Cultural Heritage of Zahara de los Atunes

Cultural Heritage of Zahara de los Atunes

  • Castle of Zahara de los Atunes

    Identification

    Castle of Zahara de los Atunes. Throughout the history, it has also been known as castle of Jadraza and Palacio de las Pilas. The neighbours of Zahara popularly know it as “el palacio” (“the palace”).

    Location

    Gobernador Sánchez Gonzálet St. S/N.

    Date of construction

    16th Century.

    Description

    The castle of Zahara de los Atunes is a construction of quadrangular base delimited by four walls of heights between five and seven meters, and whose material is made of rough stones token with lime and pebbles, adding to its corners reinforcement of stonework. In addition, it does not have loopholes but it has a narrow seaside path. It seems that originally, it had three towers: the East tower, located in the north-east corner, from which we only preserve the ashlar; the West tower, erected in the northwest corner, currently very transformed due to many and diverse modifications; and La Vela tower (tower of the candle), located in the central part of the facility and in which it was located the bell tower, from which there are no rests. Some people believe that in the south-east corner there was a fourth tower next to the well, although the preserved plans don’t refer to it. It is remarkable that the Western and Eastern towers exceed the height of their walls. In the wall there were opened at the beginning three gates, two towards the sea and one towards the land. The land gate is at the western wall, and unlike the sea gates, it is much altered due to posterior changes. To these three gates, a fourth and new one is added in the 20th Century to the north wall, a simple rounded archway with soffit of brick. Two of the outlined elements, the wall and towers, exemplify the obvious defendant function of the castle. However, it is not the only one, as we should also consider the residential and industrial ones. In fact, some of its spaces used to hold homes. This way, some people consider that the fourth tower was the residence of the dukes of Medina Sidonia in their visits. Likewise, the Western and Eastern towers were used for lodging of the landlord and of the visitor respectively. In terms of the industrial function, the castle presents itself as a storehouse of belongings, supplies and stores of the tuna fishing of Zahara. In spite of the deterioration and transformation of their structures, we know that this construction had incredible installations for the tuna fishing, like the storehouses, a saladero, a backyard for depositing the boats, ovens, freshwater wells, salting piles, a butcher’s shop, etc. Lastly, it is important to reiterate the consideration of the castle as a material shape of the triple function to which we have alluded. It would be impossible to describe it avoiding some of them. All of them are present in their architectonical characteristics.


    Historical Data

    The fortress of Zahara was built by the duke of Medina Sidonia in the 16th Century in front the need to give to the tunny fishery of this village a residential infrastructure according to its relevance. The tunny fishery of Zahara was, along with the tunny fishery of Conil, the most important of Andalucía in that age. Remember that Sancho IV “El Bravo” (“The Brave”) gave in 1924 to one of the ancestors of the duke, Guzmán “El Bueno”, the privilege to make tunny nets for fishing tuna in the area of the Strait of Gibraltar as a gift for his “reconquering” labor.

  • Former School of Zahara de los Atunes

    Identification

    Former School of Zahara de los Atunes.

    Location

    Jábega St. S/N

    Construction manager

    Manuel Sánchez (engineer of constructions). In addition to the management, he was the author of the plans.

    Date of construction

    1920.


    Description

    The former school of Zahara is an austere functional building of an only floor to which it is accessible through a fenced garden by an iron fence. Originally, it had a room of eighty four m2 next to the house of the teacher, with a kitchen, a dining room, a washroom and a bedroom. Between the room and the house there was an office for the teacher. It is remarkable of the façades, the whitewashing of the wall hanging and the shy presence of decorative items, which is reduced to simple moldings on windows, ledges and parapets. All this are kept in this little construction, even its base, which is rectangular, a feature very characteristic for sobriety and simplicity.

    Historical Data

    The school was funded by the deputy by then Serafín Romeo Fagés (1877-1937), entrepreneur of tuna fishing thanks to his benefactor labor in the villages of Barbate and Zahara. He was awarded with the title of Duke of Barbate in 1922. It seems that one of the main promoters of the construction of the school was Francisco Ardilla, a priest sent to Zahara whose aim to make the children of the village literate was prominent.

    Uses and state of preservation

    Currently the building has not been used until some years ago it housed a hotel business. In respect of its state of preservation, it is good, with the interior very modified though unlike its exterior, which remain with very little changes and so keeps its original image.

    Administrative situation

    The building is private now.

  • Nuestra Señora del Carmen Parochial Church

    Identification

    Nuestra Señora del Carmen Parochial Church.

