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The origins of the history of the Canary Islands are intertwined with myths and legends and several
different theories exist. In any case we must go back to classical times in order to find the first
historical references to
Gran Canaria.
The conquest of the Island, which took place during the reign of the Catholic Monarchs in the last third of the fifteenth century, was fiercely resisted by the natives of the Island. The definitive annexation of Gran Canaria by the Crown of Castile was the work of Pedro de Vera, who, in 1483, completed the conquest that was started earlier by Juan Rejón. The conquest took place in two phases: firstly, the landing and subsequent construction of Real de Las Palmas at the mouth of the Guiniguada river; and, secondly, Vera's military campaign, which ended with the subjugation of the aboriginal people of Gáldar, as well as the campaign for the pacification of the southern slopes of the island.
From this time onwards the Crown of Castile began to infiltrate the Island of Gran Canaria in political,
social and economic terms. The capital of
Gran Canaria became the administrative centre and epicentre of the
planning of the archipelago (the Bishopric of the Canaries, the Court of the Holy Inquisition, the Royal
Court of the Canaries...).
Not until the mid-nineteenth century was the free port system established in the Canary Islands. This was a special economic regime designed to favour trading relations. This new regime, based on tax exemptions and facilities for free trade acted as a major trading attraction and the number of British ships and shipping companies calling in at the Island soon multiplied. Currently, the geographical isolation of Gran Canaria and the Archipelago in general is formally recognised in the Economic and Tax Regime Law, which has recently been adapted and somewhat diminished by the full incorporation of the Canary Islands within the European Union.
It was precisely because of the shipping traffic that the tourism industry was born in Gran Canaria.
Over the years, tourism would eventually become the main source of income for the island, which would
become one of the main tourist destinations in the world.
These companies would also take the initiative in the building of the first hotels on the island, one of
which was the hotel of Santa Catalina (1890) in Las Palmas de
Gran Canaria, this being the only hotel
dating from the early beginnings of tourism that still remains open.
During this slump, the tourism industry could not even be revived
by the opening of the Airport of
Gran Canaria (called Gando in those times) in 1930. |


