Archeologists working at Castilleja de Guzmán, a Copper Age site in Seville, dubbed the “Stonehenge of Spain,” have uncovered a unique two-chamber dolmen burial site housing the remains of an important chieftain, along with three guards and 19 women, who it seems were executed to accompany the chiefton on his journey to the afterlife. Qué cabrón.
“This society carried out the construction of a funerary monument and then held a burial ceremony for an important figure along with many members of his court, including his wives and his concubines, which is who we think the women were,” says Javier Verdugo, head of the regional government of Andalusia’s department of historical sites.
- See also Los Dólmenes – Asociación de Amigos del Patrimonio Arqueológico “Hace más de 4.500 años un macabro ritual funerario pudo celebrarse muy cerca de la actual ciudad de Sevilla. Un grupo de 19 mujeres jóvenes se dirigió hacia la muerte. Un hombre lleno de poder acababa de fallecer. Y las mujeres debían acompañarlo en su viaje al más allá.”
Andalusia, Archeological discoveries in Spain | Tags: Castilleja de Guzmán, Copper Age in Spain, Stonehenge of Spain|

I enjoyed this potted history of Mojácar:
Mojácar used to be a town of around 6,000 people in as far back as 1870. It maintained this number of inhabitants until round about 1900 when, slowly, numbers began to fall, speeding its descent in the 1930s. Through the various local vicissitudes of the drop in the local water-table, the end of the de-forestation, a peculiar plague of locusts in 1901, the end of the mines in the 1920s and the troubled times of the Civil War, the area in general eventually became depopulated with mass emigrations to Barcelona, Algeria, Germany and even Argentina, and Mojácar itself began its long descent into what was, by 1960, a moribund village of just 600 souls. Read complete post on Spanish Shilling
Andalusia, history | |

One of Spain’s most enduring historical mysteries is close to being solved as experts decipher and translate more than 10,000 Arabic inscriptions adorning the walls of the Alhambra palace in Granada. Read in the Guardian
Andalusia, Briefs, Granada, Granada city, Spanish architecture, Spanish art | Tags: Alhambra, Arabic inscriptions in Alhambra, walls of the Alhambra palace|