Javea Grapevine 343 | Page 129

MEDIEVAL ERA - BRIEF HISTORY As with all of the Valencian region, it was the medieval King of Aragon, Jaume I, who in 1244 claimed Xàbia for the Christians and set about the long and unstable process of populating the town. The revolts of Al Azraq  slowed down the process of re population.  It was not until 1397 that Xàbia obtained its village title. By this time, the medieval village had grown into a network of narrow streets with a good defensive perimeter wall. The layout would correspond to the current streets of Roques, Ronda Sud, Sant Josep, Verge del Pilar, Pastores, Príncep d’Astúries and Ronda Nord.  Within this primitive town there was a fortified tower built on top of a previous Arab tower called the Torre d’Encairat. Close to this tower was constructed a primitive Christian church that utilized the foundations of a captured Arab farmhouse. Xàbia remained a tiny rural Medieval outpost until the beginning of the 16th century when due to the growth of the community, the walls had to be set back into the new open roads. PORTALS THROUGH FORTIFIED WALLS THE The defective portals in and out of the village were marked as the Portal del Clot (1554), Portal de la Mar (1561) and Portal de la Ferraria (1637). Etymologically, the name of “Clot”, derives from the word Cros, which means bottom of the town. “Mar” is sea, so we can derive that door exits in the direction of the sea. “Ferraria” is a reference to the Cape of San Antonio. In the era of the Roman occupation, the Cape was called the “Promontory of Ferraria”, meaning a point of high land that juts out into a large body of water; a headland. This is where one of the very first Christian Religious Orders from North African, led by Donato Servetian, built a small community to flee persecution.