Marbella

For the automobile, see SEAT Marbella.
Marbella
Municipality

Marbella in early-September 2009

Flag

Seal

Location of the municipality of Marbella in Province of Málaga
Marbella

Location in Andalusia

Coordinates: 36°31′0″N 4°53′0″W / 36.51667°N 4.88333°W / 36.51667; -4.88333Coordinates: 36°31′0″N 4°53′0″W / 36.51667°N 4.88333°W / 36.51667; -4.88333
Country  Spain
Autonomous community  Andalusia
Province Málaga
Comarca Costa del Sol Occidental
Government
  Type Mayor-council
  Body Ayuntamiento de Marbella
  Mayor José Bernal Gutiérrez (PSOE)
Area
  Total 114.3 km2 (44.1 sq mi)
  Land 114.3 km2 (44.1 sq mi)
  Water 0.00 km2 (0.00 sq mi)
Population (2012)
  Total 140,473
  Density 1,228/km2 (3,180/sq mi)
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Website www.marbella.es

Marbella (/mɑːrˈbjə, -ˈvɛljə, -ˈvɛjə/;[1][2] Spanish: [maɾˈβeʝa], locally: [maɾˈβeʝa]) is a city and municipality in southern Spain, belonging to the province of Málaga in the autonomous community of Andalusia. It is part of the Costa del Sol and is the headquarters of the Association of Municipalities of the region; it is also the head of the judicial district that bears its name.

Marbella is situated on the Mediterranean Sea, between Málaga and the Strait of Gibraltar, in the foothills of the Sierra Blanca. The municipality covers an area of 117 square kilometres (45 sq mi) crossed by highways on the coast, which are its main entrances.

In 2012 the population of the city was 140,473 inhabitants,[3] making it the second most populous municipality in the province of Málaga and the eighth in Andalusia. It is one of the most important tourist cities of the Costa del Sol and throughout most of the year is an international tourist attraction, due mainly to its climate and tourist infrastructure.

The city also has a significant archaeological heritage,[4] several museums[5][6] and performance spaces,[7] and a cultural calendar[8] with events ranging from reggae concerts[9] to opera performances.[10]

Geography

The Marbella municipality occupies a strip of land that extends along forty-four kilometres (27 miles) of coastline of the Penibético region, sheltered by the slopes of the coastal mountain range, which includes the Bermeja, Palmitera, Royal, White and Alpujata sub-ranges. Due to the proximity of the mountains to the coast, the city has a large gap between its north and south sides, thus providing views of the sea and mountain vistas from almost every part of the city. The coastline is heavily urbanised; most of the land not built up with golf courses has been developed with small residential areas. Map of Marbella. Marbella is bordered on the north by the municipalities of Istán and Ojén, on the northwest by Benahavís, on the west by Estepona and on the northeast by Mijas. The Mediterranean Sea lies to the south.

Topography

Dunes of Artola, the Sierra Blanca in the background

There are five geomorphological units: the Sierra Blanca, the Sierra Blanca piedmont (foothills), the lower hill country, the plains and the coastal dunes.[11] The Sierra Blanca is most centrally located in the province, looming over the old village. This mountain range has three peaks: La Concha, located further west at 1,215 m above sea level, Juanar Cross, located eastward (within the municipality of Ojen) at 1,178 m above sea level, and the highest, Mount Lastonar, located between the two at 1,270 metres. Marbella's topography is characterised by extensive coastal plains formed from eroded mountains.[12] After the plain lies an area of higher elevations of between 100 and 400 m, occupied by low hills, behind which rise the foothills and steeper slopes of the mountains. The coast is generally low and sandy beaches that are more extensive further east, between the fishing port and the Cabopino. Despite the intense urbanisation of the coast, it still retains a natural area of dunes at the eastern end of town, the Artola Dunes (Dunas de Artola).

Hydrography

The La Concepción reservoir

The entire region lies within the Andalusian Mediterranean Basin. The rivers are short and have very steep banks, so that flash floods are common.[13] These include the Guadalmina, the Guadaiza, the Verde and the Rio Real, which provide most of the water supply. The irregularity of rainfall has resulted in intermittent rivers that often run dry in summer; most of the many streams that cross the city have been bridged. The La Concepción reservoir supplies the population with drinking water; apart from this there are other reservoirs like El Viejo and El Nuevo (the Old and the New) that irrigated the old agricultural colony of El Ángel, and Las Medranas and Llano de la Leche that watered the plantations of the colony of San Pedro de Alcántara.

Climate

Marbella is protected on its northern side by the coastal mountains of the Cordillera Penibética and so enjoys a microclimate with an average annual temperature of 18 °C (64 °F). The highest peaks of the mountains are occasionally covered with snow, which usually melts in a day or two. Average rainfall is 628 l/m², while hours of sunshine average 2,900 annually.[14]

Flora and fauna

Playa de Cabopino (Cabopino beach) of the Dunas de Artola

Because most of the mountain areas around Marbella cannot be managed by the City Council and they are under the management of the central government, remnants of the land in its natural state are still preserved in the mountains, where there are chestnut and cherry trees, reforested firs, Aleppo, Monterrey and maritime pines; pinyons, and ferns. The fauna is represented by golden eagles, Bonelli's eagles, short-toed eagles, hawks, falcons, vultures, genets or musk cats, badgers, wild goats, deer, martens, foxes and rabbits.[15]

The coast has the Natural Monument site of the Dunas de Artola, one of the few protected natural beaches of the Costa del Sol, which contains marram grass, sea holly, sea daffodils and shrubs such as large-fruited juniper.[16] A highlight of the marine ecosystem of the sea around Marbella is Posidonia oceanica, a plant endemic to the Mediterranean, found in the Cabopino area.[17]

Demographics

Marbella urbanisation: much of the population is dispersed in low density developments.

According to the census of the INE for 2011, Marbella had a population of 135,124 inhabitants,[18] which ranked it as the second most populous city in the province of Málaga and eighth in Andalusia after surpassing Cádiz in 2008.[19][20] Unlike other towns in the Costa del Sol, Marbella had a significant population before the population explosion caused by the tourist boom of the 1960s. The census counted about 10,000 people in 1950; population growth since has been as spectacular as that of neighboring towns. Between 1950 and 2001 the population grew by 897%, with the decade of the 1960s having the highest relative increase, at 141%. In 2001, only 26.2% of Marbella's population had been born there, 15.9% were foreign-born, and those born in other towns in Spain made up the difference. During the summer months the population of Marbella increases by 30% with the arrival of tourists and foreigners who have their second homes in the area.[21]

The population is concentrated in two main centres: Marbella and San Pedro Alcántara; the rest is scattered in many developments in the districts of Nueva Andalucia and Las Chapas, located along the coast and on the mountain slopes. According to a study by the Association of Municipalities of the Costa del Sol, based on the production of solid waste in 2003, Marbella had a population of about 246,000 inhabitants, almost twice that of the population census of 2008. From the estimated volume of municipal waste in 2010, the City calculates the population during the summer months at around 400,000 people, while official police sources estimated it at about 500,000, with a peak of up to 700,000 people.

