Surface Area: 147 square kilometres
Population: 70,437
What the natives are called: Mijeños
Monuments: the Virgen de la Peña (Virgin of the Rock) hermitage,
Inmaculada Concepción church, Plaza de Toros (Bullring), Carromato de
Max museum, Casa Museo (House Museum), Museo de las Torres Vigçías
(Watch Towers Museum)
Geographical Location: in the western Costa del Sol region. The locality is some
430 metres above sea level and is 30 kilometres from the provincial capital
and 8 from neighbouring
Fuengirola. The municipality records an average rainfall
of 660 litres per square metre and the average temperature is 17º C.
Tourist Information: Tourism Office, Plaza Virgen de la Peña, 2 (29650).
Telephone: (+34) 952 58 90 34
Fax: (+34) 952 58 90 35 E-mail:
turismo@mijas.es
The municipality of Mijas takes in all that country between the mountain range
that gives it its name and the sea. The terrain thus ascends in a short distance
and at times rather abruptly from sea level on the coast to the highest peak
in the territory (1,130 metres). The ravines, peaks and more or less gentle
hills still have part of their indigenous vegetation despite the area’s
spectacular urban development making it ever more difficult to maintain grazing
lands and olive groves, which yield little income in this day and age.
Nevertheless, the rugged nature of the landscape and a certain respect for
the surroundings have kept golf courses, brick and cement from hiding the natural
beauty of this municipality, where the mountains and the village itself continue
to be the main points of reference. The coastal zone, on the other hand, is
practically urbanised from the boundary of Fuengirola to that of Marbella with
the exception of a few rocky areas that remain intact.
This municipality, like others in the province of Málaga, has three
centres of population. In this case they are Mijas Pueblo, Las Lagunas and Cala
de Mijas. The first of these is a classic whitewashed Andalusian village of
Moorish origin that contains the monuments and the administrative centre. Most
of the municipal services and part of the building developments are in Las Lagunas
while Cala de Mijas, squarely within the coastal zone, is completely given over
to residential and beach tourism.
There are facts that confirm that Mijas used to belong to Turdetania while
other traces attest to the presence of Greeks and Phoenicians, who set about
exploiting the area’s mineral wealth. The first historic reference to
the village, however, is by the geographer Ptolemy of the School of Alexandria,
who must have been in these lands in the second century A. D. or gathered information
from someone who knew them very well, judging by how exactly he describes some
places.
The locality was called Tames during the Roman era, and there is every indication
that it generated remarkable economic activity due to its proximity to the Apian
Way that linked the cities of Cádiz and Málaga. The Arabs named
it Mixa, from which the Christians derived the modern name of Mijas.
The Muslims took over the village very soon after landing on the Iberian Peninsular.
They were already governing it in 714 and doing so quite profitably, since they
permitted the inhabitants to continue to possess their property and practice
their religion and customs in exchange for a certain percentage of the agricultural
and livestock production.
The Muslims’ good relations with the Mozarabs were obvious in the time
of the strongman Omar Ben Hafsún, with whom they maintained cordial and
beneficial relations since they needed one another mutually. With the death
of Omar Ben Hafsún, Abderramán III re-conquered the area.
Mijas resisted the attacks of the Christian army until the conquest of Málaga
in 1487. When they learned of that city’s surrender the residents of Mijas
decided that an unconditional surrender would be the best option. The emissaries
that were sent to Málaga to carry out the surrender were taken prisoner
and some were sold as slaves. In 1494 the municipality’s land was divided
among Old Christians. The locality was granted the status of “villa”
(royal burgh) in 1521 as a reward for their loyalty to Carlos I during the Comuneros
rebellion and Juana la Loca also declared it to be exempt from payment of sales
taxes (“alcabalas”).
Mijas was the scene centuries later of an important historical event that took
place on 2 December 1831. General Torrijos landed on the beach of El Charcón
with 52 companions. They went across the municipal territory towards the mountains,
from which they came down to Alhaurín de la Torre to seek shelter in
a mansion that belonged to the Count of Mollina. Days later, on 11 December,
the general and his men were executed by firing squad on the beaches of San
Andrés in the city of Málaga for having stood up the absolutism
of Fernando VII.
How to Get There
You must take the Mediterranean Expressway (AP-7; N-340) from the Costa del
Sol. If you leave Málaga going towards Cádiz once you are past
Benalmádena you must take the A-368 (the signs are very clear) to Mijas.
If you leave from Fuengirola in the direction of Málaga you must likewise
take the Mediterranean Expressway and the A-387 to Mijas.