    Location

    Gobernador Sánchez González St. S/N, in Zahara de los Atunes.

    Date of construction

    The space where the church is located was built in the 16th Century, although it was fitted out as a church in 1906.

    Description

    The church of Zahara has a rectangular base, which delimits an only nave covered with a barrel vault. Above this, two rounded arcades, one of each support, compounded of seven arches each one. Regarding the materials of construction, it was used ceramic bricks except of the base of the pillars of the arches, where it was used block of stones of shell limestone. Most of the cultural motives and exhortative of the temple are found in the hollows formed by these arches. The church is accessible through a gate opened later in the north of the castle. In fact, its only façade is a stretch of the same, conveniently covered and whitewashed above which was erected a simple bell gable.

    Historical Data

    The church of Zahara was blessed the 30th May 1906. This was greatly possible thanks to the efforts of the priest Francisco de Paula Fernández-Caro Pareja, the Father Caro, who was by then archpriest of Vejer. It was chosen as location one of the spaces of the ancient castle, the so-called “bóveda de la sal” (the salt doom”), that is, the most important saladero of the fortress, from which it was used its structure. That’s why in 1906 this space was used as church.

    Uses and state of preservation

    The church that still functions as church is in good state of preservation, although as it is logic, due to its antiquity, presents some deficiencies like for instance, the roof.

    Administrative situation

    The same legal dispositions of the Castle of Zahara are applied to the church as it is integrated in the same enclosure. In this sense, the church is part of the environment as a site of cultural interest, according to the delimitation established in the Decree 517/2004 the 26th October, of the Culture Council of Andalucía (BOJA nº212 October 2004).

  • Saladero of Zahara

    Identification

    Saladero of Zahara.

    Location

    Gobernador Sánchez González St. S/N.

    Date of construction

    16th Century.

    Description

    Bearing in mind the residential and defensive functions, the castle of Zahara stands out because of its industrial function. This way, the fortress is also erected in a great saladero in which the workers work with the tuna fished by the tuna fishery of Zahara, whose relevance in the 16th Century was noticeable due to the great volume of captures, so it was worthy of having such installations. In the saladero of Zahara, delimited by the four walls of the defensive enclosure, we observe certain architectonical elements, very transformed today or deteriorated, which reveal their function. The “bóveda de la sal” is currently the nave of the parochial church or of the “wood store”, which was until recently a disco. Both spaces were part of a backyard in which perimeter were the piles of salt, as well as the so-called “postes de la enramada”, where the fish was cured. This place also kept the vessels. On the other sides, we can see the rests of a building, which used to house a store, a saladero, and a butcher’s shop in its ground floor, an oratorio, and bedrooms for the captain of the tuna fishery, the dressing room, the bookkeeper, etc, in addition to many other spaces.

    Historical Data

    The tuna fisheries of Zahara and Conil were much profitable for the dukes of Medina Sidonia, and a good example of this is the saladeros of both villages, built by the Guzmán during the period of greatest flourishing. Throughout the Modern Age, it was still working until the 19th Century and part of the 20th C. By the way, the National Council of Tuna Fishery, which exploited the tuna fishery of Zahara between 1929 and 1936, made some modifications in the enclosure, around the Western tower. Some of its spaces, like those built in the North (stores, offices..etc) were built above living spaces of the former saladero. Part of them, after abandoning the consortium of the installations, would be used as military quarters by the Civil Guard.

    Uses and state of preservation

    Of all the buildings in the saladero, only the “bóveda de la sal”, thanks to its reutilization as temple since 1906, presents a state of preservation acceptable. The state of the rest is a pity, as it has been abandoned and because of the arguable reutilizations it has had and still has (disco, summer cinema, fairgrounds…).

    Administrative situation

    The Ministry of the Culture Council of Andalucía, through the Ordinance of the 14th October 2004, resolved to register this property called “Fortaleza y Casa Chanca-Palacio de las Pilas”, with specific character, in the General Catalogue of Historical Heritage of Andalucía, as a site of ethnological interest (BOJA nº.226, 19th Novemeber 2004). It is interesting this Ordinance as in its particular instructions are established the interventions, activities, elements and materials that can be acceptable and those who aren’t acceptable, in the building as well as in its environment (point B). In addition to the City Council of Barbate, in its Normative of Protection and Prevention of the Historical Heritage of Archeological Character (BOP nº78, 3rd April 2004), was assigned to it the level of integral protection, maximum level of protection assigned to those sites that must be conserved integrally for their study and cultural public enjoyment.