Gentilic names

Traditionally the people of Marbella have been called "marbelleros" in popular language, and "marbellenses" in the liturgy; these names have appeared in dictionaries and encyclopedias. Since the mid-1950s, however, Marbellan residents have been called "marbellís" or "marbellíes", the only gentilic, or demonym, that appears in the Diccionario de la Lengua Española (Dictionary of the Spanish Language) published by the Royal Spanish Academy.[22]

The use of "marbellí" as a gentilic was popularised by the writer and journalist Victor de la Serna (1896–1958), who wrote a series of documentary articles on "The Navy of Andalucía"; in his research he had come upon the Historia de Málaga y Su Provincia (History of Málaga and the Province) by Francisco Guillén Robles, who used the plural word "marbellíes" to designate the Muslim inhabitants of Marbella.[23]

History

Prehistory and antiquity

Remains of the Roman bridge of Marbella

Archaeological excavations have been made in the mountains around Marbella which point to human habitation in Paleolithic and Neolithic times. Some historians believe that the first settlement on the present site of Marbella was founded by the Phoenicians in the 7th century BC, as they are known to have established several colonies on the coast of Málaga province. However, no remains have been found of any significant settlement, although some artefacts of Phoenician and later Carthaginian settlements have been unearthed in different parts of the municipality, as in the fields of Rio Real and Cerro Torrón.[24]

The existence of a Roman population centre in what is now the El Casco Antiguo (Old Town) is suggested by three Ionic capitals embedded in one section of the Murallas del Castillo (Moorish castle walls), the reused materials of a building from earlier times. Recent discoveries in La Calle Escuelas (School Street) and other remains scattered throughout the old town testify to a Roman occupation as well. West of the city on the grounds of the Hotel Puente Romano is a small 1st century Roman Bridge over a stream.[25] This bridge was part of the ancient Via Augusta that linked Rome to Cádiz. There are ruins of other Roman settlements along the Verde and Guadalmina rivers: Villa Romana on the Rio Verde (Green River), the Roman baths at Guadalmina, and the ruins of a Roman villa and an early Byzantine basilica at Vega del Mar, built in the 3rd century and surrounded by a paleo-Christian necropolis, later used as a burial ground by the Visigoths. All of these further demonstrate a continued human presence in the area. In Roman times, the city was called Salduba (Salt City).[26]

Middle Ages

Moorish defensive walls of Marbella

During the period of Islamic rule, after the Normans lay waste to the coast of Málaga in the 10th century, the Caliphate of Córdoba fortified the coastline and built a string of several lighthouse towers along it. In the Umayyad fashion[27] they constructed a citadel, the Alcazaba, and a wall to protect the town,[28] which was made up of narrow streets and small buildings with large patios, the most notable buildings being the citadel and the mosque. The village was surrounded by orchards; its most famous crops were figs and mulberry trees for silkworm cultivation. The current name may have developed from the name the Arabs gave it: Marbal·la (مربلة),[29] which may in turn derive, according to some linguistic investigations, from a previous Iberian place name. The traveller Ibn Battuta characterised it as "a pretty little town in a fertile district."[30][31] During the time of the first kingdoms of Taifa, Marbil-la was disputed by the Taifas of Algeciras and of Málaga, eventually falling into the orbit of Málaga, which in turn later became part of the Nazarid Kingdom. In 1283 the sultan Marinid Abu Yusuf launched a campaign against the Kingdom of Granada. Peace between the Marinid dynasty and the Nasrid dynasty was achieved with the signing of the Treaty of Marbella on 6 May 1286, by which all the Marinid possessions in Al-Andalus were restored to the Nazarid sultan.[32]

Early modern age

Partial view of the main façade of the Casa del Corregidor, built in the 16th century in the Plaza de los Naranjos

On 11 June 1485 the town passed into the hands of the Crown of Castile without bloodshed. The Catholic Monarchs gave Marbella the title of city and capital of the region and made it a realengo (royal protectorate). The Plaza de los Naranjos was built along the lines of Castilian urban design about this time, and some of the historical buildings that surround it, as well. The Fuerte de San Luis de Marbella (Fort of San Luis) was built in 1554 by Charles V. The main door faced north and was protected by a moat with a drawbridge. Today, the ruins of the fort house a museum, and on the grounds are the Iglesia del Santo Cristo de la Vera Cruz (Church of the Holy Christ of the True Cross) and Ermita del Calvario (Calvary Chapel). Sugar cane was introduced to Marbella in 1644, the cultivation of which spread on the Málaga province coast,[33] resulting in the construction of numerous sugar mills, such as Trapiche del Prado de Marbella.

19th century

In 1828 Málaga businessman Manuel Agustín Heredia founded a company called La Concepción[34] to mine the magnetite iron ores[35] of the Sierra Blanca at nearby Ojén, due to the availability of charcoal made from the trees of the mountain slopes and water from the Verde River, as a ready supply of both was needed for the manufacture of iron. In 1832 the company built the first charcoal-fired blast furnace for non-military use in Spain;[36] these iron-smelting operations ultimately produced up to 75% of the country's cast iron. In 1860 the Marqués del Duero founded an agricultural colony, now the heart of San Pedro de Alcántara.[37] The dismantling of the iron industry based in the forges of El Angel and La Concepción occurred simultaneously, disrupting the local economy, as much of the population had to return to farming or fishing for a livelihood. This situation was compounded by the widespread crisis of traditional agriculture, and by the epidemic of phylloxera blight in the vineyards,[38] all of which accounted for Marbella's high unemployment, increase in poverty, and the starvation of many day labourers.

Marqués del Duero

The associated infrastructure built for the installation of the foundry of El Angel in 1871 by the British-owned Marbella Iron Ore Company[39] temporarily relieved the situation, and even made the city a destination for immigrants, increasing its population. However, the company did not survive the worldwide economic crisis of 1893, and closed its doors in that year due to the difficulty of finding a market for the magnetite iron ore removed from its mine.[40]

In the late 19th century, Marbella was a village composed of three parts: the main districts, the Barrio Alto or San Francisco, and the Barrio Nuevo. There were three smaller nuclei arranged around the old ironworks and the farm-model of the colony of San Pedro Alcántara, as well as isolated dwellings in orchards and farms. The general population was divided between a small group of oligarchs and the working people, the middle class being practically non-existent.

20th century

In the early decades of the century the first hotels were built: the El Comercial, which opened in 1918, and the Miramar, which opened its doors in 1926.[41] During the Second Republic, Marbella experienced major social changes and contentious political parties mobilized.

As the Spanish Civil War began, Marbella and Casare suffered more anticlerical violence than the rest of western Málaga province. The day after the failed uprising that led to the civil war, several religious buildings were set fire to in Marbella. Only the walls of the Church of St. Mary of the Incarnation and the Church of San Pedro Alcantara were left standing.[42] With the aid of Fascist Italian troops, Nationalist forces seized Marbella during the first months of the war. It became a haven for prominent Nazis, including Léon Degrelle and Wolfgang Jugler, and Falangist personalities like José Antonio Girón de Velasco[43] and José Banús.[44]

After the Second World War, Marbella was a small jasmine-lined village with only 900 inhabitants. Ricardo Soriano, Marquis of Ivanrey, moved to Marbella and popularised it among his rich and famous friends.[45] In 1943 he acquired a country estate located between Marbella and San Pedro called El Rodeo, and later built a resort there called Venta y Albergues El Rodeo, beginning the development of tourism in Marbella.[46]

