The giant region of Andalucia , located in southern Spain, is
extremely diverse and hard to distill into a few paragraphs.
Most Andalusian provinces, however, do share the hot, dry
sun and a reputation for being the haunt of poets and artists.
Above all else, it is the remnants of Moorish occupations that
typify Andalusia. Between 711 A.D. and the Christian
Reconquest of 1492, the Moors hosted the most
sophisticated civilization of the Middle Ages in the three
major cities of Córdoba, Sevilla and Granada. Each one
preserves extraordinarily beautiful monuments of the era,
the most notable being Granada's Alhambra palace.
Today, the autonomous region counts the provinces of
Almeria , Cadiz , Cordoba ,Granada , Huelva,
Jaen , Malaga ,
and Sevilla in its borders. Andalusia is bounded on the south
and east by the Mediterranean Sea and Atlantic Ocean and
on the west by Portugal.
The regional cities run the gamut from chic resorts like
Marbella on the Costa del Sol to more industrial cities like
Málaga as well as historical landmarks like Granada or
Cordoba.
The capital is the city of Seville, which boasts the Alcazar, a
Moorish fortress, and La Giralda, the turret-turned-belltower
on the grandiose Gothic cathedral. The city of Mijas is an
example of an Andalusian institution, the "white villages," so
named because of the omnipresent brilliantly whitewashed
houses.
There are too many local hotspots to even begin to describe
Andalusia , but no Andalusian guide would be complete
without mentioning the ever-present festivals and ferias, the
most famous being the giant April Fair in Sevilla, the
pilgrimage to El Rocio near Huelva in late May, and the Easter
celebrations at Málaga and Sevilla.