Cultural Heritage of Barbate

Cultural Heritage of Barbate

  • Torre de Meca

    Identification

    Torre de Meca. It is also known with the names of tower of La Breña and tower Romeral.

    Location

    Altos de Meca, being its geographic coordinates 36º 11´30´´ LN y 6º 00´40´´ LW.

    Date of Construction

    Decade of the 1820.

    Description

    We are in front of a truncated cone on a circular plinth of a little more than thirteen meters of height until the parapet of the flat roof. To the hollow of the entrance located at the top was accessed through a portable ladder. This hollow leads to a hallway set in the wall and domed, which leads to the only room of the tower. It is an open rounded room covered by a semispherical doom that presents an oculus in its key and a quadrangular hollow in its back. The first one was used for easing the communication between the flat roof and the room, and the second one was used for acceding to the cabin as well. The room has the particularity of being divided into two floors by a wooden forge, allowing the communication between both through a portable ladder, the same used for entering to the cabin. Another particularity of the towers is the high number of skylights it has, seven concretely, organized in two levels for illuminating the two floors of the room. Regarding the flat roof, it is only remarkable its little space and the parapet with spillage to the interior which surrounds it. Precisely, the beginning of it, is marked by a bore. Though it was built in the 19th Century, the tower of Meca holds a pronounced stylistic parallelism with those built in the 16thC, overall about that related to the external physiognomy (truncated cone shape, entrance at the high, adjacent plinth, etc.) We just need to compare it with the nearby tower of El Tajo. Nevertheless, unlike this one, La Meca is much more stylized and slender due to the reduced diameter of its base, which does not reach six meters long. Finally, similarly to the tower El Tajo, it was used rough stones for its construction.

    Historical Data

    The visibility problems between both towers, El Tajo and Trafalgar, are accentuated in front of the progressive state of ruins of this one, which impeded the signal transmission between both. This was tried to stop with the installation of a lookout post in the most prominent intermediate point, the Altos de Meca, though the definitive solution wouldn’t come until the construction of the tower of Meca, whose works were probably defrayed by Vejer village.

    Uses and state of preservation

    The Torre de Meca is in good state of preservation thanks to the accurate restoration made between 1992 and 1993, in which it was restored the wooden forge and it was reinforced its foundations besides other actions. Currently, along with the tower El Tajo, it is one of the most tourist attractions of the Natural Park of La Breña, and it can be visited with the required authorization.


    Administrative Situation

    The Normative of Protection and Prevention of the Historical Heritage of Archeological Character in Barbate, approved at the beginning of 2004 (BOP nº78, 3rd April 2004), assigned the tower of Meca the level of integral protection, maximum level of protection assigned to those sites that must be conserved integrally for their study and cultural public enjoyment.

  • Torre del Tajo

    Identification

    Torre de El Tajo. Through its history, it has also been assigned other names, like tower of Meca, Nueva or Tembladera./p>

    Location

    Next to the border of the cliff of El Tajo, being its geographic coordinates 36º 10´25´´ LN y 5º58´24´´ LW.

    Date of Construction

    1585-1588


    Description

    The tower of El Tajo is a truncated cone construction on a circular plinth of fourteen meters and five centimeters of height until the parapet of the flat roof. A skid, restored today in part, is the way of access to the hall’s hollow, dovetailed with blocks of stone. The hollow leads to a hallway set in the wall of the tower and this, at the same time, to the only room that lies down on its inferior body. The room, rounded, is covered with a semispherical doom in which key there is an oculus to ease the communication with the flat roof. The entrance to the spiral stairways, also embedded in the wall that leads to the cabin, is in this room. It is remarkable that the box is illuminated by the only skylight that the tower has and that the cabin is illuminated by a loophole. From the cabin we go to the flat roof, which is fenced by a parapet to the fool, with spillage to the outside, the normal type in the artillery towers.
    It is also remarkable that the tower was built in masonry, it is robust building, solid and matt, characteristics that reveal its antiquity and its relationship with the easterly wind in the coast of Huelva by the same dates.

    Historical Data

    The construction of El Tajo tower was part of the project conceived by royal commissioner Luis Bravo de Lagunas in 1577, who justified its construction by alleging the necessity to defend the headland of the Tembladera (cliff area of El Tajo) and to connect the towers of Trafalgar and Barbate. This function of transmitting warning signals in case of danger to both towers couldn’t be successfully carried out due to the visibility problems between the towers of El Tajo and Trafalgar, whose circumstance motivated the later construction of the Meca tower. Finally, the constructions were defrayed by the duke of Medina Sidonia duke and the village of Vejer, in which point it is located.

