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The
Costa del Sol includes about 300km of the Spanish Mediterranean Coast
belonging to the Provinces of Malaga, Granada and Cadiz. Recently, the
Granada Province coastline was redesignated as the "Costa Tropical".
It is protected from the northern winds by a mountain which sometimes
reaches down to the edge of the sea. This privileged coast consists
of a series of large beaches, fishing grounds, coves half-hidden among
cliffs & sports harbours. The mild climate, scant rainfall and the
sea breeze produce a semitropical vegetation with frequent oleander,
palm-trees, cypresses, hibiscus and Pinsapo (only grows in Malaga and
Cadiz, find it on the white village Itinerary). The proximity of very
different countryside - mountains, valleys full of orchards and the
sea - is undoubtedly one of the main attractions of this coast, which
has all the attractive features of the Mediterranean scenery and culture.

As
it was easily accessible from the most important places of the ancient
Mediterranean world, at an early stage the Costa del Sol was visited by
Phoenicians, Greeks and Carthaginians. The Roman empire also moved its
tentacles towards it and left considerable traces which the traveller
can admire in the provincial and municipal museums. But it is the period
under Islamic rule which left the deepest mark, not only as regards the
oriental atmosphere of many of the villages, but also as regards the most
traditional means of earning a living: the orchard crops, an unquestionable
legacy of the wise lesson taught by their original Arab owners, and the
crafts where the Islamic roots of the techniques and designs are always
evident. The popular music and the magnificent Muslim buildings, which
the traveller must include on his visit at all costs, occupy a place of
prime importance among the characteristics of Andalusian culture and consequently
of the Costa del Sol.
Christianity
in these lands coincides with the Modern Age. Between the 16C and 18C
the cities and towns were endowed with churches and palaces by then totally
Westernised, although occasionally it is possible to discern Arab traces
in the Baroque forms of the less official art and architecture. There
the traveller finds a long series of modest rural parish churches. Visiting
them in the course of wandering through the small whitewashed streets
in every village on the Costa del Sol is almost as obligatory as getting
to know the halls, rooms and gardens of La Alhambra.
Apart
from the villages with a rural air, today there are housing developments,
yacht harbours, golf courses, centres of entertainment, night clubs, museums
& monuments, and many other tourist attractions. Fortunately, all
of them blend perfectly with the traditional, peaceful atmosphere enveloping
towns and villages, miraculously and faithfully preserved in their original
mould. However, holiday on the beach with all the attractions it may have
in this part of the Mediterranean Sea is not the only thing the Costa
del Sol has to offer: by making short trips the traveller has the opportunity
of getting to know the most genuine aspects of Andalusian culture.
In
addition to the folklore provided in the tourist centres, it is also possible
to reach the heart and soul of the popular celebrations. The fiestas,
Holy Week, flamenco competitions and bullfights are probably the best
recommendations for the travellers who are not satisfied with the first
thing they come across. Tasting the wines of the region in charming wineries
from other times and trying the pescadito (deep fried fish) prepared in
accordance with the demanding rules of popular cooking to the ever present
"international cuisine". |
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