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reviews_and_ramblings ([personal profile] reviews_and_ramblings) wrote2008-11-09 04:38 pm

Around the World: Alcazar de los Reyes Cristianos

There is that moment of the day when the sun is setting and the light is warm and glowing. If you have a digital automatic camera it's almost impossible to take a picture. If you have a reflex camera you need to have a tripod and a timer to count how long letting open the stop. I had a reflex camera, but not tripod or timer; I took the camera firmly in my hand and count mentally the seconds... here is the result:


by Elisa, Cordoba, Andalusia, 2000:
http://www.elisarolle.com/travel/2000Andalusia.htm

Cordoba is a stunning little town in the south of Spain, in Andalusia county. I believe it's one of the city in which I could most smelling the history.

The Alcázar de los Reyes Cristianos (Spanish for "Alcázar of the Christian Monarchs"), also known as the Alcázar of Córdoba, is a medieval Alcázar located in Córdoba, Spain next to the Guadalquivir River and near the Mezquita. The Alcázar takes its name from the Reyes Cristianos or Christian Monarchs: Isabella of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon. The fortress served as one of their primary residences.
 
While the Alcázar displays Islamic features, almost all of the structure was built under Christian rule. Originally the Visigoths had a fortress on the site. When the Visigoths fell to the Umayyad conquest of Hispania, the emirs of the Umayyad Caliphate in Damascus rebuilt the structure. The Umayyad's fell to the Abbasid Caliphate and the surviving member of the Umayyad Dynasty, Abd ar-Rahman I, fled to Córdoba. Abd ar-Rahman I's successors established the independent Caliphate of Cordoba and used the Alcázar as their palace. During Al-Andalus, the city flourished as an important political and cultural center while much of Europe was in the Dark Age. The Moors expanded the Alcázar to a very large compound with baths, gardens, and the largest library in the West. Watermills on the nearby Guadalquivir powered water lifting to irrigate the extensive gardens. These mills ran until Queen Isabella complained that they made too much noise and kept her awake.

In 1236, Christian forces took Córdoba during the Reconquista. In 1386, Alfonso XI of Castile began building the present day structure on part of the site for the old fortress. Other parts of the Moorish Alcázar had been given as spoils to the bishop, nobles, and the Order of Calatrava. Alfonso's structure retained only part of the Moorish ruins but the structure appears Islamic since Alfonso used the Mudéjar style.
 
The Alcázar was involved in the civil war where Henry IV of Castile faced a rebellion that backed his teenage, half-brother Alfonso. During the war, the Alcázar's defenses were upgraded to deal with the advent of gunpowder. At the same time, the Alcázar's main tower, now known as the "Inquisition Tower" was constructed.
 
Henry's successor, Isabella and her husband Ferdinand used the Alcázar for one of the first permanent tribunals of the Spanish Inquisition and as a headquarters for their campaign against the Nasrid dynasty in Granada, the last remaining Moorish kingdom in the Iberian Peninsula. The Inquisition began using the Alcázar as one of its headquarters in 1482, converting much of it, including the Arab baths, into torture and interrogation chambers. The Inquisition maintained a tribunal here for three centuries. Boabdil was held prisoner here in 1483 until he promised to make Granada a tributary state. When Boabdil refused to surrender his kingdom in 1489, the Christians launched an attack. Isabella and Ferdinand's campaign against Granada succeeded in 1492. The same year, the monarchs met Christopher Columbus in the Alcázar as he prepared to take his first voyage to the Americas.

The Alcázar served as a garrison for Napoleon Bonaparte's troops in 1810. In 1821, the Alcázar became a prison. Finally, the Spanish government made the Alcázar a tourist attraction and national monument in the 1950s. (From Wikipedia)

[identity profile] niidea222.livejournal.com 2008-11-09 07:36 pm (UTC)(link)
I've been there, I loved those gardens

[identity profile] lee-rowan.livejournal.com 2008-11-09 08:28 pm (UTC)(link)
That's lovely. The slight fuzziness from your taking it hand-held makes it look like an oil painting--possibly more beautiful than a photo-crisp shot would have been.