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Javea/Xàbia ...

Geography
Javea/Xàbia is situated in the north of the province, the Mediterranean Sea is found at the entire of its east coast. Flat agricultural land stretches for miles inland, cut by small streams and used primarily for growing citrus & olive trees. 90 km to the east is the island of Ibiza, which can be seen on a clear day. Javea/Xàbia is the largest place geographically in the Cap de la Nau, the headland that encompasses Javea/Xàbia, Cap Negre and Cap Martí.

The Montgó, which shelters Javea/Xàbia, is the highest summit of the region at over 750m tall. From the Javea/Xàbia side, it is said to resemble an elephant. The Natural Park of Montgó was declared in 1987, it stretches across the area of La Plana to the cape of Sant Antoni.

Climate
Javea/Xàbia is protected from harsh winter winds of the north by the massif of Montgó (753 m / 2,471 ft) and it enjoys a unique microclimate that the World Health Organisation named as one of the healthiest in the world. There are more recorded hours of sunshine per year in Javea/Xàbia than in any other place in Spain, making it a popular destination for Northern Europeans during the cold winter months.


 * Average maximum temperatures
 * Jan 16 °C
 * Feb 17 °C
 * Mar 22 °C
 * Apr 22 °C
 * May 26 °C
 * Jun 29 °C
 * Jul 30 °C
 * Aug 32 °C
 * Sep 30 °C
 * Oct 25 °C
 * Nov 22 °C
 * Dec 17 °C

Population
Since the 1970s Javea/Xàbia has become a popular place for affluent northern European expatriates to purchase retirement villas and the town has an active property industry. Around 7,700 British nationals are registered as resident in the area, as well as some 2,000 Germans and many other nationalities. The town's population is now around 31,100; but this is greatly swelled to well over 100,000 by the annual influx of summer tourists, with Spanish tourists predominating at the height of August.

Infrastructure
Since 2000, Javea/Xàbia's infrastructure has been undergoing significant expansion and improvement work, but the local government has restricted the height and types of new buildings and thus helping to retain much of the town's character. Many new estates of villas have been built in the wooded hills around the bay whilst apartment complexes are being constructed along the coastal strip between the port and the Arenal. The plain remains largely untouched and the groves still produce crops of oranges.



Tourism
Javea/Xàbia has good road connections to regional capitals. Both Alicante and Valencia airports are just over an hour's drive away. There are regular and direct coach links to both Alicante and Valencia as well as a daily service to Madrid. The nearest rail station is at Gata de Gorgos, about 10 km inland, with a regular service to Alicante. There is a regular car ferry to Ibiza and the other Balearic Islands from Javea/Xàbia's close by neighbouring town, Dénia.

The town can be split into three distinct areas: the old town, the port and the Arenal.

Old Town
The old town was once a walled town to protect the inhabitants from marauding pirates that once sailed this coast and there is still evidence of the presence of these fortifications; stone crosses mark the original gates in three locations. In the centre of town, mostly built in original Tosca stone hewn from the rocky shore, sits the church of Sant Bartomeu which dates back to the late 14th century but there is evidence that some of the structure may date back a further 300 years. The church suffered extensive damage during the Spanish Civil War and its southern and western walls remain pockmarked with bullet and shell holes. It was listed as a National Historic and Artistic Monument in 1931 and remains a centrepiece of Javea/Xàbia's 'Old Town'.

The modern municipal market sits opposite on the northern side of the church and stands on the site of the convent of Agustines Descalces (the barefoot Augustine nuns). Built in 1946, and recently refurbished, the market retains the style of the area and sells fresh fruit and vegetables, locally-caught fish, and meat from the local area.

There is also an ethnographical museum (Museu Arqueològic i Etnogràfic "Soler Blasco") and an established art gallery in the old town, Atelier 1 with regular art exhibitions are held in the gallery at the town's library.

There is range of bars and restaurants which serve local and international cuisine.

Port - Duanes del Mar
The port also has a number of restaurants (some on the sea front), a gravel beach and marina. Whilst the history of the harbour stretches back to the 15th century, the first jetty was built in 1871 and it became an important gateway for the export of raisins. The raisin trade collapsed at the end of the 19th century and the settlement became a mere fishing harbour. The modern harbour was built in the 1950s and 1960s. The nautical club has been in the central area of the harbour since 1963. The landmark is the church of Mare de Déu de Loreto, built in 1967 to represent the heart and feelings of Javea/Xàbia's fishing quarter. Its shape is that of an oval boat keel and it was built to resemble a fishing vessel bursting through the waves.

Arenal
The sandy beach area is an arc of wide white sand flanked by a promenade of shops, bars and restaurants. During the summer evenings there are a number of stalls selling handmade crafts. Many of the bars offer live music and stay open until the early hours. Sand artists and street entertainers work along the Arenal beach during the summer months. The Punta de l'Arenal behind the Parador Nacional Hotel was once an important Roman settlement where the fish sauce garum was produced. On the other end of the small bay once stood the Fontana Castle, built in 1424 and destroyed by the English during the Peninsular War in the early 19th century; the ruins of the castle now lie under modern apartment buildings but some of the castle's surviving cannons sit outside the church of Sant Bartomeu in the old town.