Soriano's nephew, Prince Alfonso of Hohenlohe-Langenburg, descendant of a high-ranking aristocratic family (his mother María de la Piedad de Yturbe y Scholtz-Hersmendorff, was the Marquesa de Belvís de las Navas) acquired another estate, Finca Santa Margarita. In 1954 he opened it as the Marbella Club, an international resort aimed at movie stars, business executives and the nobility. Both these resorts would be frequented by members of European aristocratic families with famous names: Bismarck, Rothschild, Thurn und Taxis, Metternich, de Mora y Aragon, de Salamanca or Thyssen-Bornemisza, thereby transforming Marbella into a destination for the international jet set.[45] Trading on Prince Alfonso's kinship to the royal courts of Europe, the hotel quickly proved to be popular with vacationing members of Europe's social elites for its casual but discreet luxury. Jaime de Mora y Aragón, a Spanish bon vivant and brother to Fabiola, Queen of the Belgians, as well as Adnan Khashoggi and Guenter Rottman, were frequent visitors.[47][48] Prince Alfonso's first marriage was to Princess Ira von Fürstenberg, an Agnelli heiress. Princess Marie-Louise of Prussia (great-granddaughter of Kaiser Wilhelm II) and her husband Count Rudolf "Rudi" von SchönburgGlauchau eventually took over the Marbella Club Hotel from Prince Alfonso.[49]

Luxury car parked in Puerto Banús

In 1966, Prince Alfonso brought in a Beverly Hills architect and, with the assistance of the Banus family, who were personal friends of dictator Francisco Franco and had already developed the later-controversial Valle de los Caídos, developed the high-end tourist resort Puerto Banus. The resort opened to much fanfare in 1970. Celebrities in attendance included Franco's designated successor, Juan Carlos (then Prince of Asturias), Prince Rainier of Monaco and his wife Grace Kelly, and Aga Khan IV; entertainers included Julio Iglesias. In 1973, exiled dictator Fulgencio Batista y Zaldívar, who had left Cuba with a fortune estimated at between $100 and $300 million and lived extravagantly in various Iberian resorts, died of a heart attack there. Fugitive financier Marc Rich bought a house in Marbella, renounced American and claimed Spanish citizenship during his decades of evading American income taxes,[50] although he spent more time (and died) in Switzerland.

In 1974, Prince Fahd arrived in Marbella from Montecarlo.[51] Until his death in 2005, Prince Fahd was a frequent and profligate guest; Marbella welcomed his retinue of over a thousand people spending petro-dollars.[52] The then-anonymous Osama bin Laden visited on a number of occasions with his family between 1977 and 1988.[53]

King Fahd of Saudi Arabia. His entourage used to spend up to 5 million euros a day in Marbella.

In the 1980s, Marbella continued as a popular jet set destination. However, the 1987 kidnapping of Melodie Nakachian, the daughter of local billionaire philanthropist Raymond Nakachian and the Korean singer Kimera, focused less-favourable international media scrutiny on Marbella, even though a police raid ultimately freed her.[54]

From the first democratic elections after the adoption of the 1978 Spanish Constitution, until 1991, all the mayors of Marbella were members of the Spanish Socialist Workers Party ('El Partido Socialista Obrero Español' or PSOE in Spanish).[55]

In 1991, the builder and president of Atlético Madrid, Jesús Gil y Gil was elected mayor of Marbella by a wide majority. He and his party, the neo-conservative Independent Liberal Group ('Grupo Independiente Liberal' or GIL in Spanish), promised to fight petty crime as well as the region's declining prestige. Actor Sean Connery became Marbella's international spokesman, although Connery later ended this business relationship after Gil used his image in an election campaign. Gil's administration facilitated a building boom. However, critics complained about disregard for the existing urban plan, market speculation and environmental predation by developers; the regional Andalusian government suspended some development. Gil despised town-hall formalities, instead ruling from his office at the Club Financiero, and cultivated a maverick image. The PSOE and the People's Party criticized Gil even at the national level, but voters re-elected him—and Spanish celebrities continued to spend summers there. Gil's political party, GIL, also proved popular in other tourist-dependent Costa del Sol towns like Estepona, and even across the Strait of Gibraltar to the Spanish North African cities of Ceuta and Melilla.

In 1999, Gil was convicted of embezzling public funds and falsifying public documents.[56] Gil died in 2004, and his party remained in power until 2006, but related scandals continue to this day, as discussed below.

Landmarks and places of interest

Map of the old town with its main buildings

Old Town (Casco Antiguo)

The old town of Marbella includes the ancient city walls and the two historical suburbs of the city, the Barrio Alto, which extends north, and the Barrio Nuevo, located to the east. The ancient walled city retains nearly the same layout as in the 16th century. Here is the Plaza de los Naranjos, an example of Castilian Renaissance design, its plan laid out in the heart of Old Town after the Christian reconquest.[57] Around the square are arranged three remarkable buildings: the town hall, built in 1568 by the Catholic Monarchs in Renaissance style, the Mayor's house, which combines Gothic and Renaissance elements in its façade, with a roof of Mudejar style and fresco murals inside, and the Chapel of Santiago, the oldest religious building in the city, built earlier than the square and not aligned with it, believed to date from the 15th century. Other buildings of interest in the centre are the Church of Santa María de la Encarnación, built in the Baroque style starting in 1618, the Casa del Roque, and the remains of the Arabic castle and defensive walls; also in the Renaissance style are the Capilla de San Juan de Dios (Chapel of St. John of God), the Hospital Real de la Misericordia (Royal Hospital of Mercy) and the Hospital Bazán which now houses the Museum of Contemporary Spanish Engravings.

Ermita del Santo Cristo

One of the highlights of the Barrio Alto is the Ermita del Santo Cristo de la Vera Cruz (Hermitage of the Holy Christ of the True Cross), built in the 15th century and enlarged in the eighteenth century, which consists of a square tower with a roof covered by glazed ceramic tiles. The Barrio Alto is also known as the San Francisco neighborhood, after a Franciscan convent formerly located there. The so-called Nuevo Barrio (New Town), separated from the walled city by the Arroyo de la Represa, has no monumental buildings but retains its original layout and much of its character in the simple whitewashed houses with their tiled roofs and exposed wooden beams, orchards and small corrals.[58]

Historic extension (Ensanche histórico)

Constitution Park

Between the old town and the sea in the area known as the "historic extension" (ensanche histórico), there is a small botanical garden on Paseo de la Alameda, and a garden with fountains and a collection of ten sculptures by Salvador Dalí on the Avenida del Mar, which connects the old town with the beach. To the west of this road, passing the Faro de Marbella, is Constitution Park (Parque de la Constitución), which houses the auditorium of the same name and the Skol Apartments, designed in the Modernist style by the Spanish architect Manuel Jaén Albaitero.

Marbella's Golden Mile

What is known as Marbella's Golden Mile is actually a stretch of four miles (6.4 km) which begins at the western edge of Marbella city and stretches to Puerto Banús. The area is exclusive and home to some of Marbella's most luxurious villas and estates with spectacular views of mountain and sea, such as the Palace of King Fahd, as well as some landmark hotels,[59] among them the Melia Don Pepe, the Hotel Marbella Club and the Hotel Puente Romano. The area developed during the tourism boom of the 1960s, where may be found the ruins of the Roman villa by the Rio Verde,[60] and El Ángel, where the land of the old forge works was converted to an agricultural colony, and the Botanical Gardens of El Ángel with gardens of three different styles, dating from the 8th century.

