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Full Information on the Towns and Villages of the Axarquia


El Borge

AREA 25.7 Km²
ALTITUDE ABOVE SEA LEVEL 237 m
AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL 580 l/m²
WHAT THE NATIVES ARE CALLED Borgeños
MONUMENTS The Nuestra Señora del Rosario church, Arco de la Pasa (Raisin Arch), Fuente del Cuerno (El Cuerno fountain), and the El Rinconcillo neighbourhood
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION In the western part of the region of La Axarquía, adjoining the Málaga Mountains. It is 24 kilometres from Vélez Málaga and 28 from the provincial capital.
POPULATION CENSUS IN 1994 1,071
AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMPERATURE 16.6 ºC
TOURIST INFORMATION Town Hall: Plaza de la Constitución, 1 (29718). Telephone: 952 512 033
Any reference to El Borge is necessarily a reference to raisins, since it is not for nothing that nearly half its municipal territory is devoted to this crop, making it one of the pillars of its economy - hence its title 'The Raisin Capital'. Its territory borders with the Montes de Málaga and the Axarquía regions, in a common landscape of ravenous hills covered in vines and olives. The abundance of vines, sometimes give way to frequent "paseros" (places where raisins are laid out to dry), which are a very characteristic element of the Axarquía.

El Borge is situated at the foot of Cerro Cútar (595 m.) and next to the Cútar river. There, where the relief is smoother there are cereal cultivations, irrigated citrus, fruits and vegetables in the valley plots. The village sits at the foot of the Cerro Cútar hill, which rises to 595 metres, and next to the river that bears the same name as the municipality. This territory, situated between the Málaga Mountains and the La Axarquía region, is remarkable for the many hills that cross it, most of which have been contoured into terraces to permit grape cultivation. Grain fields are to be seen on the more level areas, and along the river citrus groves, fruit orchards and vegetable gardens proliferate.

The configuration of the village can be attributed to the unwritten but customarily followed rule of the wise and distinctive traditional architecture of the mountainous regions of Andalusia: that a terrain that does not permit easy development for human use must be adapted to the activities of its inhabitants. This explains the steep ramps and even the use of steps to connect one street to another. These are architectural devices that, without trying, impart to the urban layout the charm of the spontaneous and even at times the almost unbelievable.
The village’s origin, or at least its name, which derives from the Arabic Al Burch (tower or bulwark), dates from the Muslim era. Nothing is known of earlier settlements, and there are no archaeological sites to show the sign of earlier civilisations. It is reasonable to think, nevertheless, that the history of this locality has played out in very similar circumstances to that of the nearest villages, such as Cútar, Comares and Almáchar, which made up the judicial district of Cuatro Villas (the Four Royal Burghs).
The chronicles do, however, record the stubborn resistance that the inhabitants put up to the Christian presence after the conquest, a resistance that translated into emphatic support for the sixteenth century Moorish uprising. Help was provided from El Borge for the rebels to flee to the Alpujarra Mountains of Granada, and some of its residents even came to be spokesmen of the rebellion. It all ended with the corregidor (magistrate) of Vélez Málaga, Arévalo de Zuarzo, sending a detachment to put down the continuing challenges to authority.
With the final expulsion of the Moors the village was practically abandoned and it was necessary to repopulate it with long-time Christians who came from other regions, including Bilbao, Segovia and Asturias, and this caused a long-term slowdown in the economic activity of the region.
In the mid-seventeenth century the locality suffered the ravages of the plague, which decimated the population, and in the last third of the nineteenth century when the village had its greatest density of population the appearance of the phylloxera pest on the one hand and the “Andalusia earthquake” (1884) on the other negatively impacted the development of the municipality.
How to Get There

There are several ways to get to El Borge; all are to be recommended for their scenery but some are none too comfortable for the number of curves they have. The most advisable route is to get off the Mediterranean Expressway (A-7; N-340) onto the A-335 in the direction of Vélez Málaga. Once you are past that locality, take the MA-145 and later the MA-178 to the vicinity of Almáchar, and turn there onto the MA-148, which leads to El Borge

 

 


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