The site of Morro de Mezquitilla, located on a hill above the river Algarrobo, was a peninsula in Phoenician times. The oldest remains are from the Chalcolithic period, but the most significant occupation is from the archaic Phoenician period (9th-5th centuries BC). Roman remains were also found up to the 1st century BC. The site includes square-plan dwellings and metallurgical furnaces, indicating a metal recycling area. Its material is crucial to studies of the Phoenician world on the Iberian Peninsula.
The Church of Santa Ana, founded in 1505, dates from the late 16th or early 17th century. It was rebuilt after the damage caused by the Moorish uprising. It has a Latin cross floor plan, three naves and Mudejar wooden frames. Its rococo dressing rooms and several images stand out, such as the Jesús Nazareno (1941) and the Virgen de los Dolores (18th-19th centuries). The clocks in its tower were added in the 1960s. The cemetery, initially located in front of the church, was moved in the 19th century.