Charming chalet very well located and oriented, with very nice views and within walking distance of shops and the La Cañada golf club. Ground floor: 3 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms. Fully equipped kitchen. Spacious living-dining room with access to a large covered terrace. Upper floor: master bedroom with en-suite bathroom, dressing room, and terrace with sea views. Large garden, saltwater pool, machine room, jacuzzi, and sauna. The villa is equipped with solar panels that generate electricity for the property, ensuring energy efficiency and sustainability. Additionally, it features a car battery… See full property details
Villa
Pueblo Nuevo de Guadiaro, Cádiz
4 beds
3 baths
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NINE out of ten Andalucian towns with the most expensive housing are in Malaga province, with a typical 80-square-meter apartment costing an average €320,000.
Tarifa in Cadiz is the only pricy town not located in Malaga.
Benhavis is the Andalucian town with the most eye-watering price tag with apartments costing €5,391 per square meter. That’s €430,000 for an average apartment.
Next is Marbella at €5,262 /m2, Nerja with €4,799/m2, Fuengirola with €4,784/m2, Tarifa with €4,569/m2, and Benalmádena with €4,384/m2.
Next is Estepona with €4,377/m2, Málaga city with €4,085/m2, Casares with €4,062/m2, and Mijas with €4,039/m2.
“The sharp rise in housing prices is posing a problem for housing affordability, which is at historic levels of difficulty,” Director of Studies and spokesperson for Fotocasa María Matos said.
“The main cause is the structural imbalance between supply and demand: demand is four times greater than available supply.”
“In fact, demand is approaching record highs, driven by changing preferences following the pandemic, increased migration (500,000 people in one year), falling interest rates, and the rise in single-person households,” she said.
Spain only has 350,000 social housing units, and there are fewer new builds in the works, despite the increasing population.
Una falta de tensión en el cableado ha obligado a detener la circulación en ambos sentidos, afectando a 23 trenes
Una falta de tensión en una catenaria ha detenido esta tarde la circulación de 23 trenes de alta velocidad entre Madrid-Toledo y Andalucía. Adif ha informado de que en torno a las 20.30 la circulación entre Yeles (Toledo) y La Sagra (Madrid) se había visto afectada por una avería en el cableado. Una vez recuperada la tensión, el operador ferroviario ha avisado de que los trenes “podrán reanudar la marcha progresivamente” aunque utilizando una única vía, por lo que seguirán registrando retrasos. Los técnicos siguen trabajando para solucionar la incidencia en la vía que permanece cerrada.
Una viajera de uno de los trenes afectados en el recorrido Sevilla-Madrid ha explicado que su tren, que debía haber llegado a Madrid a las 21.52, se ha detenido en un primer momento en la estación de Ciudad Real. “Incluso hemos bajado del tren, pero a los cinco minutos no han hecho volver a subir y hemos arrancado”, ha relatado. Según les han comunicado, se espera que el tren llegue a Madrid a las 23.28 (momentos antes les habían dicho que a las 23.10), aunque a las 22.46 se encontraban en La Sagra, avanzando “muy lento” y registrando paradas. Finalmente, llegaron a las 23.45.
La avería ha afectado a los pasajeros de 23 trenes que cubrían los recorridos Madrid-Puertollano y Puertollano-Madrid; Madrid-Granada; Sevilla-Madrid; Málaga-Barcelona; Madrid-Toledo y Toledo-Madrid; Cádiz-Madrid; Algeciras-Madrid; Madrid-Málaga y Málaga-Madrid, según la agencia Efe.
Recuperada la tensión en vía I entre La Sagra y Yeles. Los trenes afectados de la línea Madrid-Toledo/Andalucía podrán reanudar la marcha progresivamente. Los trenes afectados seguiran registrando retrasos debido a la circulación por vía única.
