- Marbella
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For the automobile, see SEAT Marbella.
Marbella — Municipality —
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SealLocation of the municipality of Marbella Location in Andalusia Location in Spain Coordinates: 36°31′0″N 4°53′0″W / 36.516667°N 4.883333°WCoordinates: 36°31′0″N 4°53′0″W / 36.516667°N 4.883333°W Country Spain Autonomous community Andalusia Province Málaga Comarca Costa del Sol Occidental Government – Type Mayor-council – Body Ayuntamiento de Marbella – Mayor María Ángeles Muñoz Uriol (PP) Area – Total 114.3 km2 (44.1 sq mi) – Land 114.3 km2 (44.1 sq mi) – Water 0.00 km2 (0 sq mi) Population (2006) – Total 124,332 – Density 1,088/km2 (2,817.9/sq mi) Time zone CET (UTC+1) – Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2) Website www.marbella.es Marbella is a town in Andalusia, Spain. It is situated on the Mediterranean Sea, in the province of Málaga, beneath the La Concha mountain. In 2000 the city had 98,823 inhabitants, in 2004, 116,234, in 2010 approximately 135,000.
Marbella and nearby Puerto Banús are important tourist resorts on the Costa del Sol. Marbella is especially popular with tourists from Northern Europe (including the UK, Ireland and Germany), Saudi Arabia, U.A.E. and the U.S.A. Marbella is particularly known for the rich and famous, a very popular destination for celebrities and wealthy people. It is also a major destination for luxury cruise ships and mega yachts which are also often docked in its harbour. Marbella is specially popular with those who like golf and marinas. In the area around the city there are concentrated many private estates and luxury hotels. Marbella also hosts a WTA tennis tournament on red clay, the Andalucia Tennis Experience.
From Marbella it is easy to reach other places, like Málaga, Estepona, Torremolinos, Fuengirola or Gibraltar by bus. The area is also served by the A7 autovia, and the closest airport is Málaga-Costa Del Sol.
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History
Archaeological excavations have been made in the mountains around Marbella, which point at human habitation in Paleolithic and Neolithic times. There are also remains of Phoenician and later Carthaginian settlements in the area of Rio Real. In Roman times, the city was called "Salduba" (Salt City[1]).
During Islamic rule, the Moors built a castle in this city. The name Marbella, which is derived from Marbil-la, dates from this Islamic era. The traveller Ibn Battuta characterised the town as "a pretty little town in a fertile district."[2] In 1485, the city fell to Christian forces.
In the 1940s, Marbella was a small jasmine-lined village with only 900 inhabitants. But this soon changed when Prince Max Egon zu Hohenlohe-Langenburg and his heir Alfonso de Hohenlohe experienced a problem with their Rolls-Royce in the vicinity. This first encounter with Marbella so impressed Alfonso that he decided to buy land commercially, marketing the area as a tourist destination. In 1954, he opened the Marbella Club Hotel; his son had recently returned from California and the hotel was loosely modelled on the motel style with lower pitched terracotta roofs among 23,000 trees.
Given Alfonso's maternal membership in Spain's titled aristocracy (his mother, Doña Piedad Iturbe and Scholtz, was the Marquesa de Belvis de las Navas), and his paternal kinship to the royal courts of Europe, the hotel quickly proved a hit with vacationing members of Europe's ruling elites, and those privileged to socialise with them in casual yet discreet luxury. Don Jaime de Mora y Aragón, a Spanish bon vivant, brother to Fabiola, Queen of the Belgians, Adnan Khashoggi and Guenter Rottman, were frequent vacationers.
Typical was a gala held in August 1998 as a fundraiser at the Marbella club for AIDS relief NGO. Prince Alfonso presided, supported by the sons of his first marriage to Princess Ira von Fürstenberg, an Agnelli heiress who arrived with her own entourage; Princess Marie-Louise of Prussia (great-granddaughter of Kaiser Wilhelm II) who, with her husband Count Rudolf "Rudi" von Schönburg–Glauchau, would eventually take over the Marbella Club Hotel from Prince Alfonso; and socialite Countess Gunilla von Bismarck.[3]
In 1974, Prince Fahd arrived at the city after having broken the bank of the Casino of Montecarlo.[4] Until his death in 2005, he was a frequent and profitable guest at Marbella, where his retinue of over a thousand people spending petro-dollars was welcome, including the then-anonymous Osama bin Laden.
