Malaga Car Hire, Malaga
rent a car, car rental Malaga Spain
Yunquera.
The
municipality of Yunquera receives the full benefit of the
extraordinary scenery and ecology of the Sierra de las Nieves
mountain range. It not only makes up a part of what is, strictly
speaking, the Sierra de la Nieves Nature Park but also of
its surroundings, which have been declared a UNESCO Biosphere
Reserve. Due to the strict rules that govern any activity
performed in this territory after this international designation,
a traveller here enters one of the most scenic and well-protected
areas in the province of Málaga.
Even
outside the boundaries of the Nature Park the lands of Yunquera
offer the traveller a number of places where the combination
of hills and valleys, and the inescapable presence of the
Spanish fir as the main species of tree, create astonishingly
beautiful sites such as can be seen in the vicinity of the
Nuestra Señora de las Nieves convent ruins on the border
of the municipality of El Burgo. Simply listing all the “unique
places” to be found within the boundaries of this municipality
would be just as tedious as speaking insistently of the powerful
attraction wielded by a territory that has received almost
all the blessings of nature. The visitor will realise all
this for himself when he begins to get close to Yunquera.
The place occupied by the village is one of the passes that
allow the eastern mountains of the Ronda highlands to be crossed
with relative ease. Taking into account also the abundant
water that flows from springs in the mountains, it is reasonable
to presume that the area was inhabited since the Prehistoric
period. It would not be until the arrival of the Romans, however,
that there was a stable settlement, and even then, it was
composed of widely scattered farmhouses and leisure villas.
Every
indication is that Yunquera never achieved a status worthy
of being called a Roman city, but rather was a community that
was cut off from the commercial and political life of that
era. There is no Roman highway, an indispensable feature for
holding the Empire together, that passes through the area,
nor are there archaeological sites showing the existence of
any kind of noteworthy construction other than the two remaining
bridges on the road to Ronda. It is known, however, that the
Romans called the place Juncaria, which means something like,
“meadow of rushes”.
The Arabs, with their proverbial reverence for water, learned
how to derive maximum benefit from the abundant flow from
the mountain springs. For this purpose, they designed a series
of gardens that were easily irrigated by an ingenious conduction
system. There has been no basic change in this agricultural
tradition, which can now be seen in areas devoted to cultivation
in the valleys of the Rivers Grande and Jorox. The tablelands,
meanwhile, are dominated by olive groves.
Although there are traces of an earlier Arabic settlement,
modern Yunquera was formed after the Christian conquest in
1485, more precisely when these lands were repopulated by
people who had come from Estepa.
Outstandings
Visits:
Inside the village, which still preserves part of its medieval
street layout, is the Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación
parish church, which is considered the church with the largest
dimensions in the Sierra de las Nieves. It was erected in
1505 but most of the masonry framework that has been preserved
is from the seventeenth century. It has three naves separated
by cruciform pillars that support semicircular arches. The
vaulted transept is crowned by a small dome with a number
of relief decorations.
The Cruz del Pobre (Poor Man’s Cross) hermitage stands next
to the village cemetery. The construction, which was completed
in 1866, reminds one of popular architecture. Its floor plan
and roof are hexagonal. An image of Cristo de la Cruz del
Pobre (Christ of the Poor Man’s Cross), who is much revered
by the Yunqueranos, overlooks the interior.
Half a kilometre from the village in the direction of El Burgo
is the Torre Vigía (Watchtower), which is now the information
centre of the Sierra de las Nieves Nature Park. It was built
in the sixteenth century and is known in Yunquera as “El Castillo”
(The Castle).
The
structure is in the shape of a truncated cone, virtually a
cylinder, and is covered by a roof in the shape of a partial
sphere. The openings in its masonry walls are extremely flared,
as this design was better for defensive purposes.
The Nuestra Señora de Porticate hermitage is a little
farther from the village, about five kilometres. It was built
in the eighteenth century but was remodelled in 1929. Its
construction is very simple, with a rectangular floor plan
and a wooden gable roof frame. Built into one of its walls
is a small octagonal “camarín” with decorated gesso
artwork on its edges. The small structure is crowned by a
painted dome of the early nineteenth century Rococo style.
Also
rather distant from the village (about four kilometres) is
the Arabic watchtower called the Torrecilla, which stands
1,700 metres from the right side of the road that goes to
Ronda. It has a circular base and is in the shape of a cylinder,
and still preserves parts of its rendering. It is 5.2 metres
in diameter and stands 11 metres tall. Its construction is
solid up to six metres above the ground, and the living quarters
began at that level.
How
to Get There:
The most advisable route to Yunquera starts at the city of
Málaga. Take the A-357 highway towards Campillos. After
about 14 kilometres, you will get to Cártama, and immediately
after that village, you must take the A-355 to Coín.
From that locality, you must continue by way of the A-366
to Alozaina. (This is the same road as the A-355 but this
stretch has a different name.) At Alozaina, continue on the
same road to Yunquera.
Interesting
Facts:
Surface Area: 55 square kilometres
Population: about 3,300
What the natives are called: Yunqueranos
Monuments: the Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación
church, Cruz del Pobre hermitage, Torre Vigía (Watch
Tower), Nuestra Señora de Porticate hermitage, the
Torrecilla watchtower and the Sierra de las Nieves mountain
range
Geographical Location: in the western part of the Guadalhorce
valley region, bordering on the Ronda region and in the heart
of the Sierra de las Nieves mountain range. The village is
680 metres above sea level and is 36 kilometres from Ronda
and 63 from the city of Málaga. Average rainfall in
the area is 910 litres per square metre and the average annual
temperature is 16.4º C.
Tourist Information: Town Hall, Plaza de la Constitución,
13 (29410). Telephone: 952 48 28 21; Fax: 952 482 905. Tourist
Office, Calle del Pozo, 17. Telephone: 952 482 609