The Golden Mile is divided into two parts by a motorway that runs through it. Along the motorway are strings of business centres, five-star hotels, golf course and other services. The beachside of the motorway is fully developed, while the mountain side is still undergoing development. Urbanisations in the area's sea side are Alhambra del Mar, La Alcazaba, Las Torres, Los Verdiales, Marbellamar, Marina Marbella, Oasis, Rio Verde and Santa Margarita. On the Mountain side of the motorway, the following urbanisations are currently developing: Sierra Blanca, Nagüeles, Cascada de Camoján, Jardines Colgantes, Marbella Hill Club, El Venero, El Batatal, La Capellania, La Virginia, Carolina, El Vicario, Altos de Salamanca, Casas del Señorio de Marbella, Coto Real, Ancon Sierra.[61]

The Golden Mile should not be confused with the New Golden Mile which is a marketing name given to the area between San Pedro del Alcantara and Estepona.[62]

Nueva Andalucía

Nueva Andalucía is an area just west of Marbella and inland from the marina of Puerto Banús. Home to many Golf Courses it is also known as Golf Valley. The bullring by Centro Plaza marks the entrance to Nueva Andalucia where the villas and apartments are based on traditional Andalusian architecture and design.[63]

San Pedro de Alcántara

At the heart of San Pedro de Alcántara are two industrial buildings of the 19th century: the Trapiche de Guadaiza and the sugar mill, which now houses the Ingenio Cultural Centre. The 19th century heritage of San Pedro is also represented by two buildings of colonial style, the parish Church and the Villa of San Luis, residence of the Marqués del Duero. Next to San Pedro, near the mouth of the river Guadalmina, are some of the most important archaeological sites in Marbella: the early Christian Basílica de Vega del Mar, the vaulted Roman baths of Las Bóvedas (the Domes) and the eponymous watch tower of Torre de Las Bóvedas.[64] The important archaeological site of Cerro Colorado is located near Benahavis; it features a chronologically complex stratigraphy that begins in the 4th century BC within a Mastieno (ancient Iberian ethnicity of the Tartessian confederation) area, then a town identified as Punic, and finally a Roman settlement. A series of domestic structures built behind the city walls, and corresponding to these different stages of occupation recorded in the archaeological sequence of the site, characterise the settlement as being fortified. A hoard of three pots filled with silver coins of mostly Hispano-Carthaginian origin, and numerous pieces of precious metalwork, along with clippings and silver ingots, all dating from the 3rd century BC, were found here.[65]

District of Las Chapas

In the eastern part of the municipality in the district of Las Chapas is the site of Rio Real, situated on a promontory near the mouth of the river of the same name. Here traces of Phoenician habitation dating to the early 7th century BC were discovered in excavations made during an archaeological expedition led by Pedro Sánchez in 1998.[66][67] Bronze Age utensils including plates, carinated bowls, lamps and other ceramics of Phoenician and indigenous Iberian types have been found, as well as a few Greek examples. There are two ancient watchtowers, the Torre Río Real (Royal River Tower) and the Torre Ladrones (Tower of Thieves). Among the notable tourist attractions is the residential complex Ciudad Residencial Tiempo Libre (Residential Leisure City),[68] an architectural ensemble of the Modernist movement, which has been a registered property of Bien de Interés Cultural (Heritage of Cultural Interest) since 2006.

Beaches

The beach-front in Marbella

The 27 kilometres (17 miles) of coastline within the limits of Marbella is divided into twenty-four beaches with different features; however, due to expansion of the municipality, they are all now semi-urban. They generally have moderate surf, golden or dark sand ranging through fine, medium or coarse in texture, and some gravel. The occupancy rate is usually high to midrange, especially during the summer months, when tourist arrivals are highest. Amongst the various notable beaches are Artola beach, situated in the protected area of the Dunas de Artola, and Cabopino, one of the few nudist beaches in Marbella, near the port of Cabopino. The beaches of Venus and La Fontanilla are centrally located and very popular, and those of Puerto Banús and San Pedro Alcántara have been awarded the blue flag of the Foundation for Environmental Education[69] for compliance with its standards of water quality, safety, general services and environmental management.

Politics and administration

Political administration of the municipal government is run by the Ayuntamiento (City Hall), whose members are elected every four years. Maria Angeles Muñoz, leader of the People's Party (PP) in Marbella, became mayor in 2007, and her party has governed the town ever since. The electoral roll is composed of all residents registered in Marbella who are over age 18 and a citizen of Spain or one of the other member states of the European Union. The Spanish Law on the General Election sets the number of councilors elected according to the municipality's population;[70] the Municipal Corporation of Marbella consists of 27 councilors.

Gil Cases

Corruption accusations and mayor Gil's further conviction in 2002 for diverting public funds to Atlético led to reappraisal of the city's finances. When Jesús Gil y Gil finally resigned that year, he was succeeded by Julián Muñoz, his right-hand man, a former waiter famous for his romantic involvement with singer Isabel Pantoja, a matador's widow.[71] After a power struggle in which Muñoz fired Juan Antonio Roca Nicolas, a planning consultant, for involvement in the Gil-era scandal and in the later scandal discussed below, the city council censured the new mayor and expelled him from office. More than 79 companies and 85 individuals were implicated in the initial corruption scandal (for which Roca had been released from prison upon paying a 450,000 euro fine), and an additional fifty persons and more companies were convicted in June 2013. In a televised debate, Muñoz and Gil each accused the other of having robbed public funds.[72]

After his own party repudiated Muñoz, Marisol Yagüe, a former secretary, became Marbella's new mayor, but was herself arrested and jailed in March 2006. Deputy Mayor Isabel Garcia Marcos was arrested at Malaga's airport en route to a honeymoon in Russia at this time, and police found over €360,000 in cash in a safe in her home.[73] Garcia, a Socialist until her expulsion from that party in 2003, had been known for criticizing Marbella's endemic corruption. Gil died in 2004, a year after Spain's Supreme Court barred him from holding further public office for 28 years for breach of trust and influence-peddling in the earlier cases, as well as shortly after a lower court ordered him to surrender his Atlético shares and fined him $16 million in connection with the 2002 conviction (but allowed him to remain free on bail during his appeal).[71][74]

Operation Malaya

In March 2006, Marbella seemed nearly bankrupt. City councilor Tomás Reñones, a former Atlético Madrid football player, ran Marbella after Mayor Yague and Deputy Mayor Garcia were jailed, but soon ended up in jail as well. On 8 April 2006, the Spanish Senate unanimously approved the report of the General Commission of Autonomous Communities and suspended the city council, the first time such a course of action had occurred in Spain since democracy's restoration.[75] Spain's Prime Minister, José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, head of the national PSOE, appointed a committee of auditors to run Marbella temporarily, as well as unravel the financial machinations.