    Uses and state of preservation

    El Tajo tower is in good state of preservation thanks to the accurate restoration made between 1992 and 1993, in which there were made restitutions of elements like the machicolation, the interior stairways or the sentry box, in addition to other constructions. Currently, along with the Meca tower, it is one of the biggest tourist attractions of the Natural Park La Breña, and it can be visited with the requires authorization.

    Administrative Situation

    The Normative of Protection and Prevention of the Historical Heritage of Archeological Character in Barbate, approved at the beginning of 2004 (BOP nº78, 3rd April 2004), assigned El Tajo tower the level of integral protection, maximum level of protection assigned to those sites that must be conserved integrally for their study and cultural public enjoyment.

  • Town Hall

    Identification

    Town Hall

    Location

    Inmaculada Concepción square sn.

    Architect

    Casto Fernández-Shaw Iturralde (1896-1978).

    Fecha de construcción

    1951-1953

    Description

    In the Town Hall of Barbate, Castro Fernández Shaw shows his eclectic facet by inspiring himself in an architectural style of the past, the neoclassical style, whose monumentality and solemnity were very suitable for an official and representative building like the Town Hall. Its most remarkable area is the central part of the principal façade. It is escorted and rounded off by two twins towers-façades, the kind of tower constructed by Torcuato Benjumea in the Church of San José in Cádiz, with square floor, binary Ionic columns attached to each one of the vertexes and dooms covered with tiles and crowned by a lantern. Between these, the stuffed base leads to the row of balconies, where we observe three balconies with gables, protected by balustrades and separated by six attached columns, four of them, Ionics with garlands. Above the ledge and the sill we see an attic with the embossed Barbate’s emblem of Franco. In the rear façade, there are four huge pilasters that hold a gable which exceeds the line of the ledge, albeit the decorative tension is lesser here than in the principal façade, the same as it happens in the exterior wall hangings, which are much more sober. The interior of the Town Hall is assembled around a spacious lobby, in which it is located one of the biggest stairways that leads to the rooms of the upper floor. Finally, in 1960 it was installed the clock in the tambour of the towers, so the rounded archways get closed. This way was fixed the image that the Town Hall holds today.

    Uses and state of preservation

    The building is still the headquarters of Barbate’s City Council. Although, in general, the state of preservation is good, in the central part of its principal façade there have been some leaks and the cracks of some of its columns are evident signals of deterioration.

  • Nuestra Señora del Carmen School

    Identification

    Nuestra Señora del Carmen Former School. It is also popularly known as “Mrs. Áurea School”.

    Location

    Avenida José Antonio número 23.

    Architect

    Francisco Hernández-Rubio Gómez (1859-1950).

    Date of Construction

    1920-1922.

    Description

    Although we couldn’t find the original plans of Nuestra Señora del Carmen school, descriptions of the époque, oral testimonies and the building itself help to supply them, due to our intention to evoke it the way the architect conceived it. The school was a work of maturity of the native of Jerez Hernández-Rubio and so, he is worried about comfort and a bigger sense of simplification. This is proved in the functional division of its interior spaces, where we clearly distinguish three different areas: the teaching area, the residence for teachers and the school yard. In the first one, we find two spacious classrooms, one to each side of a beautiful hall, as well as the library, the meeting room, and the receiving cabinet, these latest located in a partial upper floor, the only one in the building. At the back of this area, we find the teachers’ rooms which include bedrooms, a dining room, a kitchen, some toilets, a larder and bathrooms, for a comfortable life for the teachers. Between both areas, there is a vast tiled-floor school yard which allowed the children to enjoy their time without leaving the school grounds. It is remarkable its simplicity and functionality, but also its solidity and sobriety, perceivable in the most characteristic part of the building; the principal façade. We outline of it its symmetry, and overall, the mixed use of shell limestone and brick. Both are used without any kind of covering, the first one, used in the walls and the second one, used as decorative element, in plinths, pilasters, ledges, and window frames. By using the shell limestone, though engraved, it offers a better consistency to the construction.

