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Guide to Andalucia > Destinations > Grazalema > Historical
background
GRAZALEMA. Historical background
The
town is of Arabic origin, first named Gran Zulema, from which
we get the modern name. In the last years of the 700-year
Reconquest, it was taken by the army of the Duke of Arcos
de la Frontera in 1485. This small town experienced a huge
industrial and economic boom in the 17th century (at one
point acquiring the nickname ‘Cádiz el Chico’, ‘little
Cádiz’) thanks largely to its textile trade,
which produces even today, with the wool trade in decline,
the famous Grazalema blankets. It is also alleged to be the
rainiest place in Spain, due to its altitude and position
between Atlantic and Mediterranean weather systems (the rain
gauge for Grazalema averages 2.132 mm over the year). Certainly,
no one ever went bust selling umbrellas in Grazalema.
Excavations around Grazalema and its environs have produced
archeological evidence of human settlement and activity since
prehistory, possibly the same Paleolithic culture that left
cave art at the nearby Pileta cave system at Benaoján.
Undoubtedly, and given the evidence of these vestiges of
earlier cultures, the early history of the region dates back
to and beyond the Roman colonization of the Mediterranean
basin.
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Rural tourism?
All that you need
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Everything about the Sierra de Grazalema.
heres>> |
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Museums and places of interest in Grazalema here>> |
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Spectacles, fairs and fiestas of Grazalema here>> |
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Maps of Grazalema.
Getting there here>> |
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Ornithology in Grazalema
here>> |
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With the legions of the Roman general Scipio, defeater of
Hannibal, came the building of the 2nd century Roman villa
of Lacilbula on the hillside at the Cortijo de Clavijo, just
outside Grazalema. The name of the river here, the Guadalete,
has been linked to the river Cilbus, referred to by Roman
historians, and the villa, of which only vestiges remain,
was likely part of a fortified settlement.
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Marbella

Conil

Grazalema

El Rompido

La Herradura
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