Online Encyclopedia

MALAGA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 460 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MALAGA  , the

capital of the province of Malaga, an episcopal see, and, next to
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Barcelona, the most important seaport of Spain, finely situated on the Mediterranean coast, at the
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southern
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base of the Axarquia hills and at the eastern extremity of the fertile vega (plain) of Malaga in 36° 43' N. and 4° 25' W . Pop . (1900), 130,109 . From the clearness of its sky, and the beautiful sweep of its
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bay, Malaga has sometimes been compared with Naples . The
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climate is one of the mildest and most equable in
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Europe, the mean
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annual temperature being 66.7° Fahr . The
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principal railway inland gives access through Bobadilla to all parts of Spain, and a-branch
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line along the coast to Velez-Malaga was opened in 1908 . Malaga lies principally on the
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left
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bank of a mountain torrent, the Guadalmedina ("
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river of the city "); the streets near the sea are spacious and comparatively
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modern, but those in the older
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part of the
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town, where the buildings are huddled around the ancient citadel, are narrow, winding and often dilapidated . Well-built suburbs have also spread on all sides into the rich and pleasant country which surrounds Malaga, and several acres of
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land reclaimed from the sea have been converted into a public park . There are various squares or plazas and public promenades; of the former the most important are the Plaza de
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Riego (containing the monument to General Jose Maria Torrijos, who, with
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forty-eight others, was executed in Malaga on the rtth of December 1831, for promoting an insurrection in favour of the constitution) and the Plaza de la Constitucion;adjoining the quays is the
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fine Paseo de la
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Alameda . The city has no public buildings of commanding architectural or
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historical importance . The
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cathedral, on the site of an ancient mosque, was begun about 1528; after its construction had been twice interrupted, it was completed to its
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present state in the 18th century, and is in consequence an obtrusive record of the degeneration of
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Spanish architecture . The woodwork of the choir, however, is worthy of attention .

The

church of El Cristo de la Victoria contains some relics of the siege. of 1487 . There are an
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English church and an English cemetery, which
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dates from 1830; up to that
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year all Protestants who died in Malaga were buried on the
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foreshore, where their bodies were frequently exposed by the
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action of wind and sea . Of the old Moorish
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arsenal only a single horse-shoe gateway remains, the rest of the site being chiefly occupied by an iron structure used as a market; the Alcazaba, or citadel, has almost disappeared . The castle of Gibralfaro, on a bold eminence to the north-east dates from the 13th century, and is still in fairly good preservation . During the 19th century so much silt accumulated in the harbour that vessels were obliged to lie in the roads outside, and receive and discharge cargo by means of lighters; but new harbour
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works were undertaken in 1880, and large
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ships can now again load or discharge at the quays, which are connected with the main railway
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system by a branch line . About 2150 ships of 1,750,000 tons enter at Malaga every year . Iron, lead, wine, olive oil, almonds, fresh and dried fruit,
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palmetto hats and canary seed are exported in large quantities, while the imports include grain, codfish, fuel, chemicals, iron and steel, machinery,
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manures and staves for casks . Although trade was impeded during the early years of the loth century by a succession of
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bad harvests and by the disastrous floods of September 1907, the number of
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industries carried on in and near Malaga tends steadily to increase . There are large cotton mills, iron foundries, smelting works and
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engineering works . Pottery, mosaic, artificial stone and tiles are produced chiefly for the home market, though smaller quantities are sent abroad . There is a chromo-lithographic establishment, and the other industries include tanning, distilling and the manufacture of
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sugar,
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chocolate,
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soap, candles, artificial . ice, chemical products, white lead and pianos .
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Foreign capital has played a prominent part in the development of Malaga; a French
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syndicate owns the
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gas-works, and the electric
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lighting of the streets is controlled by
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British and German companies .

Malaga is the MaAaKa of

Strabo (iii . 156) and Ptolemy (ii . 4, 7) and the Malaca foederatorum of Pliny (iii . 3) . The place seems to have been of some importance even during the Carthaginian period; under the Romans it became a municipium, and under the Visigoths an episcopal see . In 711 it passed into the possession of the Moors, and soon came to be regarded as one of the most important cities of Andalusia . It was attached to the
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caliphate of Cordova, but on the fall of the Omayyad dynasty it became for a short time the capital of an
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independent
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kingdom; afterwards it was dependent on Granada . In 1487 it was taken and treated with
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great harshness by Ferdinand and Isabella after a protracted siege . In 1810 it was sacked by the French under General Sebastiani . The citizens of Malaga are noted for their opposition to the
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Madrid government; they took a prominent part in the movements against Espartero (1843), against Queen Isabella (1868) and in favour of a republic (1873) .

End of Article: MALAGA
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Additional information and Comments

For information about a suggested walking route around the city of Malaga, and further information about the city's history, readers might like to look at www.guide-to-malaga.co.uk Brian
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