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Periana
| AREA |
58.5 Km² |
| ALTITUDE ABOVE SEA LEVEL |
547 m |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL |
620 l/m² |
| 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. |
| POPULATION CENSUS IN 1994 |
3,485 |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMP. |
16 ºC |
| TOURIST INFORMATION |
Town Hall, Plaza de Andalucía, 1 (29710).
Telephone: 952 536 167; Fax: 952 536 276 |
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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.
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By Periana, the sierra takes a rest in small hills
and long smooth slopes, to deepen in ravines which
fall to the Guaro river, before this widens into
the Viñuela reservoir. From among Holm-oaks which
hang on to the rocks, you can contemplate one of
the most spectacular panoramas of the Axarquía. When
you descend from the sierra, the surroundings are
of smooth slopes covered with olives, pastures and
cereals. And where water is available, fruits (especially
peaches) are joined to the panorama and increase
as the plots approach the river's banks. There, there
is an abundance of orange and lemon trees which makes
this area one of the most productive. There is no
local handicraft, but there are various olive businesses
in Periana and in the adjacent Mondrón, where they
say it has the best oil in Malaga. The peaches also
have a recognized prestige.
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.
In 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.
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.
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