
A PLACE OF PASSAGE THAT BECAME A DESTINATION
Ventas de Zafarraya is a strategic enclave that for centuries has served as a gateway between Granada and the Axarquía of Málaga. The town has managed to transform its border position into a driver of prosperity.
The territory holds memories from ancient times. The first inhabitants of the Llano de Zafarraya date back to the Middle Paleolithic, when humans lived in Boquete Cave, where important Neanderthal remains were found, including the famous ‘Man of Zafarraya’. Modern history begins with a roadside inn at the Boquete, next to the Granada-Málaga Royal Road, an origin that forever marked its commercial and travel character. Another access route to Llano de Zafarraya was the ‘Camino de los Arrieros’ from Vélez-Málaga through the Castillejo, used by transhumant livestock—a historic route that kept trade alive between the coast and the interior for centuries. The 1884 earthquake was also a dramatic turning point, and reconstruction was almost entirely funded by money from the then Spanish province of Cuba, which led the town to be known as Nueva Habana in subsequent years.
