a city of Spain, in the province of Malaga. It is situate in a beautiful and fertile valley, covered with olive-trees, around which, in all directions, lofty mountains rise to a great height, which contain valuable quarries of marble of every description. Near it is a saline lake, which supplies the inhabitants of the district with salt for all their culinary purposes. As long as the Moors possessed the kingdom of Granada, this city, from being the point which commands the southern entrance to the plain, was a military post of vast importance, and its possession was perpetually contested by the rival monarchs on both sides of it. An ancient castle still remains, in which are preserved specimens of the various military weapons and accoutrements both of the Moors and the Christians of the fourteenth century. It contains about 17,000 inhabitants, employed in agriculture and in the manufacture of cloth and leather.