After a short period of interim government, municipal elections were held in May 2007. For the first time, the People's Party (PP) gained a majority, with 16 out of the 27 council seats. The PSOE won 10 council seats, United Left (IU) had 1.[76] In the municipal elections of May 2011, the PP won 15 seats, the PSOE 7, the IU 2, and three independents elected.[77][78]

City Hall in Plaza de los Naranjos

The investigation, known as the Operation Malaya case, has resulted in numerous convictions and the seizure of goods worth 2.4 million euros.[79] Today "Marbellan urbanism" is synonymous in Spain with governmental corruption, with as many as 30,000 illegal homes built in the town, without significant educational and health infrastructure.[80]

During the complex, three-year trial (which included over 300 hours of hearings and 400 witnesses), evidence showed that under a scheme masterminded by Roca (a formerly unemployed builder who ran the city's planning department in the 1990s), building permits were issued in exchange for envelopes of cash, and the money then illegally laundered. Although prosecutors had sought even stiffer terms after convicting 50 municipal officials and business executives, in October 2013, Roca was sentenced to 11 years in jail and fined 240m euros, former mayor Muñoz sentenced to six years, and former mayor Yagüe sentenced to serve two years in prison. Forty of the 95 accused were found not guilty by the Malaga court.[81][82]

The corruption investigation that led to this round of convictions began in 2005, as an investigation into drug moneylaundering.[83] Roca reportedly claimed to control the town after Gil's death. At the height of his wealth he was one of the richest men in Andalucia, having accumulated several hotels, ranches with more than 103 thoroughbred horses and fighting bulls, a private jet, a helicopter, 14 vintage cars, 5 kilos of jewellery and a 275 piece art collection including Miro paintings.[84] However, although Marbella's population had boomed to approximately 160,000 residents during the previous fifteen years, neither additional schools nor health centres were built; the city's infrastructure remained virtually unchanged since 1991. Although the city expanded its workforce from 400 employees in 1991 to 3,200 in 2006, under the GIL administrations Marbella paid neither social security contributions nor taxes for its employees. The town's debt now exceeds over 200 million euros and precludes necessary infrastructure improvements. Hundreds of the poorly built apartments and homes, many sold to expatriate British and Irish retirees, face demolition as hazardous. Investigating magistrate Miguel Angel Torres Segura, who led the investigations through 2007, was promoted to the criminal court in Granada.[84]

Symbols

The design of the coat of arms and the flag used by Marbella City Hall has been the subject of controversy. According to some sources, GIL changed these symbols without any consensus or heraldic rigour, nor had they been vetted by the Junta de Andalucía, so that different factions claim the rehabilitation of the shield granted by the Catholic Monarchs to the city in 1493 and official recognition of a flag designed in accordance with prevailing standards of vexillology.

Economy

Hotel Don Pepe, designed by Eleuterio Población, opened in 1963

According to 2003 data, Marbella is amongst the municipalities ranking highest in household disposable income per capita in Andalusia, second to Mojácar and matched by four other municipalities, including its neighbour, Benahavís.

Its business sector consisted of 17,647 establishments in 2005, representing a total of 14.7% of the businesses in Malaga province, and showed greater dynamism than the provincial capital itself for growth over the period 1998-2004, when it grew 9% compared to the 2.4% growth rate of Málaga. Compared to the rest of Andalusia, the volume of production in Marbella is higher than that of most other municipalities with similar population, ranking even above the capitals of Almeria, Huelva and Jaen.

As in most cities of the Andalusian coast, Marbella's economy revolves around tertiary activities. The service sector accounts for 60% of employment, while trade accounts for almost 20%. The main branches of the service sector are hospitality, real estate and business services, which fact underscores the importance of tourism in the Marbella economy. Meanwhile, the construction, industrial and agriculture sectors account for 14.2%, 3.8% and 2.4% of employment respectively.

The number of business establishments in the service sector accounts for 87.5% of the total, those in construction account for 9.6%, and in industry, 2.9%. Of these companies, 89.5% have fewer than 5 employees and only 2.3% have a staff of at least 20 employees.

In 2008 a study by the Institute of Statistics of Andalusia (IEA) based on 14 variables (income, equipment, training, etc.), found Marbella was the Andalusian city with the best development of the general welfare and the highest quality of life. According to the results of the study, Marbella ranks highest in the number of private clinics, sports facilities and private schools.[85]

Transport

Port of Cabopino

Cities on the coast are accessible by bus from Marbella, including Málaga, Estepona, Torremolinos, Fuengirola and Gibraltar. The area is also served by the A7 motorway; the closest airport is Málaga-Costa Del Sol.

Marine shipping

The four ports of Marbella are primarily recreational; although both Puerto Banús and the Puerto de la Bajadilla are permitted to dock cruise ships, neither operates regular service to other ports. The port of Bajadilla is also home to the fishermen's guild of Marbella and is used for the transport of goods.

Rail

Marbella is the most populous municipality in the Iberian Peninsula without a railway station in its territory, and is the only Spanish city of over 100,000 inhabitants not served by rail.[86]

An infrastructure project is underway for the construction of the Corridor of Costa del Sol rail system to connect Nerja, Málaga and Algeciras, possibly to include a high speed railway, with several stops planned for Marbella. Until then the nearest station is near Fuengirola, 27 km (17 miles) distant, further away is Málaga Maria Zambrano, located in Málaga city, 57 km (35 miles) away, and Ronda railway station, also 57 km (35 miles).

Intercity bus

Most intercity bus services are operated by CTSA-Portillo, communicating with major urban centres of the Costa del Sol, including Málaga and its airport, and nearby towns in the interior (Benahavis, Ojen, Ronda), as well as the Campo including Gibraltar (La Linea and Algeciras), some of the major cities of Andalusia (Almería, Cádiz, Córdoba, Jerez, Granada, Jaen, Seville and Úbeda)[87] and Mérida in Extremadura. The central bus station has connections to other domestic destinations, Madrid and Barcelona.

Taxis

There are always plenty of taxis available from Malaga airport or from the different taxi ranks along the Costa del Sol to Marbella, most of them are clean and non-smoking, as well as being the most comfortable way of travelling to local holiday destinations.

Marbella is not formally integrated into the Metropolitan Transportation Consortium Málaga area.

Media

Given the ethnic diversity of the city, Marbella's newspapers and magazines are published in several European languages, among which are La Tribuna de Marbella (Spanish), and Costa del Sol Nachrichten (in German). In addition, Diario Sur (Spanish) or Southern Journal (in English) and La Opinión de Málaga (Spanish) have editorial offices in the city. Among the magazines with the largest circulation are those dedicated to fashion and lifestyle, such as Absolute Marbella, Essential Magazine, The European Magazine, Transform Magazine (all in English), and Das Aktuelle Spanienmagazin (in German). Golf Andalusia and Golf Spain magazines, monthly Spanish-English bilingual magazines with a total circulation of 45,000 copies, are distributed throughout Spain.

Marbella has several local television stations, such as M95 Television, Summer TV and South Coast Television and several digital news dailies including the Voice of Marbella and Journal of Marbella.

Culture

Bronze sculpture by Salvador Dalí on Avenida del Mar

Besides the typical Andalusian cultural events, a variety of annual festivals are held in Marbella, mainly between June and October; other events are held sporadically. Festivals dedicated to music include the Marbella International Opera Festival held in August since 2001,[88] the Marbella Reggae Festival[89] in July, and the Marbella International Film Festival[90] in June at different locations around the city—amongst them the beach, aboard a boat or in Old Town. It also hosts the Marbella International Film Festival,[91] the Spanish Film Festival and the Festival of Independent Theatre.

To provide venues for these and other events, the city has cultural facilities both publicly and privately managed, such as the Auditorium of Constitution Park, the Ingenio Cultural Centre, the Teatro Ciudad de Marbella or Black Box Theatre, among others. In addition, there is a music conservatory, a cinema club and several cinemas showing foreign films dubbed into Castilian.

