Almería
Country: Spain · 205,468 inhabitants
Attractions
- Alcazaba y Murallas del Cerro de San Cristóbal
- Iglesia Catedral de Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación
- Museo de Almería
- Castillo de San Telmo
- Centro Andaluz de la Fotografía
- Murallas del Cerro de San Cristóbal
- Museo de Arte de Almería
- Museo del Realismo Español Contemporáneo
- Puerta de Almería archaeological site
- Antonio de Torres Spanish Guitar Museum
Wikivoyage
Almería is a city in Andalucia, also called "the Hollywood of Spain".
Wikipedia
Almería (UK: , US also , Spanish: [almeˈɾi.a] ) is a city and municipality of Spain, located in Andalusia. It is the capital of the province of the same name. The city lies in southeastern Iberia, extending primarily in between the eastern fringes of the Sierra de Gádor and the Andarax riverbed along the coastline of the Gulf of Almería, a large inlet of the Mediterranean Sea. The municipality has a population of 201,946.
Caliph Abd al-Rahman III founded the city in 955. The city grew wealthy during the Islamic era, becoming a world city throughout the 11th and 12th centuries. It enjoyed an active port that traded silk, oil, and raisins. This period was brought to an end with the 1147 conquest of the city by a Christian coalition. Control over Almería switched hands over the rest of the middle ages. In the early modern period, with the onset of Barbary piracy, the ethnic cleansing of moriscos in the Kingdom of Granada, and several natural calamities, urban decay accrued. The 19th-century reactivation of mining activity (lead) in the hinterland fostered commercial activity and demographic growth.
Key road routes include the A-7 connecting Almería to the rest of the Spanish Mediterranean coast and the A-92 connecting the city to Granada and inner Andalusia. Almería is served by a medium-sized airport and a port with a growing specialization in passenger and ro-ro transport with the North of Africa (Algeria and Morocco).
Being adjacent to a small desert, Almería has an exceptionally dry climate by European standards.