Adif ha comunicado la avería en la red social X, donde ha publicado: “Se ha enviado personal de electrificación y mantenimiento y locomotoras de socorro para mover los trenes detenidos fuera de estaciones”. También ha informado en la misma red de que había solicitado a Emergencias de Castilla-La Mancha que movilizara recursos de Protección Civil para ofrecer víveres a los pasajeros de los trenes parados por la incidencia.
Además, otra falta de tensión en la catenaria en una de las vías entre Girona y Sant Miquel de Fluviá ha causados retrasos en los trenes convencionales que circulan entre Girona y Figueres.
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SOMETIME around the reign of Emperor Nero, in the Roman city of Gades (now Cadiz), a man named Cinuras was laid to rest beneath a marble tomb.
The tombstone, likely paid for with his own hard-earned savings, bore an unusually bitter epitaph:
“Neither the most powerful, nor his friends, nor his loved ones, showed him any gratitude when he was alive.”
Nearly 2,000 years later, his words resurfaced not in a museum or textbook, but beneath an old chalet in the northern part of Cadiz. It was early January 2022, and workers doing renovations accidentally uncovered Roman fragments – just the beginning of a much larger story.
The inscription on Cinuras’ tomb
Thanks to subsequent funding and the involvement of professional archaeologists, what was initially thought to be an isolated find has since revealed itself as a vast Roman necropolis: a sprawling ‘city of the dead’ that has remained hidden for centuries.
Today, Cinuras is just one of many voices rising from the soil.
Historians Jacobo Vazquez and Adrian Santos are leading the excavation. They’ve already published four academic papers on the site, with a fifth in the works, and yet, both admit it’s Cinuras’s story that lingers most deeply.
“We’ve done a lot of name research,” says Vazquez. “Cinuras is almost always a slave name. And yet here he is – buried in a marble tomb, next to magistrates. That means he died a free man.”
That much is clear from his burial. Roman tradition did not allow slaves to be interred in such proximity to the city’s elite. It’s likely Cinuras was manumitted – freed after years of loyal service – and succeeded well enough to afford a proper tomb. But the bitterness etched into his final words suggests that wealth and freedom didn’t buy him the peace he craved.
The Roman site
“We are giving voice to a man who otherwise would have remained utterly unknown,” Santos reflects. “It’s very beautiful. The way his family and friends treated him is forgotten now. What remains is a real man, who really lived.”
And Cinuras is far from alone. The archaeologists have so far unearthed 269 inscriptions, many of them rich with personal histories. One tomb belonged to a woman who lived to be 100 – an exceptional age in Roman times.
Others seem to cluster around what may have been a funerary college or even a temple, possibly dedicated to the Egyptian goddess Isis.
“We think this site was sacred to Isis,” explains Vazquez. “She was often worshipped in port cities like Gades. People probably came here regularly to pray and wanted to be buried near a place they loved.”
Small terracotta votive statuettes – hand-held offerings likely left by worshippers – support this theory. So too do faint wall paintings showing birds and reeds, symbols linked to the Nile and Isis’s mythology.
“This wasn’t a luxurious temple,” Santos adds, “but a local, working chapel. It served real people, and they came back here in death.”
In total, the team has documented 55 burials so far, ranging from simple pits cut into dunes to ornate marble tombs dating from the 4th century AD, when the necropolis appears to have been abandoned.
Remarkably, many of the tombstones were found stacked like playing cards, suggesting someone – long after Rome’s fall – had preserved them rather than destroy them.
“That kind of care is rare,” says Santos. “Normally, they’d be smashed or repurposed. But here, someone saw their value. Thanks to them, we now have this incredible archive of lives.”
The work is far from over. Vazquez and Santos believe the site could fundamentally reshape how we understand Cadiz’s place in the Roman world. Far from being a sleepy outpost, Gades may have been a centre of cultural exchange and spiritual significance.
“The investigation is just beginning,” Vazquez says. “And we’re probably going to make some overwhelming discoveries.”
But even now, before the full picture is known, the rediscovery of Cinuras feels like a quiet triumph.
A man who once lamented being forgotten is now, against all odds, remembered – his story a voice from the grave that still has something to say.
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