The Montgó Natural Park
The Montgó Natural Park was founded on 16 March 1987. It covers approximately 21.5 km² situated between Javea/Xàbia and its neighbours Jesús Pobre and Dénia. Standing at 753 m high, the summit of Montgó is the second highest peak so close to the sea in the Mediterranean; on a clear day the island of Ibiza can be seen.

Traces of the earliest human presence in this area date back 30,000 years, from the upper Paleolithic. They were small nomadic groups which occupied the Foradada cave and ravines facing the sea at Cap de la Nau. These were hunter/gatherer communities.

Around 5000 BC the first agriculture and livestock communities developed with the appearance of pottery and polished stone. Arrowheads, fragments of various vessels, carved stone and bone, as well as remains of human burials from this period have been found in the caves of Montgó and Barranc de Migdia where schematic paintings are also found. Metal utensils dating from the Bronze Age (3000 BC) have also been found in these caves. The villages were situated on small hills, like the one where Javea/Xàbia's chapel of Santa Llúcia is located.

The indigenous Iberian culture began to develop in the 8th century BC. At the top of Benimàquia, (western-most tip of the Montgó) is an Iberian settlement of seventh century BC. Here Phoenician amphorae have been found. Findings of pottery, coins, ornaments in the area of the Coll de Pous (Western end of the Montgó) and the Penya de l'Àguila with its defensive walls,(on top of the ridge) confirm the presence of the Iberians until 1st Century BC. The Romans continued to use the Montgó as a place for observation and surveillance to protect the increasingly important trading port of Dianum (Dénia), which was already a sizeable town in the first century AD. Remains from excavations can be seen in the Javea/Xàbia archaeological museum.

A range of abandoned windmills crown La Plana, most of which date back to the 18th century.

The park besides its archaeological importance has flora which includes a large number of Iberian endemic plants. The Moorish Caliph Abd-ar-Rahman III who, at the beginning of the 10th century, made a special journey from Córdoba,to collect over a hundred medicinal herbs from the slopes of Montgó.

Historical Information
The area was first inhabited in prehistoric times, 30,000 years ago by cave dwellers on Montgó. Subsequent residents have included Stone Age, Romans, Greeks, Phoenicians, Visigoths, Germanic, Carthaginians, and Moors, Bronze-age peoples.

Roman fishing boats used the port, and there is evidence that dates the Roman occupation of Javea/Xàbia to the 2nd century BC, it makes Xàbia the oldest known Roman site on the coast with a commercial port for fish and minerals. In the 6th century AD. Christian Visigoth monks, came to Xàbia and founded the monastery of Sant Martí, now gone but probably gave its name to the Cap San Martí. Hermenegild, son of the Visigoth king Leovigild of Toledo, sought refuge in the Monastery after angering his father by marrying a Christian girl. When his father's troops arrived to arrest him all but one monk fled to Portichol — but Hermenegild and the old monk were killed. A number of locals with Visigoth names can be found even today.

There is little left of the Moors other than some inscribed gravestones and ceramics, although they were here from about 714AD until being expelled from Javea/Xàbia in 1609.

Also alongside the Montgó is the 14th century hermitage of Popol, most likely on a very ancient sacred site, possibly built over an underground stream as were many religious buildings.

The town's market day is on Thursdays, except when there is a local or national holiday. There are four main fiestas: the festivities of Jesús Natzaré (April / May) in honour of the perpetual mayor of the town, the Fogueres de Sant Joan (June) which are pagan in origin and commemorate Midsummer and are widespread throughout the Valencian Community, the Moros i cristians (July) parades, which take place in the port area and celebrate the defeat of the Moors by Christian forces in the 13th Century, and the Mare de Déu de Loreto (September) with the bull-running on the harbour walls and a firework display.

Sports and hobby activities are catered for in the area, including cycling, diving, fishing, golf, horse-riding, mountain-biking, photography, bowls, sailing, trekking; there are many shops & rental centres that serve these pursuits.

Nightlife
The nightlife in Javea/Xàbia is centred around the Arenal where there is a selection of bars and clubs. During the summer, several chiringuitos (beach bars) spring up along the seafront between the Arenal and the port area. The old town region also hosts a wide variety of nightlife options, ranging from the more traditional Spanish bars to modern nightclubs frequented by the locals.

Sport
CD Javea play in the Valencia Regional Preferente, the equivalent level of the Football Conference in England.

Javea Green Bowls Club play in the Costa Blanca Bowls Association Northern & Winter Leagues.

Schools
Javea/Xàbia is served well by a number of schools. Junior education is available at C.P. Graüll (town), C.P. Port de Xàbia, C.P. Vicente Tena (town), C.P. Trenc d'Alba (town) and secondary education at I.E.S. Antoni Llidó (town) and I.E.S. Número 1 de Xàbia (port).

Being a popular destination for ex-pats, both English and other nationalities, there is a market for international education. The first "International" school to start-up in the area was The Lady Elizabeth School, started by Veronica Barnes. Since then, Xabia International College has also formed. The Lady Elizabeth School and Xabia International College both have junior schools, and offer full-time education up to A-Level standard.

The Lady Elizabeth School Senior School has since moved to Xaló, an inland area 30 minutes from Javea/Xàbia, while the Junior school has moved to 10kms away to Cumbre del Sol in Benitachell to a brand new school.

Xabia International College is now the only international school in the town.