    Historical Data

    The school was financed by Serafín Romeu Fargés (1877-1937), tuna entrepreneur, liberal politician and, since March 1922, duke of Barbate because of his benefactor labor. He entrusted the management of the school to the Daughters of Charity, which was carried out by them until the middle of the II Republic. They lived here and even set up one of the rooms as chapel. After their depart, national teachers would occupy their place, being one of them Áurea López de los Santos, who would exercise the teaching for many years in this center, where he also lived in. In 1927, Serafín Romeu provided the social capital of the anonymous society General Almadrabera with the building, of which he was stockholder. Two years later, this entity would make the appropriate with the consortium national Almadrabero, contribution made free of charge and with the condition of taking care of maintaining the school. By disappearing the consortium in 1973, the Municipal Housing Agency considered to acquire building to transform it into a house for the elderly, purchased made effective in 1975. Since 1979 until 1985, the residence, promoted by Cáritas Interparroquial was in operation but it was located in a different area from the classrooms. When the Patronage was dissolved in 1983, the City Council of Barbate as its universal successor, was then the owner of the building.

    Uses and state of preservation

    The interior of the school is completely modified, yet the primitive are of teaching had the same use until 2005, concretely the classrooms of Childhood Education in the Public School of Childhood Education and Primary School Baesippo. Currently, the City Council allocates the former classrooms to diverse uses. What in the past was a residence for teachers, now it is the headquarters of the Delegation of Technologies of Information, Innovation and Sustainable Development. In addition, the hall holds a tourist information office. On the other hand, the façades keep the general lines of their original aspect, though some interventions were wrong, like the closening of the door of the rear façade, the more than one meter rising of the wall that surrounds the yard school and the breaking of the façade in some points to install doors. Even with all this, the state of preservation is good.

    Administrative Situation

    The building, as we have said before, is a property of the City Council of Barbate.

  • Trafalgar Lighthouse

    Identification

    Trafalgar Lighthouse.

    Location

    At the far edge of the Cape of Trafalgar.

    Engineer

    Eduardo Saavedra Moragas (1829-1912), in cooperation with Rafael Navarro, Antonio de Palacio and Manuel García, students of the Caminos School.

    Date of Construction

    1860-1862.

    Description

    Saavedra planned a lighthouse of thirty four meters of height whose most remarkable element was the shaft, a body of truncated cone shape of twenty nine and a half built with blocks of stone. Above it, another body, this time cylindrical and of one hundred eighty five centimeters of height that holds the lantern. This was the original aspect of the lighthouse until the installation in 1926 of a new light made necessary its modification. In fact, in front of the greater weight of the machinery it was necessary to reinforce the tower, because the stability of itself was dangerous due to the windstorms. The works were made in 1929, following a project of the engineer Carlos Iturrate, who decided to attach to it buttresses that joined in its superior part with pointed arches. From then, it was shaped, more or less, the image that it presents currently, full of plasticity and clarity, thanks to respectively, the chiaroscuros caused by the buttresses and the final whitewashing.

    Historical Data

    For the construction of the Trafalgar lighthouse were used the materials of the beacon tower of Trafalgar, located in its vicinity and demolished in 1860. On the other hand, the lighthouse was lighted up for the first time the 15th July 1862. Its light, with a range of nineteen miles approximately, was produced by an optical device of second rate power, which after some modifications made in 1936, became a device of first rate power, which meant an increase of its light beam range, about forty miles.

    Uses and state of preservation

    The Trafalgar lighthouse still works and the state of preservation is good.

    Administrative situation

    The maintenance of the Trafalgar lighthouse is a responsibility of the port authority of the Bay of Cádiz, integrated in the public entity of State’s Harbors that, at the same time, is assigned to the Ministry of Development. On the other hand, the Normative of Protection and Prevention of the Historical Heritage of Archeological Character in Barbate, approved at the beginning of 2004 (BOP nº78, 3rd April 2004), assigned the Cape of Trafalgar, geographical feature where the lighthouse is located, the level of integral protection, maximum level of protection assigned to those sites that must be conserved integrally for their study and cultural public enjoyment.

  • Senior Centre

    Identification

    Former Youth Centre and Current Senior Centre.

    Location

    Avda. Del Mar número 58.

