Setenil de las Bodegas is a town (pueblo) in the province of Cádiz, Spain, famous for its dwellings built into rock overhangs above the Rio Trejo. According to the 2005 census, the city has a population of 3,016 inhabitants. It has an exact antipodal city: Auckland, New Zealand.
This small town (pueblo) is located 157 kilometers (98 mi) northeast of  Cadiz. It has a distinctive setting along a narrow river gorge. The town  extends along the course of the Rio Trejo with some houses being built  into the rock walls of the gorge itself, created by enlarging natural  caves or overhangs and adding an external wall.Modern Setenil evolved from a fortified Moorish town that occupied a  bluff overlooking a sharp bend in the Rio Trejo northwest of Ronda. The castle dates from at least the Almohad period  in the 12th century. However, the site was certainly occupied during  the Roman invasion of the region in the 1st century AD. Setenil was once  believed to be the successor of the Roman town of Laccipo, but it was  subsequently proved that Laccipo became the town of Casares in Malaga. 
Given the evidence of other nearby cave-dwelling societies, such as  those at the Cueva de la Pileta west of Ronda, where habitation has been  tracked back more than 25,000 years, it is possible that Setenil was  occupied much much earlier. Most evidence of this would have been erased  by continuous habitation.
Tradition holds that the town's Castilian name came from the Roman Latin phrase septem nihil  ('seven times nothing'). This is said to refer to the Moorish town's  resistance to Christian assault, allegedly being captured only after  seven sieges. This took place in the final years of the Christian Reconquest.  Besieged unsuccessfully in 1407, Setenil finally fell in 1484 when  Christian forces expelled the Moorish occupants. Using gunpowder  artillery, the Christians took fifteen days to capture the castle whose  ruins dominate the town today.Due to the strategic importance of Setenil, the victory was celebrated widely in Castile and was the source of several legends in local folklore. Isabella I of Castile is said to have aborted during the siege with the ermita  of San Sebastian being built as a tribute to the dead child, who was  named Sebastian. However, there appears to be no historical basis to  this story.
The full name of Setenil de las Bodegas dates from the 15th century,  when new Christian settlers, in addition to maintaining the Arab olive  and almond groves, introduced vineyards. The first two crops still  flourish in the district but the once flourishing wineries—bodegas— were wiped out by the phylloxera insect infestation of the 1860s, which effectively destroyed most European vine stocks.Over the intervening centuries, Setenil also gained a reputation for its meat products, particularly chorizo sausage and cerdo (pork) from pigs bred in the surrounding hills. As well as meat, it has a reputation for producing fine pasteles  (pastries), and its bars and restaurants are among the best in the  region. Its outlying farms also provide Ronda and other local towns with  much of their fruit and vegetables.
Article source : www.wikipedia.org, 
Image source  : www.environmentalgraffiti.com; www.odditycentral.com
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