Outstandings
Visits:
Except in exceptional cases first class architectural specimens
do not abound in small mountain villages, which means that
the scenery plays almost the only role. The urban landscape
of these localities, protected from outside influences by
their inaccessibility and really only opened to the outside
world in the mid-twentieth century, should be counted as part
of this scenery.
In Parauta’s case, its urban layout is purely Moorish, and
its streets exhibit an absolutely irregular pattern. One peculiarity
is that the façades of some of its houses have had
the whitewash applied directly without a plaster coating,
giving a spontaneous air of rusticity that does not go unnoticed.
It can be seen that there are two neighbourhoods in the village
that meet at a square; in the northern neighbourhood is the
Inmaculada Concepción church.
This
church was built in the sixteenth century. It has a Latin
cross floor plan with a wooden roof over the transept, and
the exterior is noteworthy for its Mudéjar tower with
semicircular arches on the bell level, which is covered by
a hip roof. In the church can be seen an eighteenth century
image of a Virgin of Sorrows and a polychrome wooden carving
of San Pascual Bailón, a copy by Adrián Risueño
of an original by Pedro de Mena.
Not far from the village is the Valdecilla evergreen oak tree,
which some refer to as “the mother of all evergreen oaks”.
It is a specimen that is unique to its species and has been
cited in several botanical publications. It is more than 20
metres tall and more than three metres in diameter.
How
to Get There:
From any point on the Costa del Sol go to San Pedro de Alcántara
via the AP-7 (N-340) and there take the A-376 road towards
Ronda. About 10 kilometres short of that city, turn onto the
A-519, which leads to Parauta.
Interesting
Facts:
Surface Area: 44.2 square kilometres
Population: about 250
What the natives are called: Parauteños
Monuments: the Inmaculada Concepción church, Valdecilla
evergreen oak tree, Sierra de las Nieves Nature Park
Geographical Location: in the eastern part of the Ronda region.
The municipality borders the Guadalhorce valley region and
the Western Costa del Sol. The village is 800 metres above
sea level and is 105 kilometres from the provincial capital.
The area records an average annual rainfall of 1,300 litres
per square metre and the average temperature is about 14º
C.
Tourist Information: Town Hall, Plaza del Calvario, 30 (29421).
Telephone: 952 181 028; Fax: 952 181 000