    Architect

    Carlos Solís Llorente

    Date of Construction

    1956

    Description

    The former Youth Centre is a building of simple and plain shapes, in which takes precedence, like in many other constructions of the époque, the search of functionality. However, it presents some elements that give to it certain singularity. The principal one derives from the privilege that the architect concedes to the frontal vision of the building, talking about the portico of the hall, by which it is monumentalized its access. It is a portico open to the exterior and overhanging, hold by a series of rounded archways, five arches concretely. There is a terrace settled up above the portico, to which surrounds a parapet with grille and which is accessible through the first floor. Apart from that, the façades of the former Youth Centre were sober and whitewashed, and it is coursed by two ledges, which are actually some simple moldings that remark the separation between both floors and between the parapet and the second floor. Only in this last one, the tram is found on the terrace, which is decorated with curved tiles. These are also used to cover the hipped roof that crowns the construction.

    Historical Data

    The former Youth Centre was built by the Social Patronage José Antonio Primo de Rivera.

    Uses and state of preservation

    The building is in good state of preservation. Its interior is much modified. However, the façades, in spite of some retouches of color in the ledges and the plinth, keep their original aspect. In terms of the uses, it is currently the headquarters of the Senior Centre and of the Local Museum of Traditions and Popular Customs, even though its rooms are also used by the City Council and diverse local associations.

  • San Paulino Parish Church

    Identification

    San Paulino Parish Church

    Location

    San Paulino St. nº 1.

    Architect

    Manuel Fernández-Pujol Fernández (graduated in 1929).

    Date of Construction

    1946-1954.

    Description

    The San Paulino church has a Latin cross floor plan, even though the apse, which is polygonal and the arms of the crossing present a lacking development. In the lengthwise direction, it has only a nave with a barrel vault reinforced by transverse arches that download their weight into the pilasters. In the cross-wise direction, that is, the transept, the same is found, although its lacking development already mentioned does not make necessary the use of transverse arches. It is remarkable that an impost reveals the divisor line between the wall and the dome. In the intersection of both naves, we can find a doom with ribs and oculus, lifted on four toral arches through scallops.

    Focusing on the exterior, we can remark that the naves were covered with a pitched roof with curved tiles, but at the beginning of the 70’s of the last siècle, it was replaced in the principal nave this type of covering for a flat one. Above the transept and covering the doom, it is lifted a four-sided tower, whose pitched covering is crowned by a lantern, rounded off with a little doom covered with blue tiles. Attached to the main façade we find the bell tower, which is formed by the four-sided tower, an octagonal bell tower and a doom covered with blue and white tiles.

    The whole is of great austerity and simplicity, noticeable in the interior as well as in the exterior. It has influence on it the finishing wall hangings, smooth and whitewashed, the lacking and small size of the hollows, and the insignificant presence of the decorative elements. A good example of these characteristics gives to the main façade, with its big door without any ornamental detail, its little rose window and its empty alcove.

    It must be added that around the temple, we find various parish spaces, like the sacristy, the office of the parish priest, the archive, the room for catechesis, the home, etc… For the construction of this last one, at the end of the 70’s, it was necessary to demolish a little baptistery located next to the right side of the main façade.

    Of the interior of the church, it is remarkable those elements, that – in our view – deserve attention. First of all, five great oil paintings of the Italian painter Ciro de Michele, made between 1954 and 1958, show naval scenes of the Gospel. Secondly, there are six stained glass windows where they are represented the Virgen del Carmen, San Paulino, the Virgen del Pilar, the Virgen de la Oliva, San José and the Inmaculada Concepción, and the rose windows with the Carmelite emblems. Thirdly, Nuestro Padre Jesús Nazareno chapel, in which there are exposed for cult the images of Nº. P. Jesús Nazareno (Vicente Tena, 1927), María Santísima de los Dolores (Miguel Láinez Capote, 1941) and San Juan Evangelista (Juan Abascal Fuentes, 1975). Fourthly, the Medinaceli Christ chapel, in which we observe the sculptures of Nº. P. Jesús Cautivo y Rescatado (Miguel Láinez Capote, 1950) and María Santísima de la Trinidad (Fernando Buiza, 197?). Fifthly, the simple altarpiece in wood, made of mahogany and citronella mainly, presides the presbytery, designed by the endeavour ÇSantarrufina in 1937. In it, we can see the images of the Santísimo Cristo del Amor (Enrique Casterá, 1965), San Paulino (Francisco de P. Gomara, 1944) and the Virgen del Carmen (Eduardo Espinosa, 1938). Sixthly, two images of angel located in the tabernacle, attributed to “La Roldana” and dated between 1686 and 1689. Seventhly, the sculpture of the crucified Christ located in the sacristy, was brought at the beginning of the 20th C. from Vejer and whose author is unknown, as well as its date, although by its characteristics can be dated from the 16th or 17th centuries.

