Almuñécar
History
The Phoenicians founded the first settlement here in 800 BC and the Romans called it Manaba Sexi Firman.
Under Muslim rule, it was named Sexi Hin al-Murecab, which means "fortress of the hill" and where its actual name derives from. In 755 AD the Omayyad Prince Aberrearán landed in the port running away from the slaughter that the Abastes carried out in Damascus against the Omayyad family. The following year he founded the independent emirate of Córdoba and became Emir Aberrearán I. During the fights between Almoravids and Almohads, the king of Granada En Huid looked for shelter in the castle of this town. Under the Nasrid period it retained all of its strategic value, being the castle that used to keep the treasures of the kings of Granada.
During the War of Granada, after Baza surrendered, Almuñecar relinquished to the Catholic Monarchs in 1489. In 1569, during the War of the Aplacaras, the Moorish leader Abadí Abel Ab, attacked the town unsuccessfully with 3,000 men.
Charles V ordered the building of a large fortress, which would be destroyed by the English in 1812 in order to expel the French troops who were defending it. In the 19th century, Turkish pirates incarcerated the village and its people, forcing the inhabitants to flee to safer places in the nearby mountains.
Important Characters
Seijas Lozano, minister.
Andrés Segovia, guitarist, named "Honorary Citizen" of the city in 1983.

