Malaga Car Hire, Malaga
rent a car, car rental Malaga Spain
Villanueva
de Algaidas.
Most
of the surface of the municipality of Villanueva de Algaidas,
which on its northeast side borders the province of Córdoba,
is free from extremes of terrain; this is gently rolling country
with a few hills interrupting here and there as though to
prevent a completely level horizon. Well into the southern
part of the municipality, the terrain becomes more rugged
and rises to heights of around 1,000 metres as in the case
of the Arcas and Pedroso mountains (948 and 1,024 metres,
respectively).
On
the highest elevations brush is plentiful and there are still
a few remnants of ancient live oak forests, but the rest of
the landscape is characterised by extensive olive groves and
grain fields and by the numerous farmhouses that add scattered
splashes of white to the lands devoted to those crops.
It appears that the caves in the El Pedroso mountains were
inhabited in prehistoric times, which is to be expected as
there were human settlements in this part of Málaga
from such ancient times that their ages are hard to calculate.
The age of the Los Alcaides necropolis, however, has been
computed to be 3,500 years. This is an archaeological site
that is, like the caves in the Arcas mountains and in the
aforementioned El Pedroso mountains, proof of the passage
of prehistoric man through this area.
These
antecedents notwithstanding, the origin of the modern village
is much more recent, in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth
centuries, to be precise. Before that time the Duke of Osuna,
owner of these lands at the time, had authorised the construction
of a Franciscan convent adjacent to the Burriana stream. That
building is in ruins today but is worth a visit.
As occurred in other places around a fortress or castle, here
it was the Franciscan convent that attracted several incipient
population centres. Over time, they developed the need for
governmental organisation that could only be furnished by
a municipal government that could arbitrate disputes between
these communities scattered around what at the time was called
La Rinconá.
The first village was located a little more than a kilometre
from the modern one, at a place known today as La Atalaya,
and other neighbourhoods sprang up adjacent to areas that
were favourable for a particular type of crop. La Atalaya,
La Rinconá, Zamarra, Albaicín and Parrilla are
some of those neighbourhoods that eventually formed the modern
village of Villanueva de Algaidas. Its Town Hall was established
in 1843 after it was separated from Archidona.
Outstandings
Visits:
When the visitor arrives in the village, he will see that
its relatively recent origin does not keep the locality from
exhibiting the traditional aspect of an Andalusian village.
Its urban plan is perhaps a little more regular than those
of villages of Moorish origin but it has the unmistakable
atmosphere of the region in which it is located.
The ruins of the Franciscan convent, which was the origin
of the first community, are this locality’s only historic
building. This convent, called Nuestra Señora de Consolación
de las Algaidas (Our Lady of Consolation of Las Algaidas),
was founded in 1566 by the first Duke of Osuna, Pedro Téllez
Girón, under the auspices of Francisco Blanco, at that
time the Bishop of Málaga.
The cave church of Villanueva de Algaidas near the Franciscan
convent has been dated to between the ninth and tenth centuries.
It consists of three naves, the largest of which has a rectangular
floor plan, barrel vault and a shallow apse. There is an opening
on each side of it that gives access to another two naves,
one of which probably served as the sacristy or baptistery,
judging from its stone trough.
How
to Get There:
Go to the city of Málaga via the Mediterranean Expressway
(A-7; N-340) and there take the A-45 (N-331) expressway towards
Antequera. On the outskirts of that city continue on the same
A-45 to the A-92 and take it in the direction of Archidona.
Shortly before you get to that village turn onto the A-6201,
which goes to Villanueva de Algaidas. All the changes are
very well marked all the way from Málaga and it is
hard to go wrong.
Interesting
Facts:
Surface Area: 74.5 square kilometres
Population: about 4,200
What the natives are called: Algaideños
Monuments: the Franciscan convent of Nuestra Señora
de Consolación de las Algaidas, the cave church, Los
Alcaides necropolis and the Museo Berrocal (Berrocal Museum)
Geographical Location: in the north-western part of the Antequera
region, on the border between Málaga and Córdoba.
The village is 540 metres above sea level. It is 11 kilometres
from Archidona, 30 from Antequera and 70 from the provincial
capital. The area receives 625 litres of precipitation per
square metre and the average annual temperature is about 15.6º
C.
Tourist Information: Town Hall, Constitución, 16.Telephone:
952 743 002; Fax: 952 743 400