Torrox
Interesting facts
Area: 50
Number of inhabitants: 11.000
Descent: Torroxeños
Monuments: Plaza de la Constitución, Church of Ntra. Señora de la Encarnación,
Convent of Ntra. Sra. de las Nieves, Shrine of San Roque.
Geographical situation: In the Axarquía, at the foot of the Sierra Tejeda and
Sierra Almijara, 49 kilometres from Malaga and 23 from Vélez, at 145 metres
above sea level.
Tourist information:
Town Hall, Plaza de la Constitución, 1. 29770. Phone: 952 538 200 Fax: 952 538
100
The name of the town derives from the Arabic word for a tower, but the history
of Torrox goes back a long way before Moorish times, to the 1st century A.D. We
know this from archaeological remains found in the mouth of the river Torrox.
The Phoenicians settled here, and after them, the Romans. The remains of a Roman
fish conservation factory, named Claviclum, was discovered in the area, from
where the celebrated "garum" was exported to Rome. The Moorish prince Abd-el-Rahamn
Ben Muawiya, last representative of the Omeya dynasty in flight from Damascus,
arrived in Torrox in 755, after having landed at Almuñécar, to unite with his
own Al-Andalus brethren. He then gathered a large army of men and advanced on
Archidona, where he was proclaimed Emir of the Believers in March of 756.
Abd-el-Rahman was the first independent Emir and Caliph of Cordoba, and his
dynasty lasted three centuries of culture, art, commerce and agricultural
advancement. But the population of Torrox was not happy with his rule, and
things came to a head at the end of the 9th century with the rebellion lead by
Omar Ben Hafsun against the Cordoba Caliphate. The Caliph Abd-el-Rahman laid
siege to the Castel of Torrox in 914, capturing the rebels and burning the ships
that came to their assistance on the coast. A completely Muslim population grew
up in the town in the 11th century, dependent on the Frigiliana leadership.
Torrox was conquered by the Catholic Monarchs in 1487 after the fall of Vélez
Málaga, but the victory was not consolidated until a year later. The Catholic
Monarchs awarded the town with the title "Muy Noble y Muy Leal Villa de Torrox"
(Very Noble and Very Loyal_) in the year 1503, and Queen Isabel I authorised the
building of a watch tower in the town as protection against coastal pirates. A
series of earthquakes destroyed part of the town in 1884 and 1885.
Outstanding visits
Town centre
The town centre of Torrox is exceptionally rich in historic architecture, its
narrow and winding streets reminiscent of Moorish times. The town centre is
filled with small houses built as the ground rises and falls. The central Plaza
de la Constitución has a unique collection of Roman busts on the gable ends of
the buildings, and there too is the imposing parish church.
Church of Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación
This church was built at the beginning of the 16th century over an old mosque,
and restored and enlarged in the middle of the 17th century. Its design is
Baroque, in the shape of the Latin cross. The interior is divided into three
naves, the central one in timber structuring, and outside the most interesting
item is the beautiful square tower with semicircular arches supporting a roof
with pinnacles.
Convent and hermitage of Nuestra Señora de las Nieves
This is an important work of Mudejar architecture built in the 16th century. The
ground plan of the Hermitage is the shape of the Latin cross, with naves and
side chapels, presbytery, choir and spire. The convent is built onto the
hermitage, and was founded by the Mínimos Fathers of the Order of San Francisco,
who also founded the hermitage. It has two storeys with a cloister and interior
patio. The convent was used for storing fruit in the 19th century, and later as
a police station for the Guardia Civil, up to the 1970s. Another interesting
religious building in the town is the hermitage of San Roque, dating from the
16th century. This is a simple structure with a single nave, choir and spire.
Worth a visit too are the 18th century Aduana y Casa de la Moneda (Customs House
and Mint) and the present Casa de la Cultura, built in 1863 by José Sevilla.