It is a typical mountain village with 1-floor white
houses, cobblestone streets and pots in the iron gates. It presents winding
roads and wild landscapes full of pines, almonds and fruit trees. From the
distance you can contemplate its typical silhouette of a homogeneous town
located in the mountain that culminates in a Muslim castle. The king Jaime I el
Conquistador took the town and gave it to the Castello noble family. Later,
they transferred it to the Counts of Rotova. The disaster of the Moorish expulsion
in 1609 determined its history since it was, and still being, a typical
agricultural town.