But the truth is that the own name of the town, whose meaning has a clear Arab origin, indicates a medieval antiquity at least. Benalúa had to be one of the farmhouses that were dedicated to the cultivation of territories of irrigated land in the surroundings of Guadix, in this case those of a fertile plain formed in the confluence of the Guadix and Fardes rivers.
The surroundings of this town have served as human settlement since the Neolithic period, increasing its population with the Argaric culture. Numerous vestiges of painted ceramics confirm the presence of Iberian settlers. At Roman time, it became a Pagus Minor, at the side of the Herculea Route. According to the tradition it was visited by the disciples of the Santiago apostle headed by San Torcuato, who was martyred and buried in the Hermitage Tomb. At Arab time it was a very scattered set of caves, tower and small villages that defended the entrance of Guadix. It received the name of Ben-Allah (house of God) or Ben-al-Guad (joint of the rivers), from which the present name derives. After the Reconquista it became a cortijada dependent of Fonelas. In 1818, with the dissolution of the estates, it acquires its own jurisdiction and the title of town.
Of Benalúa, the vegetables and fruits and the plates of smaller hunting with quail, partridge or rabbit, stand out. Its inlays are also advisable and the typical recipes as the pringue cakes, the barbecued lamb or the stew of tarbinas.
- Church of Nuestra Señora del Carmen: At the beginning it was consecrated as Church of Nuestra Señora de la Anunciacion, but with the opening in the XIX century of the Sugar Factory of the Carmen the villagers adopted as patron the Virgin of the Carmen. The parochial church is formed by the union of two temples: one of the XVI century that forms the present cruise and other of the XIX built in Neomudejar style, restored recently.
- Hermitage of San Torcuato: It is a simple construction that houses an image and several relics of San Torcuato, patron of Guadix.
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