Surface Area: 8.3 square kilometres
Population: 4,062
What the natives are called: Arriateños
Monuments: the San Juan de Letrán parish church
Geographical Location: in the
Ronda highlands, 6 kilometres from that city and
120 from the city of
Málaga. The village sits 600 metres above sea level.
The average annual rainfall is 718 litres per square metre and the average temperature
is 15.5º C.
Tourist Information: Town Hall, Plaza de la Emigración Arriateña, s/n (29350).
Telephone: (+34) 952 165 096
Fax: (+34) 952 165 141 E-mail:
info@arriate.es
The small municipal area of Arriate on the north and west, borders the River
Guadalcobacín, a tributary of the Guadiaro that imparts a peaceful and
leafy landscape to the lands closest to it. The rest of the territory is used
mainly for olive groves and grain fields, which share the space with fruit orchards
and vegetable gardens. The Las Cumbres (911 metres) and Salinas (954 metres)
mountain ranges, although outside the municipal boundaries, from their heights
frame a zone that, due to its location entirely within the Ronda depression,
is quite flat.
Several caves on either side of the River Guadalcobacín reveal the presence
of man in this region during the Palaeolithic period. No cave paintings have
been found in them, but rather some stone axes that prove the existence of human
settlement in that age. This is understandable due to the nature of the surroundings,
which have an abundance of water and gentle terrain, with forests and mountains
that would have made both hunting and primitive man’s first agricultural
activity easier.
Its proximity to two such important sites as Acinipo and Ronda leads one to
think that Arriate was the stage for more than one interesting historical event,
but there is no documentation of such. The first verified fact is the battle
of Arriate in 1407, when the castle commandant of Cañete La Real left
his fortress in the care of his son and came to the assistance of the nearby
locality of Setenil, which was under threat from the Muslims. The Muslims took
advantage of the occasion to attack Cañete, resulting in the death of
the son of the commandant. As an act of revenge Hernando de Arias laid an ambush
for the Arabic troops within the boundaries of Arriate.
It is obvious that this village has an Arabic origin. Even the name Arriate
derives from Arriadh, meaning a space with fruit trees and flowers and which
is an apparent reference to a farmstead that existed in the place. It was not
until 1630, however, that the Arriateños were able to separate from Ronda,
for which privilege they had to pay 352,739 reals.
How to Get There
To get to Arriate from the Costa del Sol you must take the old N-340 or the
AP-7 expressway to San Pedro de Alcántara and there take the A-376, which
leads to Ronda. There take MA-478 to Arriate.