
Teba
The township has an area of 143.10 km², and the town is situated at an altitude of 555 meters above sea level. As of January 1, 2007, Teba had a population of 4253 inhabitants.
Situation
Elevation: 555 meters
Latitude: 36º 58'00"N
Longitude: 004º 55'59"W
Climate
The climate in the town of
Teba is bordered on the north and east by the

Other signs include the church of Santa Cruz Real—a splendid specimen of the Andalusian Baroque cathedral packaging, completed in 1715 by Jose Tirado, with a rectangular plan with three naves separated by columns of red marble that makes it splendid and unique in the local area, covered up by two barrel vaults.
Also inside the church is a magnificent collection of objects related to the liturgical and worship (chalices, chasubles), many of them made from noble metals and going back to the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries.

Despite the mountainous municipality, their lands are generally suitable for agriculture, which has been traditionally the most important economic sector for its inhabitants. Teba is also known for its size, work cattle, particularly in respect to pigs, goats, sheep, and vaccines.
Heritage
The town of Teba, declared a Historic-Artistic Site, is in a typically Andalusian track, a series of palaces and manor houses (the front of the house of the Empress Eugenia de Montijo and the mansion of the Marquis of Grenina are good examples), and a prominent, popular group of houses, which have appeared in the Catalog of Historical Heritage Andaluz as examples of the rich heritage.
Outside the city center and across from the town are many unique examples of the various manifestations of the historical, archaeology, including the deposits of the Cave of the Doves, attached to the Recent Prehistory, Cerro de Los Ibero Castillejos, and the Roman site of Cortijo del Tajo (both of which have been declared Cultural Interests in February 2008), and the Star Castle.
The chapel of the Rosary, the renovated chapel of Carmen,
and the new shrine of Our Father Jesus are other churches in Teba. This is
without prejudice of some residential buildings of great magnificence; for
example, the home of Eugenia de Montijo, Countess of Teba, who then became
Empress of France after her marriage to Napoleon III in 1853. In other places
like
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Some cases have a chasuble and embroidered coat, which is based on a widespread oral tradition of the people, by Queen Isabel the Catholic. There are also samples of the unique local and religious architecture remaining from the Convent of San Francisco from the 16th century, founded by a Franciscan community and which now has a preserved facade and has been converted into part of a craft workshop.
