Online Encyclopedia

DENIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 21 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DENIA  , a seaport of eastern

Spain, in the province of
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Alicante; on the Mediterranean Sea, at the head of a railway from Carcagente . Pop . (1900) 12,431 . Denia occupies the seaward slopes of a hill surmounted by a ruined castle, and divided by a narrow valley on the south from the
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limestone ridge of Mongb (2500 ft.), which commands a magnificent view of the Balearic Islands and the Valencian coast . The older houses of Denia are characterized by their flat Moorish
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roofs (azoteas) and view-turrets (miradores), while fragments of the Moorish ramparts are also visible near the harbour; owing, however, to the rapid extension of
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local commerce, many of the older quarters were modernized at the beginning of the loth century . Nails, and woollen,
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linen and esparto grass fabrics are manufactured here; and there is a brisk export trade in grapes, raisins and onions, mostly consigned to
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Great Britain or the
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United States . Baltic
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timber and
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British
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coal are largely imported . The harbour
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bay, which is well lighted and sheltered by a
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breakwater, contains only a small space of deep
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water, shut in by deposits of sand on three sides . In 1904 it accommodated 402 vessels of 175,000 tons; about
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half of which were small fishing craft, and coasters carrying agricultural produce to
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Spanish and
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African ports . Denia was colonized by Greek merchants from Emporiae (Ampurias in Catalonia), or Massilia (
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Marseilles), at a very early date; but its Greek name of Hemeroskopeion was soon superseded by the
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Roman Dianium . In the 1st century B.C., Sertorius made it the
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naval headquarters of his resistance to Rome; and, as its name implies, it was already famous for its temple of
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Diana, built in imitation of that at Ephesus . The site of this temple can be traced at the
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foot of the castle hill .

Denia was captured by the

Moors in 713, and from 1031 to 1253 belonged successively to the Moorish kingdoms of
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Murcia and Valencia . According to an ancient but questionable tradition, its population rose at this period to 50,000, and its commerce proportionately increased . After the city was retaken by the Christians in 1253, its prosperity dwindled away, and only began to revive in the 19th century . During the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–14), Denia was thrice besieged; and in 1813 the citadel was held for five months by the French against the allied British and Spanish forces, until the garrison was reduced to loo men, and compelled to surrender, on honourable terms .

End of Article: DENIA
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