The wicked Roderick and the reason for the Conquest - with intermittent fevers.
We are now heading through Cijuela and Lachar, both of which are bounded by the A-92. Greater Cijuela has about 4000 people in it and the nearby pueblos. Going back to the Middle Ages a couple of towers were built. The first was destroyed by the troops of Don Alvaro de Luna in 1431 and all traces of it have gone. The second has remains but I am not sure who did for it. In 1760 only forty people lived here. In 1776 flax and hemp arrived and things pushed up. In 1850 Pascual Madoz’s work on ‘Spain and its Overseas Possessions’ said - in an edited form: ‘ ... situated on a plain in the Granada valley, not very healthy due to the tides of the Genil River, which is 400 to 500 varas to the north, suffering from intermittent fevers. It has 101 houses, including the town hall in poor condition, a primary school endowed with 2 reales daily, which is attended by 17 to 20 children, a modern hermitage, belonging to the Duke of Abrantes, lord of the town, which serves as the paris...