The International Contemporary Art Fair I, also known as MARB ART, was held in Marbella in 2005, exhibiting works of photography, painting, sculpture and graphic design by over 500 artists; it has been held annually since at the Palace of Congresses. The following year the 2006 extension of the Ateneo de Málaga Marbella (Atheneum of Málaga Marbella) opened, dedicated to the development of artistic and cultural activities.

Amongst local cultural associations is the Cilniana Association, an organisation dedicated to protecting and promoting the heritage of Marbella and neighbouring towns, which publishes its own magazine. Since 2009 the city has been home to Marbella University,[92] the first private university in the province of Málaga. In 2013, the city welcomed the opening of Marbella International University Centre (MIUC),[93] an international higher-education institution focused on Business, Politics and Media, and the only university in Andalusia where courses are taught in both English and Spanish.

Hospital Bazán, the Museum of Engraving

Museums

Cuisine

The traditional cuisine of Marbella is that of the Malagueño coast and is based on seafood. The most typical dish is fried fish, using anchovies, mackerel, mullet or squid, amongst others. Gazpacho and garlic soup are very typical. Bakeries sell oil cakes, wine donuts, borrachuelos (aniseed rolls fried with a little wine and dipped into syrup), torrijas (similar to French toast) and churros (fritters). In addition to the traditional native cuisine, there are many restaurants in Marbella that serve food of the international, nouvelle, or fusion cuisines.[100]

Festivals

In June, the Fair and Fiesta of San Bernabe is celebrated to honour the patron saint of Marbella. For a week there are various activities and performances which are divided into two parts: Fair Day, which began in Old Town and is now held in the Avenida del Doctor Maíz Viñals and Fair Night, which takes place in Arroyo Primero. In October the fair and festivals in honour of the patron saint of San Pedro Alcantara are celebrated, which also last a full week. The smaller Fair and Festivals of Nueva Andalucía celebrated in early October in Las Chapas and El Ángel are also popular.[101] Throughout the summer season (July to October) most barrios of Marbella have events organised by neighbourhood associations to encourage cultural activities including: bullfights, musical performances, photo competitions and sporting events. Among the best known associations are those of Santa Marta, Salto del Agua, Leganitos, Divina Pastora, Trapiche, Plaza de Toros and Miraflores. Other festivals and local celebrations include the Pilgrimages of Cruz de Juanar (May), La Virgen del Carmen (July) and La Virgen Madre (August), as well as the Día del Tostón (November), a traditional celebration which consists of going to the fields to roast chestnuts.[102]

Education

International schools in Marbella include:

Tourism

The city is especially popular with tourists from Northern Europe[103] (including the United Kingdom, Ireland and Germany) and also Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates.[104] Marbella is particularly noted for the presence of aristocrats, celebrities and wealthy people;[105] it is a popular destination for luxury yachts,[106] and increasingly so for cruise ships, which dock in its harbour.[107][108]

The area is popular with golfers and boaters, and there are many private estates and luxury hotels in the vicinity, including the Marbella Club Hotel. Marbella hosts a WTA tennis tournament on red clay, the Andalucia Tennis Experience.

Sights in or near Marbella include:

Notable residents

Media references

The short story Soñar un Crimen is set in Marbella. It details one of the infamous murders that occurred in the city.

Marbella was featured in the popular political thriller, Syriana. It was used as the location for a private party which an Arabian Emir hosts. Marbella was portrayed as an extremely affluent city with most cars at the entrance of the palace being very expensive. In the same year it appeared in Steven Spielberg's Munich in a very similar context.

In 2006, there was an international advertisement advertising Marbella as a tourist destination. The song on the advert is aptly called Marbella and is performed by singer Cristie.

Torrente 2: Misión en Marbella and the Finnish 1985 comedy film Uuno Epsanjassa is situated in Marbella.

Many other films and TV programmes such as Nip/Tuck portray it as a playground for the rich.

ITV aired a TV programme in spring 2007 called Marbella Belles which portrays a series of British women who now live in Marbella with their rich partners.

Cast of Living on the Edge visit on the fourth episode of the first season.

It is also referenced in the stage play "Noises Off" by Michael Frayn. The character Phillip and his wife Belinda have been tax exiles in Spain. The character Gary thinks he and his guest are alone in the house, when he spots Phillip, and thinks he's a ghost. Gary: "Hold on a second, you're not from the other world!" Phillip: "Yes, yes, Marbella!"

Carlos Baute's song "Colgando en tus Manos" mentions him and his love of holidaying in Marbella and Marta Sanchez sings this line in their duet version of the song.

The second half of series 2 of Auf Wiedersehen, Pet is set in Marbella.

The British TV show The Only Way Is Essex has filmed multiple times in Marbella, including the current series.

In 2011 the Spanish soap opera (telenovela) "La Reina del Sur" starring Mexican actress Kate del Castillo was often filmed and based on locations in Marbella, which included many landmarks in the city.

In 2015, the British television channel ITVBe filmed Life on Marbs, a constructed reality series following a cast of regulars set in and around Marbella.

Twin towns and sister cities

Marbella is twinned with:

