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Periana.
The
municipality of Periana is framed in the north by the depressions
of the Alhama and Enmedio mountain ranges, with the dominant
peaks in that area being La Torca (1,499 metres), La Umbría
(1,352 metres) and El Puerto del Sol (1,100 metres). The terrain
slopes southward to the La Viñuela reservoir but first
sprawls out into hills, lower than the aforementioned heights,
and the village lies on these. Immediately afterwards the
territory forms a ravine along the course of the River Guaro
before it empties its waters into the La Viñuela reservoir,
which is the only one in this region and the largest in capacity
in the entire province of Málaga.
n
such terrain as this, which includes notably high peaks, gentler
hills of medium altitude and much lower elevations adjoining
the reservoir, and which is also creased by several rivers
(the Guaro, Seco, Vilo and Sabar), it is not strange that
there are such widely different arboreal species and such
highly diversified crops; the area’s spectacular topography
exhibits simultaneously, depending on the spot, zones of evergreen
oaks, olive groves, grain fields, pastureland, orchards-especially
of peaches-citrus fruit and carefully tended market gardens
farther down where water is close at hand.
There were human settlements in the municipality of Periana
at least since the Mousterian (Lower Paleolithic) period,
as is shown by relics found at Cerro de Alcolea, near Mondrón;
at the El Fuerte hill and in the Marchamonas shelter in the
northern zone, where there have even been some pictorial remains
found.
Remains
of Lithic workshops have also been found in the Capellanía
area adjacent to La Viñuela, a site that was inhabited
until the beginning of the Bronze Age. These findings come
as no surprise because the entire northern part of La Axarquía
was occupied by man from the Prehistoric period, and Periana
would hardly be the exception. There is nothing to indicate
there were Roman settlements, however, despite the discovery
of a coin from the late second century B. C. on the Capellanía
hill.
Nor are there records of Periana from the Arabic era, during
which it presumably was no more than a farm community that
was referred to in the chronicles of the time as simply a
place passed through by the Christian troops who arrived from
Archidona in 1487 to conquer Vélez. It would not become
an actual village until the small San Isidro Labrador hermitage
was converted into a parish church in 1761, at which time
it ceased to come under the jurisdiction of Riogordo.
The
effects of the sadly famous Andalusia Earthquake of 25 December
1884, which affected a strip of land 299 kilometres long by
70 kilometres wide, were felt with enormous force in Periana
despite the fact that it was not at the epicentre of the quake.
Many houses collapsed and 58 villagers perished. Faced with
such a disaster, King Alfonso XII visited the village in January
1885 and designated the sum of 300,000 pesetas to help repair
the damage. This amount was used to build the new church and
a neighbourhood.
Outstandings
Visits:
Since Periana is not only a village that was founded in the
eighteenth century but that has also suffered the consequences
of the extremely powerful earthquake of 1884, an event that
made necessary the reconstruction of a large number of buildings,
its urban layout does not exhibit that ancestral Moorish character
that distinguishes so many other localities in Málaga.
Nevertheless, its streets are not lacking in a certain grace,
especially the oldest ones that virtually reject straight
and horizontal lines as opposed to other, more modern streets
where the use of the surveyor’s line is evident, since no
effort was made to hold back the clock.
In
any event it is an open, friendly village, with white houses
(some with those bases so disdained by certain purists), and
secluded squares of an indisputably Andalusian style. To all
this, add a scenic viewing point commanding an impressive
expanse of La Axarquía; for this alone the village,
as a sort of point of reference in the enormity of the landscape
in which it is located, would merit a leisurely visit.
The parish church of San Isidro should be noted as an interesting
monument. It was built after the great earthquake, as was
the entire neighbourhood that surrounds it. It consists of
three naves separated by pointed arches that rest on columns,
and the exterior is of facing brick, in conformity with the
neo-Mudéjar style in which it was constructed.
Less than three kilometres from the village are the Baños
de Vilo (Vilo bathhouses), which were already being used by
the Arabs due to the curative properties of their calcerous
and nitrogen-rich waters, proclaimed, by advertising in the
late nineteenth century, as being recommended for all types
of herpes. At that time, there was a sort of bathhouse adjacent
to the spring that made use of the place. Due to certain problems
arising out of their ownership, the facilities deteriorated
and finally, after some repairs were made, a storm practically
destroyed them in 1907. Recovery work has been going on for
several years to get them back into operation.
How
to Get There:
Turn off the Mediterranean Expressway (A-7; N-340) onto the
A.335 as though going to Vélez, but without entering
that village, continue on the same road towards Alhama de
Granada. Upon arrival at El Cruce turn onto the A-6118, which
leads to Periana.
Interesting
Facts:
Surface Area: 58.5 square kilometres
Population: about 3,500
What the natives are called: Perianenses. Nickname: “Los Manga
Anchas” (“The Wide-sleeved Ones”)
Monuments: the San Isidro Labrador church, Baños de
Vilo bathhouses, headwaters of the River Guaro, and the panoramic
views of La Axarquía.
Geographical Location: in the northern part of the La Axarquía
region, on the border of the province of Granada. The village
is 550 metres above sea level. It is 23 kilometres from Vélez
and 48 from the city of Málaga. The area records an
average annual rainfall of 620 litres per square metre and
the average temperature is 16º C.
Tourist Information: Town Hall, Plaza de Andalucía,
1 (29710). Telephone: 952 536 167; Fax: 952 536 276