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Loja, Granada

Loja, Granada

FieldValue
nameLoja
settlement_typeMunicipality
official_name
native_name
image_skylineLoja Campanario.jpg
image_captionBell Tower of the Church of the Incarnation.
image_flagBandera de Loja (Granada).svg
image_shieldCoat of Arms of Loja (Spain).svg
nicknameFlower among thorns
pushpin_mapSpain Province of Granada#Spain Andalusia#Spain
pushpin_labelLoja
pushpin_map_captionLocation in the Province of Granada##Location in Andalusia##Location in Spain
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Autonomous community
subdivision_name1Andalusia
subdivision_type2Province
subdivision_name2Granada
subdivision_type3Comarca
subdivision_name3Loja
subdivision_type4Judicial district
subdivision_name4Loja
seat_type
coordinates
elevation_m448
area_total_km2454.7
established_titleFounded
established_date9th century BC
population_as_of
population_footnotes
population_total
population_demonymLojeños
population_density_km2auto
blank_name_sec1Official language(s)
timezoneCET
utc_offset+1
timezone_DSTCEST
utc_offset_DST+2
postal_code_typePostal code
postal_code18300
area_code_typeDialing code
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameFrancisco Joaquín Camacho Borrego (2011)
leader_partyPP
website

Loja (; ), formerly Loxa, is a town in southern Spain, situated at the western limit of the province of Granada. It is in the valley of the River Genil, overlooked by the so-called Sierra de Loja, of which the highest peak, Sierra Gorda, stands 1,671 metres above sea-level.

History

Loja has sometimes been identified with the ancient Ilipula, or with the Lacibi (Lacibis) of Pliny and Ptolemy. It is unknown when Loja was first captured by the Moors; most likely this happened in the 8th century. It first clearly emerges in the Arab chronicles of the year 890. Back then, it was also likely to be named as Lūsha.

Reconquista

It was taken by Ferdinand III of Castile in 1226, but was soon afterwards abandoned.

As part of the Granada War, Loja was attacked in 1486 by Christian forces under Ferdinand and Isabella. These soldiers included some Englishmen commanded by Sir Edward Woodville. The victorious Spanish allowed the Muslim population to leave for Granada. The town's Moorish name, Medina Lawša, was changed to Lauxa. Isabella called it the "flower among thorns". In 1491 work began on the Church of the Incarnation on the site of the town's main mosque.

Loxa

19th century

The town was the centre of the Loja uprising in 1861, led by local , that was quickly suppressed.

Transport

In the 1870s a railway line was laid linking Bobadilla and Granada. The line has been adapted to enable high-speed AVE trains to reach Granada, but the route still prevents them from running at full speed. As at 2025 a new high-speed route through Loja is being built. This new track (the variante de Loja) will improve journey times between Madrid and Granada as well as forming a component of the "Mediterranean Corridor" route between Antequera and Almería.

Main sights

The town's Islamic heritage is still evident in the quarter of the Alcazaba, a Moorish fortress of which most of the walls and towers remain.

Other sights include:

  • Convent of Santa Clara (16th century)
  • Convento of St. Francis of Assisi, including a 16th-century cloister
  • Church of the Incarnation, the main church which was begun in Mudéjar style at the end of the 15th century
  • Church of San Gabriel (16th century)
  • Church of Santa Catalina (16th-17th century)
  • Church of *N.tra S.ra Virgen de la Caridad * (16th century)
  • Hermitages of Jesus Nazareno, san Roque, and Calvario, 16th century chapels and sanctuaries
    • Caseron de los Alcaides Cristianos* (17th century)
  • Palacio de Narvaez (17th century)
  • Fuente de la Mora ("Fountain of the Moorish maiden"), also known as los venticinco canos, a fountain where waters from different springs are made to flow from twenty-five tubes.

Notes

References

  • Days in the Sun by Martin Andersen Nexo (1929)

References

  1. {{Cite EB1911
  2. Delgado. (2021). "Un guiri inglés en la Toma de Loja".
  3. Lawrence DR. Christopher Wilkins. The Last Knight Errant: Sir Edward Woodville and the Age of Chivalry. London: I. B. Tauris & Co. Ltd., 2010. xxii 234 pp. index. append. illus. bibl. £25. {{ISBN. 978-1-84885-149-8. ''[[Renaissance Quarterly]]''. 2010;63(2):631-633. {{doi. 10.1086/655286
  4. "Loja".
  5. "Adif AV adjudica el tramo Variante de Loja-A92 por 148,7 millones de euros".
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