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Torrox
| AREA |
50 Km² |
| ALTITUDE ABOVE SEA LEVEL |
145 m |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL RAINFALL |
532 l/m² |
| WHAT THE NATIVES ARE CALLED |
Torroxeños. Nickname: Hocicones |
| MONUMENTS |
The Roman complex of El Faro de Torrox (Roman villa,
bathhouses, necropolis, etc.), the Nuestra Señora
de la Encarnación parish church, the Nuestra
Señora de las Nieves hermitage and convent,
San Roque church, Casa de la Moneda (Mint) |
| GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION |
In the southern part of the region of La Axarquía,
at the foot of the Tejeda and Almijara mountain ranges.
The village is 40
kilometres from the city of Málaga and 20 from
Vélez Málaga. |
| POPULATION CENSUS IN 1994 |
10,819 (approx 17,000 in 2004) |
| AVERAGE ANNUAL TEMP. |
19 ºC |
| TOURIST INFORMATION |
Town Hall, Plaza de la Constitución, 1 (29770).
Telephone: 952 538 200; Fax: 952 538 100. Office of
Tourism: Centro Internacional, Bloque 769 Bajo (29793).
Telephone: 952 532 155; Fax: 953 530 225 |
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The Torrox valley presents a special scenic
attraction, as the plots on the banks of
the rivers are joined by others
which climb the steep hillsides of the nearby
hills in terraces, forming huge green 'staircases' of
vegetables and fruits among which there are
subtropical crops.
As the valleys open up
to the coast, the agriculture extends
from east to west of the municipality with
crops by means of greenhouses, allowing the
sale of high market value products out of season.
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In the town, of Arabic origin, there are the remains
of turrets and walls. The urban structure of Torrox
is totally Moorish, with narrow, steep and windy
streets, and steps. There we can find unexpected
corners with the typical contrast between the whitewashed
walls and the flower filled pots. This municipality’s terrain is so rugged that
it seems to positively abhor level land, being an
endless succession of ravines and hills. Due to their
proximity to the sea, the hills do not rise to great
altitudes. Their highest points such as La Rábita
de Torrox and the Cocoja, which abound in low brush,
are not more than 700 metres high. The Torrox stream,
which the villagers also call Patalamara, La Plata
or Argentino, crosses the municipality from north
to south and its waters are used to the full for
irrigation before they empty into the sea at Punta
de Torrox.
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| The municipality
has nine kilometres of sandy beaches along which
lie the population centres
of Torrox Costa and El Morche.A polished axe from
the Neolithic period has been found at the hamlet
of Los Casarones, some two kilometres north of the
village, proving that there were already human settlements
in this area at that time. It probably was also colonised
by Punics or Phoenicians, considering the proximity
of the Trayamar and Mezquitilla archaeological sites
in Algarrobo Costa.
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This continues to be
just a hypothesis, however, since so far no remains
have been found
to prove it. There is no room for doubt, however,
of the strong Roman presence in the area known as
Faro
or Punta de Torero. Substantial remains have been
found there of
the city of Caviclum, which was founded in the first century and remained active
at least until the eighth century. It was around the middle of that century that
Omeya Abderramán established himself in Torrox after landing at Almuñécar,
and he would shortly afterwards establish the independent Caliphate of Córdoba.
Some
historians identify Torrox as Hisn Turrus, where in the year 914 troops
under Abderramán III defeated those of Omar
Ibn Hafsun, the Muladí rebel who had set out
to topple the Caliphate of Córdoba. After
this event, Torrox came under the jurisdiction of
Frigiliana. It is known that throughout the long
Muslim domination the village was an important silk
producer, which is why its irrigated lowlands were
devoted to raising mulberry trees.
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The fall of Vélez
to the Christian troops in 1487 had such an effect
on the region that many other localities surrendered
without a fight in order to prevent greater problems.
Torrox did so on 29 April 1487, just two days after
the taking of Vélez. Very shortly afterwards,
however, the chieftain El Zagal recaptured the village
for the Muslims, in whose hands it would remain only
a few months before passing again into the control
of the Christian.
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When the Morisco rebellion broke out in 1568, half the population was made up
of Old Christians and the other half of Moriscos. Many of the latter took part
in the El Peñón de Frigiliana insurrection. By the year 1571 at
least 22 Moriscos from Torrox had been prosecuted by the Tribunal del Santo Oficio
(Holy Office Tribunal) of Granada. It is documented that the members of the Quilat
family were burned at the stake, accused of professing the Mohammedan religion.
The significant participation by the Moriscos of this area in the uprising resulted
in stern repression that caused the abandonment of the eight Arabic settlements
that made up the municipal territory: Alhandiga, Almeida, Arcos Benamayor, Cajauja,
Lautín, Lugarejo and Periana (a different locality from the modern one).
During the eighteenth century the local economy was based on sugar cane production,
to which more than 80 per cent of the arable land in the municipality was devoted,
and there were two sugar mills. The El Faro de Torrox ruins were discovered in
1773, at which time the municipal population was about 3,000.
Torrox entered the nineteenth century with an epidemic of yellow fever in 1804
that decimated the population. A few years later it suffered the occupation by
the Napoleonic troops, who in 1812 “bade farewell” to the village
by blowing up the castle. Nevertheless, the municipality was experiencing unusual
prosperity in the middle of the century. At that time it had two olive oil mills,
two potteries, three flour mills, a brandy distillery and the sugar mill that
belonged to the Larios family.
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How to Get
There
The turning for Torrox is clearly marked
on the Mediterranean Expressway (A-7
or N-340) on the stretch between Vélez
Málaga and Nerja, and that road
will lead straight to there with no further
changes.
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