    Historical Data

    The construction of a temple that could take in the large number of parishioners of Barbate was a need resolved temporarily by the curia with the raising of the modest church of Nuestra Señora del Carmen and San Paulino (1937). The definitive solution would come later, in the coming of a series of favorable circumstances, from which we remark the construction of our diocese of twenty nine parishes in September 1944, between them that of the San Paulina, and the start-up, with it, of determined mechanisms to ease the construction and/or expanding of temples in it. To these events, we should add the economical availability of the central and municipal administrations, with their subsidies. This way it was possible to lay the foundation stone of the new temple the 12th October 1946. Its construction was also possible thanks to the donations of National Consortium of Tunny Fishing and of the neighbors, mobilized around the Council Pro-Parish, organism constituted in January 1948 and in which predominated the representatives of the fishing sector. Lastly, it is remarkable the role played by the priest Manuel López Benítez, destined to our village since 1941, who can be considered as one of the main promoters of the project due to his capacity of coordination and mobilization, a quality that was brought to light even after the benediction of the temple, the 12th October 1954, where it was necessary to tidy up it.


    Uses and state of preservation

    The San Paulino church is still working. Regarding the architectonical changes, they are not many, but they deserve to be outlined the above cited of the roof of the main nave and the demolishment of the baptistery. In terms of the changes of image, at the beginning of 2004, it was preceded to paint certain areas of the façades in white, abandoning so, the original predominance of lime. In any case, and having this into account, the aspect the temple presents today does not differ very much from which it had fifty years ago, being its current state of preservation more than acceptable. /p>

    Administrative situation

    The building is property of the diocese of Cádiz and Ceuta.

  • San Ambrosio Chapel

    Identification

    San Ambrosio Chapel.

    Location

    Kilometer 10 from the CA-218 (Vejer-Barbate).

    Date of construction

    VII Century.

    Description

    San Ambrosio Chapel has an only nave, with orientation from West to East, which is structured by four pointed transverse arches of brick. These used to hold the now disappeared gable roof, with a tile roof on wooden beams and board. The four arches lie on eight columns attached to the walls, one for each support, that are rounded off by a cymatium molding and nacelles, except the two closest to the apse which are formed by compounded capitals, possibly of Roman origin. At the feet of the nave we find the narthex, whose covering, which is also lost, was a roof beam falling to the West. The communication between both spaces is resolved with the insertion of the wall that separates them from a pointed hollow of horseshoe, framed by an alfiz and rounded off by an ecclesiastic emblem of the priest Pedro Fernández de Solís. Above this, there are three crosses, to the left, the San Andrés cross; in the middle, the cross-calvary of the Carmelo; to the right, above its covering, it is rounded off by a central splayed oculus and a solar clock in the upper vortex. On the other hand, the narthex is accessible through a semi-circular arch hold by doorposts of ashlars. In the east end of the chapel, the head, we can see the four-sided apse. It is separated from the nave by a wall in which a central pointed arch opens with pointed discharge arches in the laterals. The apse is divided in three spaces, which functions are difficult to precise due to their worsening state, although the most logical thing is that they may belong to the presbytery and analogous rooms (sacristy, tabernacle, etc…) Just at the back of the apse, we can find the ruins of a water tank, of Roman origin, that some researchers identify as the baptistery. The chapel has a square base annex to the northern wall of the nave, which is covered by an octagonal doom above beveled vaults. Currently it can be acceded from the outside. However, in its origin, it was acceded from the nave through a semi-circular hollow, now covered. Lastly, the materials used in the construction of the chapel are diverse, alternating blocks of stone, rough stones, and bricks.

    Historical Data

    San Ambrosio visigothic chapel was built in the 7th Century above the rests of a Roman village, some of which were reutilized in the building, like the compounded capitals close to the apse. To concrete, its consecration took place the 14th November 644, when the bishop Pimenio, title holder of the asidonense diocese, left some relics of the martyrs Vicente, Félix and Julián in the base of a column. Thus, the inscription testifies that it was engraved on the shaft of that column. Since then, the chapel has been restored many times. The most important restoration was that promoted by Pedro Fernández de Solís, bishop of Cádiz between 1473 and 1500. The lateral chapel, the pointed transverse arches and its own emblem date from this period.

