The roots of the settlement date back to the time of the
Phoenicians, although until the sixteenth century it was simply a fishing village specialized in trapping tuna (as its name suggests) as one of the most important tuna traps of Andalucia were here. Tuna trapping is a traditional art practiced since at least the Roman rule. The earliest document which the name of Zahara is found is probably the treaty of accommodation between
Vejer and
Tarifa dated 1444
AD. The settlement was established following the granting of a licence to extract tuna granted to
Guzman el Bueno. This privilege still belongs to his descendants, the
Dukes of Medina Sidonia, who own the tuna-trap of Zahara. Following the granting of this licence, in the first half of the fifteenth century, the family built the
Castle of Zahara de los Atunes and Palace of Jadraza. The Palace served three functions: as a fortified castle to protect against
Barbary pirates, a residential palace during the Tuna Season and a processing plant to deal with the tuna. In the early sixteenth century, due to good tuna harvests, Zahara began to be permanently populated by merchants, soldiers and tuna fishermen, who cut '
poached' fish in the privacy of the church. ==Geography==