Aledo, Spain


Aledo is a municipality in the Region of Murcia, southern Spain.
It is home to a castle built during the early Middle Ages by the Moors, to command the Guadalentín valley. When the Taifa of Murcia was conquered by the Kingdom of Castile, it was assigned to the Order of Santiago, who renovated it and added the Torre del Homenaje.

History

The municipality has been inhabited since the Upper Palaeolithic. There are remains of that presence in the archaeological site Cabezo de las Cuevas. The current municipality was also scene of human residence in the Calcolthic. The proof of that is a site named La Agualeja that consists mainly in small remains of a wall. There is also evidence of human occupancy in the Bronze Age, specifically of people belonging the Argaric civilization. It consists in another archaeological site named Los Allozos II and it was a typical Argaric settlement which was located on a hillock.
During the Roman Hispania Era there was also human presence and one evidence of that fact are the archaeological sites named Juncarejo and Juncarejo II. The site consists of remains of a building structure and the rests of another which is placed in the first one. That could be remains of a burial site.
The most documentary references of Aledo date back to 896 A.D. In the document, the town was mentioned as a hisn. In that most part of the Iberian Peninsula was under rule of Muslim governments.
In the 11th century the castle of Aledo began to be built. In the last years of that century the king Alfonso VI of León and Castile started to conquer back the territories under Muslim rule. In the year 1086 Aledo was taken.
In the year 1092 the king Yusuf Ben Texufin got siege laid with the support of troops from Sevilla, Almería, Granada and Murcia. After two more sieges the Muslim side turned out in conquering back Aledo.
In the year 1243 the Treaty of Alcaraz was signed. In that document a vassalate of the Taifa of Murcia was agreed. However, Aledo, Lorca, Mula and Cartagena rejected the treaty. Aledo was conquered back by the Christians in the year 1244.
After the Reconquista of the Taifa of Murcia was repopulated, but Aledo was repopulated several decades later.
In that era Aledo was located near the border with the Muslim Emirate of Granada and that
As the Emirate of Granada was conquered back, the border position of Aledo came to an end. That lead it to a stagnation of the area and to an increase to Totana, a current municipality which was in that era part of the municipality of Aledo.
During the 16th century the population of Totana increased whereas the population of Aledo decreased.
An upspring of the year 1520 named Revolt of the Comuneros the fortress of Aledo and the town itself resulted highly damaged. That promoted that Totana became capital of the municipality and Aledo became a neighbourhood of Totana.
In the 18th century, Aledo and Totana split and became two different municipalities.

Geography

The municipality is part of the comarca Bajo Guadalentín. It is enclosed by the municipality of Lorca but its west, which makes the border with Lorca. Aledo is located on the south slope of the mountain range Sierra Espuña.

Demography

There were 1022 inhabitants registered in Aledo. They are distributed in the following localities: Aledo, with 893 residents; Las Canales, where 60 people live; Nonihay, which population consists of 22; Patalache, where 5 people live and Los Allozos, with 4 inhabitants.

Main sights