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Denia,
the capital of the Marina Alta, is a modern cosmopolitan city offering
both visitors and residents a range of services. It owes its current
importance to its being the historical city of the region par
excellence, a city that was known in medieval times as the Marquesado
de Dénia. Its name derives from the Latin name Dianium which is the
origin of the name given to its inhabitants, the 'dianenses'; Daniya
was its Islamic name. The city experienced its period of urban and
cultural glory when it became an independent Taifa following the
division of the Caliphate of Córdoba during the 11th century. The
historical centre of Denia contains the symbol of the city, its castle.
The commercial centre is located in the calle Marqués de Campos and
the adjacent streets. Dénia is a coastal city located to the north of
the province of Alicante and has a 20-kilometre coastline, made of
small, beautiful coves. To the north there are the fine sandy beaches
of Les Marines and Les Bovetes and the shingle beaches of Les Deveses
and L' Almadrava (shingled) beaches which are craggy and rocky; to the
south is the Les Rotes beach. Though the beaches are long, they are
not enormous and generally appeal to family-type tourism. The mild
temperature, the annual average being 18º C, means that it is a
pleasant place to stay. A monument was erected to the climate in the
eighties. Dénia is close to the sea, though some of its most
characteristic features, such as the Mongó and the Natural Park, are
situated on the border between Dénia and Jávea. In the surrounding
area there are Gothic hermitages from the period of the Conquest and
caves where potholing is carried out.
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