This
municipality contains five urban centres between the River
Manilva and the border of the province of Cádiz
that originated in different eras and among which the
population is distributed: the actual village of Manilva,
Sabinillas, El Castillo, Hondacavada and El Puerto de
la Duquesa, as well as various housing developments that
are in a state of constant and orderly growth.
The
landscape, far now from the rugged interior of the province,
displays the topographic features of the nearby Campo
de Gibraltar (Gibraltar area) being a succession of low
hills creased by short streams that empty directly into
the sea (Alcorrín, Martagina, Indiano, Estanquillo,
etc). On one of these hills, specifically that of Los
Mártires, sits the village at less than three kilometres
from the coast.
It is known that these lands were covered with vineyards
at least since the sixteenth century and they continue
to be, but they do not constitute the only crop as there
are also areas devoted to grain, vegetables, fruit trees
and pastures. The last two are more abundant the closer
one gets to the River Guadiaro on the border of the province
of Cádiz.
Manilva’s
location, very close to the Straits of Gibraltar, has
meant that practically every culture that has passed through
the Iberian Peninsular has also passed through this territory.
There is no doubt that since the Neolithic period there
has been uninterrupted human settlement of one sort or
another right up to the present time. There are late Neolithic
remains in some caves in the Utrera mountain range, and
at the Cerro del Castillo archaeological site Bronze Age
remains have been found.
But here again it was the Romans who left the most tangible
traces of their culture, such as the Roman villa of Sabinillas,
the ruins of what apparently was a tower on the El Hacho
hill, and some ceramics at Haza del Casareño. The
sites from the Muslim domination are found in the interior,
rather far from the coast.
Beginning with the sixteenth century the history of Manilva
parallels that of Casares, the county to which it belonged
at that time. The lack of security in this area of the
Mediterranean during that century was a danger to many
communities, causing Málaga, Gibraltar and Ronda
to ask Carlos V to urge the Duke of Arcos to provide more
protection and to set up a town on the coast.
In 1528 Carlos V ordered the construction of a tower at
El Salto de la Mora, and shortly afterwards half a hundred
residents of Casares set up residence on the Los Mártires
hill. These would be the first settlers of the original
Manilva, which would continue to be subordinate to Casares
until 1796, the year it achieved its independence.
Outstandings
Visits:
This municipality’s most notable historic and artistic
monument is the Castillo de la Duquesa (Castle of the
Duchess), also known as the Fortín de Sabinillas
(Sabinillas fort). It was built on a place that the aforementioned
Roman villa must have occupied. The position commands
a broad view of the coast, which is why it was built on
this site in 1767 to defend the area from the continual
pirate incursions. A resident of Seville, Francisco Paulino,
financed the construction and the King compensated him
by placing him in command of a cavalry company. The engineer
Miguel del Castillo was in charge of the design and execution
of the project. The present Santa Ana church was built
in the eighteenth century over an earlier and smaller
late-sixteenth century church of which almost no records
survive. The present building dates from the mid-eighteenth
century and measures 36 metres long by 20 metres wide.
It was modified in the mid-nineteenth century. The Torres
de Chullera (Chullera towers) are a type of structure
intended for watching over the coastal zone. One of them
is from the Nazarite period and the other is somewhat
more modern. Both were used for various purposes over
the course of their history.
How
to Get There:
From any point on the Costa del Sol, take the Mediterranean
expressway towards Cádiz. Beginning at Estepona
there are two options: either continue on the aforementioned
AP-7 expressway, or else get onto the old coastal highway
N-340. In either case, the signs for Manilva will leave
no doubt, but you must take the A-377. The village is
very close to the coast and halfway between the two aforementioned
routes.
Interesting Facts:
Surface Area: 35.3 square kilometres
Population: about 7,500
What the natives are called: Manilveños
Monuments: the La Duquesa castle (or Sabinillas fort),
Santa Ana church and the Chullera towers
Geographical Location: This is the western-most municipality
on the Costa del Sol and therefore borders on the province
of Cádiz. It is 97 kilometres from the city of
Málaga and 35 from Gibraltar. The average annual
rainfall in the area is 750 litres per square metre and
the average temperature is 17º C.
Tourist Information: Town Hall, Calle Mar, 34 (29691).
Telephone: 952 890 065; Fax: 952 890 066. Tourist Office:
Carretera Sabinillas-Manilva, Kilometre 0m50. Telephone:
952 890 845; Fax: 952 890 845