Alameda is a town and municipality in the province of Málaga, part of the autonomous community of Andalusia in southern Spain.
The municipality of Alameda, the northernmost province of Malaga, lies on a plain in which only a few small hills break the horizontal landscape which is abound with olives.
Give that within the area the roads that connected Granada, Málaga and Seville crossed, the Marquis de Estepa, in 1663, decided to build the parish Immaculate Conception, around which the population was established.
In the Plaza de Andalucia, which can be considered today the center of town, is a tombstone of 1994 which reads "The first Republican council, established on June 27, 1931, ordered the bell of the clock with the names of their councilors in relief, being carved during the unfortunate events of 1936.
[2] " The political administration of the municipality is carried out through a democratically controlled town council whose members are elected every four years by universal suffrage.