See also

References

  1. "Marbella". Oxford Dictionaries. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
  2. "Marbella". Dictionary.com Unabridged. Random House. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
  3. La población andaluza. Instituto de Estadística y Cartografía de Andalucía. 2011. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  4. "Archaeology Marbella". PGB España. Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  5. "Marbella Museums and Art Galleries". World Guides. Archived from the original on 28 January 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  6. "An up-and-coming cultural quarter for Marbella?". Déjà Vu Marbella. 19 November 2012. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  7. "Costa del Sol Concerts for Summer 2012". i-Marbella.com. Archived from the original on 11 July 2012. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  8. "Marbella events and activities". Marbella Family Fun. Archived from the original on 29 January 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  9. "Reggaeville: World of Reggae in One Village". Reggaeville.
  10. "Marbella Opera Festival & Other August Events". Enforex Spanish Language School. Archived from the original on 8 August 2009. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  11. Marbella: mapa geológico de España. Ministerio de Industria y Energía. 1978. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  12. Teresa Moreno (Ph. D.) (2002). The Geology of Spain. Geological Society. p. 85. ISBN 978-1-86239-127-7. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  13. Andrés Díez Herrero; Luis Laín Huerta; Miguel Llorente Isidro (2009). A handbook on flood hazard mapping methodologies. IGME. p. 23. ISBN 978-84-7840-813-9. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  14. "Marbella Weather". World Weather Online. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  15. Pilar Rodríguez Quirós (23 September 2007). "La Sierra de las Nieves crece mirando al mar". Diario Sur (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 25 October 2008. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
  16. Muñoz-Reinoso, José Carlos (6 May 2004). "Diversity of maritime juniper woodlands". Forest Ecology and Management. 192 (2–3): 267–276. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2004.01.039.
  17. José Enrique García Muñoz, María Eugenia Manjón-Cabeza and José Enrique García Raso (September 2008). "Decapod crustacean assemblages from littoral bottoms of the Alborán Sea (Spain, west Mediterranean Sea): spatial and temporal variability". Scientia Marina. Institut de Ciències del Mar de Barcelona. 72 (3): 437–449. doi:10.3989/scimar.2008.72n3437. ISSN 0214-8358. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  18. "Population and Housing Census 2011. Municipal results Málaga". Instituto Nacional de Estadística. Retrieved 12 April 2013. Results of database queries are ephemeral
  19. "Censos de Población y Viviendas 2011. Resultados para Andalucía". Instituto de Estadistica y Cartografia de Andalucia. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  20. Chris Chaplow. "Population of Andalucia in 2011". andalucia.com. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  21. "Federación de Asociaciones de Vecinos de Marbella" (in Spanish). Federación de Asociaciones de Vecinos de Marbella. 29 September 2008. Archived from the original on 22 November 2011. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  22. "Diccionario de la Lengua Española". Real Academia Española.
  23. Francisco Guillén Robles (1874). Historia de Málaga y su provincia. Rubio y Cano. p. 216. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  24. Castro, J. L. L. (2009). "El poblamiento rural fenicio en el sur de la Península Ibérica entre los siglos VI a III aC". Gerión. Revista de Historia Antigua. 26 (1): 149–182. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  25. Anderson, James M. (1991). Spain: One Thousand One Sights: An Archaeological and Historical Guide. Michigan State University Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-0-919813-93-9. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
  26. Clifford Edmund Bosworth (2007). Historic Cities of the Islamic World. BRILL. p. 103. ISBN 978-90-04-15388-2. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  27. Zozaya, Juan (1991). "Fortification building in al-Andalus". Madrider Beiträge. Kolloquium Berlin: Verlag Philipp von Zabern. 24 (Spanien under der Orient im frühen under hohen Mittelalte): 69. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
  28. Jerrilynn Denise Dodds (1992). Al-Andalus: The Art of Islamic Spain. Metropolitan Museum of Art. pp. 70–71. ISBN 978-0-87099-636-8. Retrieved 27 April 2013.
  29. Una descripción anónima de al-Ándalus, ed. de Luis Molina, Madrid: CSIC, 1981, p. 74
  30. Ibn Batuta (1 December 1996). Travels in Asia and Africa, 1325-1354. Asian Educational Services. p. 313. ISBN 978-81-206-0809-2. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  31. http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1354-ibnbattuta.html
  32. Víctor Gallero Galván. "Historia de Coín" (in Spanish). Junta de Andalucia Instituto de Educación Secundaria Los Montecillos. Archived from the original on 26 June 2010. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
  33. United States. Congress. House (1879). House Documents, Otherwise Publ. as Executive Documents: 13th Congress, 2d Session-49th Congress, 1st Session. p. 1050. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  34. Chris Evans; Göran Rydén (2005). The Industrial Revolution In Iron: The Impact Of British Coal Technology In Nineteenth-Century Europe. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 160. ISBN 978-0-7546-3390-7. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  35. Aenaeus Bernardus Westerhof (1975). Genesis of magnetite ore near Marbella, southern Spain: formation by oxidation of silicates in polymetamorphic gedrite-bearing and other rocks. GUA. p. 13. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  36. Joseph Harrison (1978). An Economic History of Modern Spain. Manchester University Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-7190-0704-0. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  37. "Historia de San Pedro Alcántara Marqués del Duero". Ayuntamiento de Marbella Delegación de Comunicación. Archived from the original on September 6, 2012. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  38. Great Britain. Parliament. House of Commons (1886). House of Commons Papers. H.M. Stationery Office. p. 344. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  39. Gabriel Tortella Casares (2000). The Development of Modern Spain: An Economic History of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Harvard University Press. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-674-00094-0. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  40. José Bernal Gutierrez. "Comportamiento demográfico ante la inversión minera foránea. La población de Marbella en los inicios de la Marbella Iron Ore Company and Limited (1866-1874)" (PDF) (in Spanish). Universidad de Granada. p. 16. Archived from the original on May 19, 2005. Retrieved 12 April 2013. Footnote 94: "En la última década del siglo, la crisis industrial viene acompañada de los primeros síntomas del declive minero: en 1893 se suspendió la explotación por la gran acumulación de existencias, y se va haciendo reconocible, al mismo tiempo, la poca disposición que la sociedad propietaria de las minas de l término, la ‘Marbella Iron Ore C&L’, demostró para renovar los sistemas tradicionales de extracción, y que a la postre redundaría en el paulatino agotamiento de las vetas” ( Vid LÓPEZ SERRANO, F. A. (2000): “Miseria, guerra y corrupción. Una aproximación a la Marbella de 1898", Cilniana , 13, pp. 4-17)
  41. Enrique Navarro Jurado (2003). Puede seguir creciendo la Costa del Sol?: indicadores de saturación de un destino turístico. Servicio de Publicaciones, Diputación Provincial de Málaga. p. 29. ISBN 978-84-7785-585-9. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  42. Lucía Prieto Borrego (2007). "Mujer y Anticlericalismo: La Justicia Militar en Marbella 1937–1939". HAOL (in Spanish). Asociación de Historia Actual. 12 (Winter): 102. ISSN 1696-2060. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  43. Redacción (27 November 2008). "Retiran el título de Hijo Predilecto al creador de la Seguridad Social y el derecho al cobro de desempleo". Minuto Digital. Archived from the original on 25 April 2011. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  44. "Puerto Banús and Nueva Andalucía". Essential Marbella Magazine. 29 March 2012. Archived from the original on 19 March 2013. Retrieved 19 April 2013.
  45. 1 2 "Localizacion de Marbella Informacion sobre Marbella que pertenece a la provincia de Málaga" (in Spanish). La web del ayuntamiento. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  46. Ángel A. Jordán (1 April 1989). Marbella Story. GeoPlaneta, Editorial, S. A. p. 73. ISBN 978-84-320-4707-7. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  47. Count Rudi von Schönburg (6 October 2009). "The Beginnings of Marbella Club". Panorama. Archived from the original on 9 November 2012. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  48. Ronald Kessler (1987). Khashoggi: the rise and fall of the world's richest man. Corgi. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-552-13060-8. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  49. Mary Costelow (2 July 2012). "Count Rudi keeps the luxury Marbella Club hotel eternally young". Girlahead. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  50. Kelly Phillips Erb, (June 27, 2013). "Marc Rich, Famous Fugitive & Alleged Tax Evader Pardoned By President Clinton, Dies". Forbes.com. Forbes. Archived from the original on November 5, 2013. Retrieved 13 March 2014.
