Andalusia Seville Cordoba Granada
Plaza Espana resides inside the Parque de María Luisa, which was once the private grounds of a palace. It was created for the 1929 Ibero-American Exhibition.
Seville – Plaza de Espana
Seville - Catedral de Santa Maria de la Sede This enormous Gothic cathedral, about 400 by 600 feet, replaced the Almohad mosque that occupied the same site. It is claimed that it is the largest church in the world, bigger than St. Peter's in Rome in volume.
The Giralda (1184-1196) which is now its bell tower, was originally a minaret of a 12th Century Moorish mosque, it is 322 feet tall if you include the bronze statue of "Holy Faith" at its peak. This minaret has two twins: one is in Marrakech and other is in Rabat. The three are the oldest surviving Almohad minarets.
The rose window above a main entrance; the fence of Roman columns joined by chains surrounding the huge structure
The Visitation of the Magi,
this depicts the third king as African, a way of indicating that the whole world worships the Christ child.
The Door of the Birth
The terra cotta figures were sculpted by the French artist Lorenzo Mercadante de Bretaña and Pedro Millán in the late 15th century.
Seville: A Synagogue converted into a magnificent church
Seville - Patio de las Muñecas
the intimate area in the Palace of D. Pedro.
Patio de las Muñecas One of the doll's heads The four small heads, on the arch which leads to the entrance hall of the palace, give this patio its name.
Seville - Patio de las Muñecas in Palacio del Rey Don Pedro
Casa de Pilatos Currently owned by the Dukes of Medinaceli, the palace was built in the 16th century by a wealthy aristocrat Marquis de Tarifa after returning from a voyage to Jerusalem, where he got enchanted with the house of Pontius Pilate
Casa de Pilatos
The construction is a blend of Baroque, Renaissance and Mudéjar styles
Palácio de San Telmo, constructed in 1682
Seville's Maestranza Bullring
was completed in 1763 and can accommodate as many as 12,500 spectators
The Great Mosque of Cordoba "Patio de Los Naranjos" (Orange Trees courtyard), Before entering the Great Mosque of Cordoba
Na old entrance to the Mosque. In 784 the Mosque was one-third of its current size
The construction of the Torre del Alminar, the bell tower, began in the 16th century over an Islamic Minaret and was finished in the 17th century. It is 305 feet (93m) tall.
The Mihrab: The prayer niche where an original copy of the Koran was stored, constructed between 961-976 AD
The Mosque contains 850 columns and is made of jasper, marble, granite, and onyx.
In 1371 the Christians build the Capilla de Villaviciosa in the Mosque using Moorish craftsmen so that it would blend in with the Mudejar architecture.
In 1523 an inconsistent Baroque cathedral was started in the center of the Mosque. This was sanctioned by Charles V but he was reportedly horrified when he saw the results.
The "Mezquita de Cordoba" was begun in 784 by Abd al-Rahman I when he bought the Visigoth basilica of San Vicente which was then torn down and the mosque was built on the site. Three periods of additions from 784 through the 16th century brought it up to its current glory
Baroque Cathedral in the Great Mosque of Cordoba
The Great Mosque of Cordoba over the old Roman Bridge on the Guadalquivir river.
The Alhambra
Mohammed I, the first king of the Nasriden – a Moorish dynasty in Granada, converted a 9th-century castle into his private royal residence, and it is this which we now know as the Alhambra. The structure, which covers an area of 13 hectares, is renowned for its stunning frescoes and interior detail. The building is one of the finest examples of Moorish architecture in the world
The Lion Court (Patio de los Leones) at the Alhambra The Fountain of Lions is a magnificent alabaster basin supported by the figures of 12 lions in white marble, which once functioned as a clock with water flowing from a different lion at each hour.
Patio de los Leones – there are in total 124 thin marble columns
Mirador to the Lindaraja courtyard
The Alhambra Palace –adornment of filigree foliage and Arabic inscriptions.
Alhambra -Vault at the Hall of Ambassadors ( Salon de los Embajadores ) in the Torre de Comares
Courtyard of the Maiden ( Patio de las Doncellas ) This name perhaps reflects the annual gift of 100 virgins to the sultan
Jardin del Estanque – frescoes in the niches.
Granada - The nave of the Cathedral
Granada: the massive organ inside the Cathedral
Granada - La Cartuja Monastery of the Carthusian monks, the 17th century construction is in Baroque style, with a plain aspect in the outside.
Granada: The Cartuja monastery
Granada: The Cartuja monastery
Granada: The Cartuja monastery