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Comillas, known in the 17th and 18th
centuries as the "town of the archbishops",
since some of the most outstanding prelates who occupied
dioceses in Latin America were born there, had still
in the early 19th century the aspect of a fishing village
with no means of communication. From 1852, with the
finding of calamine mines, this village underwent an
important improvement in communication (the Santillana-Comillas
road), which allowed the increase of summer tourism,
this becoming the main economic activity once mining
disappeared.
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