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Alicante (Catalan: Alacant, Spanish: Alicante) is the capital city of the province of Alicante, in the south of the Valencian Country, Spain, by the Mediterranean Sea. Alacante is an important Seaport. As of the 2003 census, the population of the city of Alicante proper was 316,178, and the population of the entire urban area was estimated to be 676,237 inhabitants, ranking as the eight-largest urban area of Spain
Alicante is one of the fastest growing cities in Spain. Its economy is based upon tourism, wine production, services and administration. It exports wine, olive oil, and fruit, and has light industries, including food-processing, leather, textiles, and pottery. The area's food speciality, are turrones - honey and almond nougats.
It has regular ferry services to the Balearic Islands, and an international airport is nearby. Amongst the most notable features of the city, is its castle - the "Castillo de Santa Barbara", which sits high above the city upon a cliff. Is very important the festival in june, the Bonfires of Saint John.
The city is the headquarters of the Office for Harmonisation in the Internal Market.
Alicante was founded in 324 BC by the Greeks who named it Akra Leuke (White Peak). In 201 BC it was captured by the Romans who called it Lucentum, Hannibal is said to have unloaded his famous war elephants here. Between 718 and 1249, the city was ruled by the Moors. In 1265 it was retaken by Alphonse X of Castile and incorporated into the kingdom of Castile. In 1304 was incorporated into the kingdom of Valencia, in the Aragon Crown.
The city was besieged by the French in 1709 and 1812, and later by the Federalists of Cartagena in 1873.