Guaro, Málaga

This article is about the Spanish municipality. For other uses, see Guaro

Guaro is a municipality of the Province of Málaga, in Andalusia, southern Spain, with a population of 2,228. It belongs to the Guadalhorce valley area, 44 kilometres off Malaga Capital, and it stands 354 metres above sea level. The land area is 22 square kilometres. Guaro's main economical activities are olive and almond agriculture, along with other traditional irrigated crops, and oddly-enough, as of 2006 the number of women with work contracts doubled that of men.

The first settlement in the area dates from Arabic times and was located at the place known as Old Guaro, at the feet of a tower that once was part of the line of fortifications of Guadalhorce valley. The municipality was conquered by the Catholic Monarchs in 1485. Guaro became an independent village on 1614 by decree of King Philip IV of Spain. The city is notable for its typical Andalus streets bordered with white houses garnished with flowers. Its main monument is Saint Michel's parish, built in the 16th century and reformed in the early 17th century by Pedro Días de Palacios, that exhibits a square, two-bodied tower and no lateral vessels.

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