    Uses and state of preservation

    We don’t know the date in which the chapel was left, but it is true that currently it is in a complete situation of abandonment and it manifests a high grade of deterioration. This happens in spite of the work made by San Ambrosio School-Workshop (1999-2003), whose initial ambitious aim is to recover the chapel as well as its environment, although only were accomplished the cleaning of the area and some interesting archeological works. A good proof of the deterioration is the lacking of roofs, the underpinning of the four transverse arches, the lacking of coverings or the degradation of the materials for construction in particular points.

    Administrative situation

    The chapel and the territories that surround it are property of the diocese of Cádiz and Ceuta. Being one of the little examples of visigothic architecture in the peninsular south, the Culture Council of Andalucía determined, through the decree 75/2004, the 17th February (BOJA nº. 52, 16th March 2004) declared it Site of Cultural Interest in the Monument category. In the same text, they were also declared sites of cultural interest the following movable properties: the foundational inscription of the chapel, today put in Nª. Sª de la Oliva sanctuary (Vejer de la Frontera), the image of San Ambrosio which was exposed for the cult and today it is localized in the parish church of Divino Salvador (Vejer de la Frontera).

    The City Council of Barbate, being conscious of its value, in the Normative of Protection and Prevention of the Historical Heritage of Archeological Character in Barbate, approved at the beginning of 2004 (BOP nº78, 3rd April 2004), assigned to it the level of integral protection, maximum level of protection assigned to those sites that must be conserved integrally for their study and cultural public enjoyment.

The Township

Located in the region of La Janda, Barbate is a precious village of Cádiz which holds one of the most famous fishing ports in Andalucía. Through its 25km of coast that groups the municipal term, villages like Zahara de los Atunes and Caños de Meca or beaches like the Hierbabuena or Nuestra Señora del Carmen, compose one of the most recognized tourist cores in the South of Spain. In addition, the Natural Park of Breña and Marismas del Barbate offer the chance to walk by a great variety of routes of great ecology and landscape interest inside of the township in which the Trafalgar Cape is found, where happened the famous battle and where the Frank-Spanish fleet was defeated by the admiral Nelson.

Official Announcements

Government Team’s salary
-Publication of the gross salary of the Mayor and the City Councilors of the Government Team.

Circular
-Office of the Municipal Register of Inhabitants 


09/11/2015

Publication of the gross salary of the Mayor and the City Councilors of the Government Team

GROSS SALARIES 2015

Mayor and City Councilors of the Government Team 


 

Name

Delegation

Annual Gross

Monthly Gross

Miguel Molina

Mayoralty-Presidency, Civic Security, Municipal Legal Counseling, Hiring and Transparency

37.604 €

2.686 €

Ana Pérez

Social Welfare area and Services to the Citizenship

39.200 €

2.800 €

Javier Rodríguez

Innovation Area, Busines, Tourist and Technological Development

24.864 €

1.776 €

María José Corrales

Urban Development Area, Infrastructures, Environment and Patrimony.

26.320 €

1.880 €

Tamara Caro

Economy, Treasury and Human Resources.

26.320 €

1.880 €

Sergio Román

Culture, Cultural Heritage, Historical Archive, Hotel Business, Trade and Communication.

24.864 €

1.776 €

Estela Ortigosa

Patrimony, Environment and Sutainability.

24.864 €

1.776 €

Juan Miguel Muñoz

Youth, Festivities, Free Time, Civic Participation and Boroughs.

24.864 €

1.776 €

 


07/12/2011

Office of the Municipal Register of Inhabitants

It is communicated to the citizens that go to the Office of the Municipal Register of Inhabitants to process the change of address in the census, that the cited change does not imply the fiscal change of address in the database of other public organisms.

Buen ambiente en el torneo de balonmano playa celebrado el pasado sábado en la Playa del Carmen

La Playa del Carmen fue el escenario el pasado sábado, 26 de agosto, del torneo de balonmano playa organizado para los equipos más jóvenes y las escuelas. El campeonato estuvo organizado por el Club Balonmano Playa Barbate en colaboración con la Delegación de Deportes del Ayuntamiento de Barbate. En el torneo han participado más de cien jugadores de once equipos pertenecientes a las categorías benjamín, alevín, infantil y cadete, tanto masculinos como femeninos. 

     Este torneo se organiza previo a la pretemporada y contó con muy buen ambiente entre todos los participantes, que disputaron partidos en la Playa del Carmen desde las 09.30 horas hasta bien entrada la tarde. Entre los equipos se encontraban varios del Club Bahía de Algeciras, así como Los Pulpos de la misma localidad. Por supuesto, el Club Balonmano Barbate también participó, demostrando una vez más la gran calidad de sus jugadores.