Totalán
Interesting facts
Area: 9,30
Number of inhabitants: 625
Descent: Totalaneños
Monuments: Church of Santa Ana, Tower of Salazar, Dolmen of the Cerro de la
Corona.
Geographical situation: In the Mountains of Malaga, 25 kilometres from Malaga
City, at 291 metres above sea level.
Tourist information:
Town Hall, C/ Pasionaria, 8. 29197. Phone: 952 400 215 Fax: 952 400 254
Totalán is in the heart of the Malaga Mountains, its western end bordering with
Moclinejo and Rincón de la Victoria. The town centre is situated on a small hill
beneath the Cerro de las Herrerías, between two small streams that flow down to
the meeting of two other bigger streams, the Totalán and the Olías.According to
Mateo Gallego, the name of the town derives from the Arabic word for cake or
tart ("torta" in Spanish), this theory based on documents that mention different
houses named Tortela, Tortila and Tortalán, because of the typical Andalusian
tarts that were made there. Totalán was left with the name but not the tarts in
question. The history of the place runs more or less parallel to that of other
towns in the area. The first documentary evidence we have of early settlements
here was to the existence of the Iberians, but there is a long gap between their
time and the re-conquest, when the town was a farm settlement. The Salazar tower
is in the southern part of the municipality, on a hill that overlooks the sea.
This was a Moorish construction, its purpose to defend the interior settlements
from the coastal pirates, and it was only one of a series of defence towers
along the entire coastline at the time. In 1492, when the conquest of Malaga was
being planned by the Christians, the Torre Totalán is mentioned. At that time
there were many mills along the river banks, and mention is also made of an "Aceyte"
mill of stone in the area.
The area was struck by phylloxera at the end of the 19th century, destroying
most of its vineyards, and the people of the town subsequently suffered economic
difficulties. Many moved to El Palo, although the peak of emigration was after
1940, when the population was 1,377. Totalán has continued to suffer de-population
since the time of the Civil War, and its population continues to live on the
cultivation of almonds and olives.
Outstanding visits
The Parish Church
The parish church of Santa Ana is the most important building in the town, and
its oldest. It is small in size, with two naves and semicircular arches along
the sides. These are supported by two Tuscan columns in red marble, whose origin
is somewhat mysterious. The tower is Mudejar in style. The church was built
between 1505 and 1510, although the present structure dates from the 17th
century. A Moorish arch joins the building with some houses alongside, creating
a narrow passageway that is reminiscent of a Moorish past.
Torre de Salazar
The Tower of Salazar is a defensive structure that forms part of the defensive
line of the coast, along with the Tower of Totalán.
Dolmen of the Cerro de la Corona
Situated about 600 metres from the town centre we find the funeral site of the
Cerro de la Corona, dating from the 4th and 3rd centuries B.C. Studies carried
out on it over recent years reveal the remains of human skeletons and ceramic
pieces there, being the last resting place of at least ten people aged from
three to forty five years.