The
visitor should get his camera or video recorder ready
and be prepared to shoot film like it it’s going out of
style because this village he is coming to, presents one
picture postcard scene after another.
He
won’t be able to resist the temptation to take home images
of one of the villages that best preserves the traditional
Andalusian character, without those additions and creations
that are sometimes used to try to recreate what never
existed.
This municipality’s territory penetrates the Ronda region
in the Alcaparaín (1,200 metres) and Prieta (1,521
metres) mountain ranges and approaches the River Turón.
The terrain decreases in elevation towards the central
part of the territory, where olive groves and grain fields
abound, while in the environs of the village the effects
of man’s efforts can be seen to contour the land and form
terraces that yield fruits and vegetables.Aside from a
few Neolithic relics that attest to the presence of prehistoric
man within the boundaries of Casarabonela, the most important
ancient remains are from the Roman era.
Every
indication is that the first settlement in this place
was founded by the Romans, who called it Castra Vinaria,
but this theory, credible though it is, has yet to be
proven. Nevertheless, there are remnants of the roads
that linked Casarabonela with Málaga and Ronda,
and it is a known fact that when Rome built a road the
towns that it ran through were important or useful, if
not both.
The Arabs, who never wasted an existing defensive structure,
extended and reinforced the old Roman fortress, and they
must have done it with such skill that it was the very
last fortress to fall to the Christian troops during their
battles in this region of al-Andalus. It was also the
Arabs who, from the original Roman name, derived Csar
Bonaira (Palace of Bonaira), which the Christians changed
into Casarabonela at the beginning of the sixteenth century.
fter the village was conquered and the Moors were expelled
after their armed uprising, the territory of Casarabonela
was divided between arrivals from Extremadura and other
parts of Andalusia. In 1574 Felipe II conferred upon it
the status of villa (royal burgh), as is recorded in a
document that is preserved in the municipal archives.
Outstandings
Visits:
The urban quarter of Casarabonela alone has enough attractions
to justify a prolonged visit. The Moorish ambience here
is all-pervasive. There are narrow, maze-like alleys,
gradients of varying steepness that are sometimes replaced
by steps, brilliantly white houses in the old traditional
architectural style, and secluded spaces where time seems
to shut itself away from modern worries. Not everything
is of Arabic origin, however. The Christian tradition
is obvious here in the numerous niches that, each with
its own particular saint, call attention to the devotion
of the people.
The Santiago church is also Christian. It is a former
collegiate church that was built over a mosque in the
sixteenth century in the late Gothic style and later modified
on more than one occasion. It is located in the highest
part of the village, behind the ruins of the Arabic castle,
of which part of four towers and some sections of the
wall remain. The church is divided into three naves separated
by semicircular arches that rest on quadrangular pillars.
The
most remarkable parts of this church’s interior are the
choir room and the tabernacle chapel. The altarpiece by
Rafael Ruiz Liébana overlooks the main chapel,
where the Virgen del Rosario (Virgin of the Rosary, a
painted wooden carving from the eighteenth century) is
located. The structure’s exterior is notable for the façade
with its semicircular arch and the three-level tower,
fully whitewashed and crowned by a pyramidal ceramic roof.
The Veracruz hermitage, which was expertly restored in
2000, consists of a single nave with a “camarín”(niche)
that is profusely decorated with gesso artwork and houses
the Virgen de los Rondales. On its exterior can be seen
a three-level façade and a belfry. Farther up is
the Molino de los Mizos (Los Mizos mill), a traditional
nineteenth century oil mill that still has all its gear
and tools. Not far from the urban district you can visit
Los Villares, an ancient medieval village archaeological
site. The spring in the Fuente Quebrada Cave, the La Yesera
cave, the little El Chorredón waterfall and the
La Jácara chasm are natural spaces that are worthy
of note.
How
to Get There:
The more advisable of the two access routes to Casarabonela
from the Costa del Sol is by the A-357 from the city of
Málaga to Ardales. In that village take the MA-446,
and after travelling about 12 kilometres turn onto the
MA-445, which leads to Casarabonela. The other route leaves
the A-7 (N-340) expressway on the section between the
airport and Torremolinos. the A-366, in the direction
of Coín, will take you to Alozaina, and there you
must take the A-6208 on to Casarabonela.
Interesting Facts:
Surface Area: 114.1 square kilometres
Population: approximately 2,500
What the natives are called: Moriscos
Monuments: the Santiago Church, ruins of the Arabic castle,
the Veracruz hermitage, Molino de los Mizos (Los Mizos
Mill), and the Los Villares archaeological site.
Geographical Location: in the north-western part of the
Guadalhorce valley region, bordering on the regions of
Antequera and Ronda. The village is 500 metres above sea
level and 48 kilometres from the provincial capital. The
area’s rainfall exceeds 710 litres per square metre and
the annual average temperature is 17º C.
Tourist Information: Tourist Office, Calle Real, 5 (29566).
Telephone: 952 456 067