Guardamar del Segura

Guardamar del Segura
Guardamar Town Hall
Guardamar Town Hall
Flag of Guardamar del Segura
Coat of arms of Guardamar del Segura
Guardamar del Segura is located in Province of Alicante
Guardamar del Segura
Guardamar del Segura
Location in Spain
Guardamar del Segura is located in Valencian Community
Guardamar del Segura
Guardamar del Segura
Guardamar del Segura (Valencian Community)
Guardamar del Segura is located in Spain
Guardamar del Segura
Guardamar del Segura
Guardamar del Segura (Spain)
Coordinates: 38°5′23″N 0°39′18″W / 38.08972°N 0.65500°W / 38.08972; -0.65500
Country Spain
Autonomous community Valencian Community
ProvinceAlicante
ComarcaBaix Segura / Vega Baja
Judicial districtTorrevieja
Founded10th century
Government
 • MayorCarmen Verdú (2011) (PP)
Area
 • Total
35.58 km2 (13.74 sq mi)
Elevation
25 m (82 ft)
Population
 (2018)[1]
 • Total
15,058
 • Density420/km2 (1,100/sq mi)
Demonym(s)guardamarenc, -a (Val.)
guardamarenco, -a (Sp.)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
03140 and 03149
Dialing code965 and 966
Official language(s)

Guardamar del Segura (Valencian: [ˌɡwaɾðaˈmaɾ ðel seˈɣuɾa]), or briefly Guardamar, is a municipality of the province of Alicante located at the mouth of the river Segura in southern Valencia (autonomous community), Spain. It is a Mediterranean resort, with a large pine forest abutting an 11-km-long white sand beach.

Historically, it was an area of fishermen and farmers. A Phoenician colony, called Herna by Roman geographer Avienius in his book Ora Maritima was the first settlement near the mouth of Segura river,[2] In Valencian, guardar means safekeeping and mar means sea, and this is another possible basis for its current name.

Guardamar is the southernmost Valencian-speaking town and in 1991 41.8% of the town's residents could speak it.[3] Guardamar is also the only municipality of the Vega Baja del Segura comarca (known locally as Baix Segura) where Valencian is traditionally and widely spoken.

Guardamar hosts local festivals like Moros i Cristians (Moros y Cristianos), L'Encantà, and Fogueres de Sant Joan (Hogueras de San Juan), which commemorate its history.

  1. ^ Municipal Register of Spain 2018. National Statistics Institute.
  2. ^ Bierling, Marilyn R. and Gitin, Seymour (2002). The Phoenicians in Spain: an archaeological review of the eighth-sixth centuries B.C.E.: a collection of articles translated from Spanish. Eisenbrauns, p. 124. ISBN 1-57506-056-6
  3. ^ "Fons estadístic documental - Generalitat Valenciana". www.edu.gva.es. Retrieved 20 April 2018.