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DENIA , a seaport of eastern See also: Spain, in the province of See also: Alicante; on the Mediterranean See also: Sea, at the See also: head of a railway from See also: Carcagente
.
Pop
.
(1900) 12,431
.
Denia occupies the seaward slopes of a See also: hill surmounted by a ruined
See also: castle, and divided by a narrow valley on the See also: south from the See also: limestone See also: ridge of Mongb (2500 ft.), which commands a magnificent view of the Balearic Islands and the Valencian See also: coast
.
The older houses of Denia are characterized by their flat Moorish See also: 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 See also: local commerce, many of the older quarters were modernized at the beginning of the loth century
.
Nails, and woollen, See also: linen and See also: esparto grass fabrics are manufactured here; and there is a brisk export See also: trade in grapes, raisins and onions, mostly consigned to See also: Great Britain or the See also: United States
.
Baltic See also: timber and See also: British See also: coal are largely imported
.
The harbour See also: bay, which is well lighted and sheltered by a See also: breakwater, contains only a small space of deep See also: water, shut in by deposits of See also: sand on three sides
.
In 1904 it accommodated 402 vessels of 175,000 tons; about See also: half of which were small fishing craft, and coasters carrying agricultural produce to See also: Spanish and See also: African ports
.
Denia was colonized by See also: Greek merchants from Emporiae (Ampurias in See also: Catalonia), or Massilia (See also: Marseilles), at a very early date; but its Greek name of Hemeroskopeion was soon superseded by the See also: Roman Dianium
.
In the 1st century B.C., See also: Sertorius made it the See also: naval headquarters of his resistance to See also: Rome; and, as its name implies, it was already famous for its See also: temple of See also: Diana, built in imitation of that at See also: Ephesus
.
The site of this temple can be traced at the See also: foot of the castle hill
.
Denia was captured by the Moors in 713, and from 1031 to 1253 belonged successively to the Moorish kingdoms ofSee also: Murcia and See also: Valencia
.
According to an See also: ancient but questionable tradition, its population See also: rose at this See also: 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 See also: loo men, and compelled to surrender, on honourable terms
.
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