In the eighties, Marbella continued to be a destination for the jet set, with the most recognizable face being that of Gunilla von Bismarck. However, problems arose in 1987 when Melodie Nakachian, a daughter of Raymond Nakachian, a local billionaire philanthropist and the Korean singer Kimera was kidnapped, putting the city in the focus of the media.
In 1991, the builder and president of Atlético Madrid, Jesús Gil y Gil was elected by a wide majority as mayor of Marbella for his own party, the Independent Liberal Group (GIL in Spanish), promising to fight petty crime and the declining prestige associated with the region. Amongst other things, he used, as an international spokesman for the city, actor Sean Connery who later ended this relationship after his image was used for electoral purpose by Gil.
The city also experimented with extensive building activity under the administration of Gil, with critics stating that this construction was often performed without regard for the existing urban plan and thus new plans were stopped by the Andalusian government. Something of a maverick, Gil despised town-hall formalities instead ruling from his office at the Club Financiero. Criticism was levelled at Gil by the major parties of Spain (Spanish Socialist Workers' Party and People's Party) but this did not convince enough voters to oust him and Spanish celebrities continued to spend summers there. Gil's GIL extended to other Costa del Sol towns like Estepona and across the Strait of Gibraltar to the Spanish African cities of Ceuta and Melilla.
This period brought an appraisal of the city but also investigations of corruption. Eventually, Jesús Gil was forced to resign in 2002 after being jailed for diverting public funds for Atlético. He was succeeded by Julián Muñoz, a former waiter then well-known for being romantically engaged with singer Isabel Pantoja with more than one hundred trials for corruption following. Muñoz was overthrown by his own party which elected Marisol Yagüe, a former secretary, as the new mayor. Muñoz and Gil took part in a scandalous debate on television where both accused each other of having robbed public funds.
The situation exploded in March 2006, when Yagüe was jailed as the city council was near bankruptcy. According to unsubstantiated testimony, Muñoz and Yagüe were puppets in the hands of Antonio Roca, a councilman who got the job after failing in private business and gathering substantial wealth while working as a public servant. While Yagüe was in jail, the city council was run by Tomás Reñones, a former Atlético Madrid football player, who ended up in jail as well. On April 8, 2006, the Spanish government decided to suspend the council, the first time such a course of action was taken in Spanish democracy [1].
After a short period of interim government, municipal elections were held in May 2007. The People's Party (PP) gained a majority with 16 out of the total of 26 councillors. The Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) had 10 councillors, United Left (IU) had 1. [5]. The Mayoress is Maria Angeles Muñoz, leader of the People's Party in Marbella. In the municipal elections of May 2011 the PP won 15 seats, the PSOE 7, IU 2 with three independents elected.[6]
Sights in and around Marbella
- Arabian wall
- Bonsai museum
- Museo del Grabado Español Contemporáneo
- Old city centre
- Playa de la Bajadilla (beach)
- Playa de Fontanilla (beach)
- Puerto Banús, a marina built by José Banús where Rolls-Royces and Ferraris meet yachts.
- The Golden Mile featuring the Marbella Club Hotel and its beach club, as well as the late King Fahad's palace.
- Encarnation's Church (Iglesia de la Encarnación). Oldest church in the city situated in the old-town.
Notable residents
- Antonio Banderas has been a regular visitor to Marbella where he has a house in Los Monteros. His and Melanie Griffith's daughter was born in Marbella in 1999.
- In 1981 English actress Joan Collins accepted her career-making role in the hit prime time melodrama Dynasty while living in her Marbella vacation home.
- Sean Connery lived in Marbella, where he was regularly seen playing golf when not filming. He left following disagreements with the local press.
- English writer Vincent Cronin has had a home in Marbella for decades.
- Arms dealer Monzer al-Kassar was a longtime resident until his imprisonment, and has been nicknamed "The Prince of Marbella".
