A
series of legends
prevail regarding the origins of the town, some of which
confuse fact with fiction. Some identify Velez with Sexi,
capital of the ancient region of Sexitania, while others
attribute its founding to Beluz, the Lybian Hercules, insisting
that he gave the town his name.
A
Christian tradition claims the presence of St. Peter in
the town.
Details obtained from archaeological excavations confirm
that Velez was inhabited in prehistoric times.
The walls of a Phoenician town have been discovered near
the mouth of the River Velez on Los Toscanos Estate, and
necropolises have been located on El Jardin and La Noria
country estates.
Velez must have been an important urban centre during
the Roman era, giving refuge to settlers who had abandoned
the coast following the fall of the Empire; however, it
was during the Moslem occupation of Spain that the town
really acquired renown and importance. In the 13th century,
the fortress of Velez, along with Comares and Bentomiz,
figured as one of the most important towns in the area
corresponding to the present-day province of Malaga; proof
of this is the alliance between the Christian King Ferdinand
III, known as the Holy, and the Nazari ruler Al-Hamar.
An account by the traveller Ibn Batuta (1304-1368) describes
Velez as a prosperous town enjoying an active trading
relationship with the kingdom of Granada and the cities
of the Mediterranean via its commercial port at Mariyya
Balis -Atalaya de Velez- (Torre del Mar).
In
April 1487, it was captured by the troops of the Catholic
Monarchs . The fall of Velez Malaga was crucial to the
subsequent surrender of Malaga.
The port of Torre del Mar developed in the wake of the
Christian conquest under the protection of the castle
-part of whose walls still stand today- of Rui Lopez of
Toledo, a distinguished Castilian soldier who was awarded
this military enclave in return for his role in the capture
of Velez.
The 18th century (1704) saw one of the most important
naval battles of the War of Succession. A Franco-Spanish
fleet and the combined forces of the English and Dutch
navies locked horns in a fierce battle involving 146 ships
and almost 50,000 men. The confrontation failed to produce
a clear victor and the Anglo-Dutch contingent withdrew
to the port of Gibraltar, the French and Spanish heading
for Malaga.
Another
important episode in Velez’s history occurred during the
War of Independence, when retreating Napoleonic troops
blew up the town’s walls, which were left practically
in ruins.
The village and its municipal area were also affected
by the major tremor known as the Andalusian Earthquake
on Christmas Day 1884, suffering six mortalities and extensive
material damage.
A new stimulus, which was to change forever the whole
face of Velez-Malaga, the neighbouring dependency of Torre
del Mar and the rest of the municipal area, as well as
its inhabitants’ economic activities and way of life,
came in the second half of the 20th century, when the
progressive development of tourism, which had begun in
1960s, transformed the town into one of the Mediterranean’s
leading holiday resorts.