The Things We Take For Granted

After a while, living in Almuñécar, you become ‘immune’ to its archaeological treasure, so it is only when visitors come and express admiration for the sheer quantity of historical monuments, ranging from those left behind by the Phoenicians to the Moors, that you sort of ‘snap out of it.’

A recent group of visitors from the UK, including a curator at the British Museum, Mr Jonathan N. Tubb, was shown around the Cueva de Siete Palacios and the archaeological remains of the fish-salting factory, dating back 200 years before Christ.

It is indeed sad that some of these monuments have been neglected, such as the Puente de Noy necropolis, which has been ignored since the late 70’s, and not to mention the recent scandal of mountains of archaeological finds, dating back over 2,000 years in some cases, being left in plastic fruit crates in a damp, unguarded cellar… but at least this kind of visitor will help to put Almuñécar ‘on the map.’

(News: Almunecar, Costa Tropical, Granada, Andalucia)