- Mark Langford, the former, multi-millionaire boss of The Accident Group who notoriously sacked most of his 2,700 staff by text message, died after being involved in a car accident in Marbella on April 11, 2007
- Actor Dolph Lundgren resides in Marbella and London with his wife and two children.
- English songwriter Richard Daniel Roman
- Porn star Linsey Dawn McKenzie
- Actor and comedian Mike Reid was living in Marbella at the time of his death on 29 July 2007. He was born in Hackney, London, England, and retired to Marbella a few years before he died.[2]
- Former dictator of Cuba, Fulgencio Batista, died in Marbella in 1973.
- Scottish footballer Andy Gray[disambiguation needed ]
- James Hewitt
Media references
Santiago Segura's Torrente comedy film series took its second part Torrente 2: Misión en Marbella (2001, the highest grossing Spanish film ever) to Marbella, where the repulsive cop José Luis Torrente meets the kitsch inhabitants of the city in an intrigue of international politics.
Marbella was featured in the popular political thriller, Syriana. It was used as the location for a private party which an Arabian Emir hosts. Marbella was portrayed as an extremely affluent city with most cars at the entrance of the palace being very expensive. In the same year it appeared in Steven Spielberg's Munich in a very similar context.
In 2006, there was an international advertisement advertising Marbella as a tourist destination. The song on the advert is aptly called Marbella and is performed by singer Cristie.
The Finnish 1985 comedy film Uuno Epsanjassa is situated in Marbella.
Many other movies and TV programmes such as Nip/Tuck portray it as a playground for the rich.
ITV aired a TV programme in spring 2007 called Marbella Belles which portrays a series of British women who now live in Marbella with their rich partners.
Cast of Living On The Edge visit on the fourth episode of the first season.
It is also referenced in the stage play "Noises Off" by Michael Frayn. The character Phillip and his wife Belinda have been tax exiles in Spain. The character Gary thinks he and his guest are alone in the house, when he spots Phillip, and thinks he's a ghost. Gary: "Hold on a second, you're not from the other world!" Phillip: "Yes, yes, Marbella!"
Carlos Baute's song "Colgando en tus Manos" mentions him and his love vacationing in Marbella and Marta Sanchez sings this line in their duet version of the song.
Simon Cowell for series 7 of the X Factor went to Marbella for his Judges House with the groups with Sinnita.
The cast of the ITV2 show The Only Way is Essex visited Marbella in the summer of 2011, and it was mentioned many times in the second series, where they nicknamed the resort "Marbs".
Twin towns – Sister cities
Marbella is twinned with:
- Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
- Miami Beach, United States
- Nabeul, Tunisia
- Nevers, France
- Punta del Este, Uruguay
References
- ^ Yahoo! UK Travel
- ^ http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/1354-ibnbattuta.html
- ^ Beéche, Arturo (October 1998). "Royal News". European Royal History Journal (Oakland) (/VIII): 32.
- ^ http://www.abc.es/hemeroteca/historico-08-08-2005/abc/Gente/la-vida-de-fahd-en-la-milla-de-oro_2156278218.html
- ^ http://www.marbella.es/ayuntamiento/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=128&Itemid=241
- ^ local election results, Spanish Ministry of the Interior, accessed 17 July 2011
External links
- Marbella Travel Information
- Marbella TV
- Ayuntamiento de Marbella — official Marbella city hall site, partly in English, mostly in Spanish
- Marbella travel guide from Wikitravel
- Marbella Weather — Climate and brief history
- News, market trends, stats, politics, events from Marbella, Spain (in English)
Capitals of provinces Port cities Algeciras · Almuñécar · Benalmádena · Chipiona · El Puerto de Santa María · Fuengirola · Marbella · Moguer · Motril · Nerja · San Fernando · Sanlúcar de Barrameda · TorremolinosOther cities Antequera · Aracena · Baeza · Cazorla · Dos Hermanas · Grazalema · Guadix · Jerez de la Frontera · Linares · Ronda · Rota · Santiponce · ÚbedaList of the Spanish Costas Categories:- Marbella
- Municipalities in Málaga
- Tourism in Spain
- Populated places in Málaga
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