  51. Antonio Montilla (8 August 2005). "La vida de Fahd en la Milla de Oro" (in Spanish). ABC Gente / Estilo. Archived from the original on 17 June 2011. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  52. Ghosts of Spain: Travels Through Spain and Its Silent Past. Walker. 4 March 2008. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-8027-1674-3. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  53. "Graceless ending for Marbella spa". The Olive Press. 4 April 2012. Archived from the original on 14 November 2012.
  54. Paul Delaney (21 November 1987). "Raid by Police Frees Kidnapped Girl, 5, in Spain". New York Times. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  55. "Ayuntamientos". Ayuntamiento de Marbella. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
  56. "Causas contra Gil y sus encarcelamientos". El Mundo. 14 May 2004. Archived from the original on 20 November 2012. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
  57. George Hazel; Roger Parry (2004). Making cities work. Wiley-Academy. pp. 75–77. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  58. "Trazado cartesiano de sus antiguas calles" (in Spanish). 14 June 2011. Archived from the original on 1 September 2011.
  59. Mona King (2000). Essential Costa del Sol. AA Publishing. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-7495-2371-8. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  60. Christopher Wawn; David Wood (2000). In search of Andalucia: a historical geographical observation of the Málaga sea board. Pentland. p. 228. ISBN 978-1-85821-690-4. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  61. Marbella's Golden Mile, andalucia.com
  62. , New Golden Mile
  63. Nueva Andalucía, andalucia.com
  64. United States. Hydrographic Office (1916). Mediterranean Pilot: Strait of Gibraltar, south and southeast coast of Spain, African coast from Cape Spartel to Gulf of Gabes-including the Balearic Islands. Hydrographic Office under the authority of the secretary of the navy. p. 140. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  65. Salvador Bravo Jiménez, Miguel Vila Oblitas, Rafael Dorado Cantero, Antonio Soto Iborra (2009). "El tesoro de Cerro Colorado. La Segunda Guerra Púnica en la costa occidental malagueña (Benahavís, Málaga)_". In Alicia Arévalo González. Actas XIII congreso nacional de numismática: "Moneda y arqueologia : Cádiz, 22-24 de octubre de 2007 (in Spanish). 1. Madrid: Universidad de Cádiz. pp. 105–118. ISBN 978-84-89157-42-2. Retrieved 30 January 2013.
  66. Christopher Wawn; David Wood (2000). In search of Andalucia: a historical geographical observation of the Málaga sea board. Pentland. p. 221. ISBN 978-1-85821-690-4. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  67. Peter Alexander René van Dommelen; Carlos Gómez Bellard; Roald F. Docter (2008). Rural Landscapes of the Punic World. Isd. p. 85. ISBN 978-1-84553-270-3. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  68. Javier Navarro Luna (1999). Territorio y administraciones públicas en Andalucía. Universidad de Sevilla. p. 180. ISBN 978-84-472-0501-1. Retrieved 29 January 2013.
  69. "Playas de Marbella". Webmalaga.com. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  70. "Ley Orgánica 5/1985, de 19 de junio, del Régimen Electoral General" (PDF). Boletín Oficial del Estado. Gobierno de España, Ministero de la Presidencia. Archived from the original on 23 December 2011. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
  71. 1 2 http://www.economist.com/node/2012229
  72. "Spain's politics: The man from Marbella". The Economist. 21 August 2003. Archived from the original on 23 August 2012. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  73. http://www.elmundo.es/especiales/2006/04/espana/corrupcion_marbella/quien.html
  74. https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2006/10/spai-o17.html
  75. Daniel González Herrera (16 November 2006). "Marbella awaits new elections after most local politicians are accused of corruption". City Mayors. Archived from the original on 23 January 2013. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
  76. "Gestión Municipal". Concejales (in Spanish). Ayuntamiento de Marbella. 4 April 2010. Archived from the original on 4 April 2010. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  77. "Elecciones Locales 2011". Concejales a elegir en 2011 (Councilors to be elected in 2011) (in Spanish). Gobierno de España, Ministerio del Interior. 23 May 2011. Archived from the original on 25 March 2012. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  78. local election results, Spanish Ministry of the Interior, accessed 17 July 2011
  79. Daniel González Herrera. "Marbella awaits new elections after most local politicians are accused of corruption". City Mayors. City Mayors Foundation. Archived from the original on 6 March 2012. Retrieved 23 January 2013.
  80. "La disputa por Marbella". El Siglo de Europa. 5 July 2007. Archived from the original on 24 July 2011. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
  81. "Dozens convicted in Marbella corruption scandal". BBC News. 4 October 2013. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  82. "50 sentenced in Marbella property scandal". The Local. Spain. 5 October 2013. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  83. Vassilopoulos, John (17 October 2006). "Marbella construction scandal exposes endemic criminality of Spanish capitalism". World Socialist Web Site. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
  84. 1 2 Snelling, Nick (28 July 2010). "Corruption in Spain, Marbella, the Godfather, a face lift and Mr Clean". Culture Spain. Archived from the original on 11 March 2014.
  85. "Un estudio de la Junta sitúa a Marbella como el municipio andaluz con mayor calidad de vida". SUR, diario de Málaga. 19 April 2008. Archived from the original on 28 October 2008. Retrieved 20 April 2013.
  86. "Marbella, única urbe española de más de cien mil habitantes sin servicio de tren". Málaga Hoy. 17 November 2008. Archived from the original on 18 June 2010. Retrieved 20 April 2013.
  87. "Horario de Autobuses Marbella" (PDF). Corporación Española de Transporte (CTSA) Portrillo. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2008. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  88. "El Teatro 'Ciudad de Marbella' acogerá del 8 al 11 el XI Festival Internacional de Ópera de Marbella". Ayuntamiento de Marbella. 30 July 2012. Archived from the original on 3 August 2012. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  89. "Presentación del Marbella Reggae Festival". 16 April 2013. Archived from the original on April 16, 2013. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  90. Jazz Journal International. Billboard Limited. 2004. p. 18. Retrieved 15 April 2013.
  91. "Curtain set to rise on Marbella International Film Festival". Euro Weekly News. 27 September 2012. Archived from the original on 10 November 2012. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  92. "Marbella University: English-Speaking for Pioneering Business and Psychology". Marbella University. Archived from the original on 23 January 2013. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  93. http://www.miuc.es/
  94. "Spanish Contemporary Engraving Museum". What to do in Marbella. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  95. "Museo Cortijo Miraflores" (in Spanish). Ayuntamiento de Marbella. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  96. "Museo del Bonsai". Costa del Sol. Archived from the original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  97. "Ralli Museum in Marbella". Ralli Museums. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  98. "Sede de la Delegación de Cultura / Colección arqueológica" (in Spanish). Ayuntamiento de Marbella. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  99. "The Sugar Refinery". PGB. Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  100. "Food in Marbella". Marbella Guide. 26 November 2009. Archived from the original on 7 January 2011. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  101. "Fiestas de Marbella". webmalaga.com. Sociedad de Planificación y Desarrollo SOPDE. Retrieved 30 June 2013.
  102. "Festivals in Marbella". Marbella Guide. Archived from the original on 2 October 2012. Retrieved 16 April 2013.
  103. Myra Shackley (23 May 2012). Atlas of Travel and Tourism Development. Routledge. p. 104. ISBN 978-1-136-42782-4. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  104. Conal Urquhart (9 March 2013). "How the influx of new global elites is changing the face of Europe". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 15 March 2013. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  105. Ken Bernstein (1990). Spain. Berlitz. p. 182. ISBN 978-2-8315-0494-0. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  106. Berlitz Guides (1 January 1993). Berlitz Travellers Guide: Spain 1993. Berlitz International, Incorporated. p. 775. ISBN 978-2-8315-1783-4. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  107. "Marbella renueva su apuesta por los cruceros pese a la incertidumbre sobre La Bajadilla". Diario Sur (in Spanish). 5 February 2013. Responsables turísticos de la ciudad cierran en Fitur dos acuerdos para colocar al municipio en el mapa de las compañías de lujo que trabajan en el sector
  108. Fairplay. Fairplay Publications Limited. July 1997. p. 169. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
  109. Michael Feeney Callan (31 October 2012). Sean Connery. Ebury Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7535-4706-9. Retrieved 23 April 2013.
  110. "By John Dingwall Status Quo rocker Rick Parfitt swaps his wild days for family life". Daily Record. 26 December 2009. Retrieved 13 April 2013.
  111. "Reid's widow: He was my rock". The Sun. 2007-10-04. Retrieved 2012-02-22.
  112. "Batumi - Twin Towns & Sister Cities". Batumi City Hall. Archived from the original on 2012-05-04. Retrieved 2013-08-10.
This article incorporates information from the equivalent article on the Spanish Wikipedia
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marbella.
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Marbella.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.