Mostly pottery, with occasional wars and floods.
We are heading towards Chiclana de la Frontera, which appears to be one of those places which you live if you can’t be squeezed in to Cadiz. They aren’t the only ones. The Phoenicians and their descendants seem to have moved in. Being on the river and within reach of the sea it seemed to be an ideal place for buildings, cisterns, silos and ovens and all the other things discovered by archaeologists in 2006. Fast forward to 1303. When the Crown of Castille gave the place to Alonso Perez de Guzman Guzman was Moroccan born and may have been a Muslim. It is suggested his origins were smudged to fit in with the religious intolerance of the 16th century. The place boomed, along with Cadiz, during the Early Modern - interrupted by the tsunami caused by the Lisbon earthquake which killed dozens of people. In 1811 the French turned up to siege Cadiz. An Anglo-Spanish army turned up, under Sir Thomas Graham. They did for the French but did not manage to...