You’ve decided you wish to visit the extraordinary golden coastlines
of Miami, Florida or Queensland, Australia. Well what if you had more
accessible and cheaper, but just as breath-taking, alternatives because there
is. The Costa del Sol, Costa Dorada and the beaches of Gibraltar in Spain.
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| View of Costa Del Sol from the air. |
Translated as the Sun Coast, this shoreline has been under
infrequent but long ownerships and incorporated into their many Empires. From 218
BC, it was ruled by the Roman Republic, which used the Costa del Sol as a
transit port for the
Via Herculea,
which also boosted the economy and culture of the cities dotted along this
ancient oceanfront. Centuries after the decline of Roman power, the trade
industry dominated the source of income in the Malaga province in the 18
th
Century. Since then, the Costa del Sol has been introduced to and see the benefits
of the tourism industry. The region is situated in the south of Spain between its
two younger sister coasts, Costa de la Luz (Coast of Light) and Costa Tropical
(Tropical Coast) along the Mediterranean. Along this renowned coast, there is
the city of Malaga itself, the capital of the province with the same name. The
city was founded in the 6
th Century BC whilst under the rule of
Ancient Carthage but received its name during the leadership of the Roman
Republic and Roman Empire from 218 BC. With a populous of over 569, 000, the
city is the sixth largest in the whole of the Spanish Kingdom.
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| Map of Gibraltar. |
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Rock and City of Gibraltar -
an Overseas British Territory. |
Near to this coastline is the British Overseas Territory of
Gibraltar, located on the southern tip of Spain. Known in Grecian mythology as one of
the two Pillars of Hercules, after he created the Strait of Gibraltar, this
section holds an importance not many people are aware of. With a population of
32.2 thousand nowadays, Gibraltar also has a long distant memory intertwining
with that of Carthage and Romans. However, Gibraltar has always remained under
British sovereignty during and after the fall of the British Empire, which was reaffirmed
during the referendums of 1967 and 2002.
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| Flag of Gibraltar. |
Unlike its two fellowships, Costa Dorada (Golden Coast) is a
relatively medium sized coastline included within the province of Tarragona and
the region of Catalonia, between Cunit and Alcanar facing the Spanish island of
Ibiza, Malta and Mallorca. One of the many metropolises on its doorstep is
Salou. With a population of just under 26.6 thousand, the history has a long past
as a port city for the Greeks and Romans, but it also regained its infamy in
1229, after James I of Aragon departed Salou’s harbour to conquer the Balearic
Islands to create the Kingdom of Majorca. Because of the increasing tourism
industry, Salou’s main attractions are the Costa Dorada, the Church of Santa
Maria del Mar, the Monument of Jaume I and the Fountains of Font Iluminosa.
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| Costa Del Sol Map. |
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| Costa Dorada Map. |
In 2012, I visited the Costa Dorada and the city of Salou in
the Autumn Half Term School Break with my family. Once we arrived, it was a
whirlwind of “visit this place, visit that place.” But I enjoyed the holiday as
it was – a simple holiday with a raw breath-taking view of the Mediterranean Sea,
broken up by the Balaeric Islands, which could be seen in the distance from the
rocky crevices and soft sand beaches at the shoreline. The Costa Dorada is the
personification of that image in your head of a cloudless sky,
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| View of Costa Dorada. |
magnificent
coast with a natural sense of awe and an endless horizon. These contrasts and
simultaneous compliments that of the Costa del Sol and Gibraltar shorelines. These
two coasts I visited two years after, in 2014 on a separate trip to see the
Costa del Sol in its entirety. Whilst the Costa Dorada has the raw magnificence
of a rugged shore, these two smooth, gentle beaches really are staggering in their
individual perfections and are definitely, from a writers viewpoint, the scene
of many character reflective scenes and sections in a story, with the Strait of
Gibraltar drawing your attention to the output of Morocco and the African
Continent. With the Rock of Gibraltar in the background and the Strait of Gibraltar
in the foreground, the local shoreline is unquestionably and categorically the
place where you can lose yourself and all the built up stresses for a while
until that burden of work is replaced with a sense of content and belonging. As a part of Spain, the Sun and Golden Coasts, including Gibraltar despite it being a British Overseas Territory, have a very easy acceptance about them, allowing those disadvantaged to relax and enjoy their holidays, not intruding with uncomfortable questions about anything they perceive to be different.
Have you come to your decision yet? These three Spanish awe-inspiring coasts or the more expensive versions over across the Atlantic and on the other side of the world? You may find yourself surprised with what you find on the European continent, closer to home.
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