February 9, 2010


Where To Go?

-Towns & Cities

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The Beaches of La Safor
The visitor to the region of La Safor finds himself in an attractive area with a history of its own, nestling in a natural environment whose characteristics are twofold: the high mountains which form the ranges of Mustalla, Safor, Grossa and Aguilles blend into a natural circle of pinnacles and woodland, while the plain is crossed by an accommodating coastal corridor of market gardens and beaches. Gandía, the ducal town and regional capital, grew up between the River Serpís and the Gully of San Nicolás in the space created by an early Iberian settlement. In the fifteenth century, the town
found a new role for itself in the form of intense court activities, fanned and supervised by Juan de Borja, Second Duke of Gandía. Alexander VI, the Borja Pope, marked out this destiny for the capital of La Safor when he bought the land from Ferdinand the Catholic to assign it to his son, Pedro Luis. From that time onwards, the fate of this prosperous town, then engaged in the manufacture of silk and sugar, was interwoven with the lust for power and intervention in European affairs which fuelled the saga of the Borjas. Amongst all of the Borjas, it was to St. Francis of Borja, the Jesuit general, born in Gandía, the
great-grandson of Alexander VI and Fourth Duke of Gandía, that the ducal town linked its destiny. St. Francis moved away from the moral turmoil of other members of the family to devote his time to the fostering of culture and virtuous coexistence. So as to consolidate the cultural life which had been nurtured years before by the poet Ausias March, the novelist Joanot Martorell and the humanist Joan Rois de Corella, he founded the Gandía University of the sixteenth century.
The present-day town centre has preserved the heritage of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in the symbolic buildings of the Ducal Palace, the Collegiate Church, the Convent of Santa
Clara, the Hermitage of Santa Ana, the Archaeological Museum and the Town Hall. The Collegiate of Santa Maria was built little by little between 1250 and 1520, with the Gothic style as its constant reference point. Originally, the Door of the Apostles featured sculptures by the master, Damià Forment. The Ducal Palace was built on the foundations of an old rambling Arabian house, close to the left bank of the River Serpis. The Italianising influence is obvious and is accounted for by the close connections which the Borjas maintained with Italy. The archaeological Museum, located in the Hospital of San Marcos, has an elegant Gothic room with pointed arches, known as the Men’s Hall.
The second most important
town in the region of La Safor is
Oliva, situated a few kilometres
to the south on the provincial
border with Alicante. Countless
visitors are attracted by its
welcoming, clean beaches and
the number of campsite places
available. The ancestral home of
the Enlightenment scholar,
Gregorio Mayans, stands today
in the town centre. The
Centelles family, who owned
the town in the sixteenth
The beach at Gandía
The Ducal Palace. Gandía
century, also left their mark. The
popular quarters are to be
found on the side of the Cerro
de Santa Ana, while the hustle
and bustle converges on the
beaches of Daimús, Miramar
and Guardamar. The inland
valleys of the region of La Safor,
protected from the wind and
inclement weather by Mount
Mondúver (841 metres), along
with the northern area, known
as La Valldigna, make up
another attractive route
through the mountains. The trip
begins on the outskirts of
Gandía, on the byroad leading
to the municipal district of Barx.
As one leaves Marxuquera, one
has a first glimpse of the groves
of orange trees which have
replaced the leafy pinewoods of
former times. The entrance to
the Parpalló Cave, on the inner
side of the Mondúver, may be
seen towards the right from the
road. This cave is an
archaeological bed which is
indispensable for the
reconstruction of Upper
Palaeolithic life. The route
continues up the Drova Valley,
where the ascent of the
Mondúver commences. The
town of Barx used to be the
summer resting place of the
monks who lived in the
Monastery of Valldigna.
Encompassed by fountains and
engaged in the cultivation of
fruit trees, almond trees and
citrus fruits, it enjoys mild
temperatures on account of its
altitude whereas, down on the
plain, the climate is hot.
Leaving this scenic view and the
surrounding mountains behind,
which may be appreciated from
a spot with the tuneful name of
Visteta, a winding road leads
down to La Valldigna. According
to local tradition, the monarch,
James II, while visiting the place
with the Catalonian abbot,
Boronat de Vilaseca, exclaimed
that this was a vall digna
(literally, a worthy valley) for a
monastery. As a result, he
founded the Monastery of Our
Lady of Valldigna towards the
end of the thirteenth century.
With the help of the Valencian
government, it has been
possible to recover this valuable
part of the heritage which for
centuries was administered by
the monks of the Cistercian
Order.
Monastery of Simat de Valldigna
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