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= <span style="position:relative;top:-5px;background-color: rgba(228, 188, 118, .75); color: white;z-index:20;">Trip to Granada and the Sierra Nevada (December 2017)</span> =
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= Granada =
  
<wz tip="The Nasrid decorations of the ''Palacio de la Madraza'', among the best preserved in Andalusia, giving an idea of what the Alhambra must have looked like at the time of its Muslim grandeur."><poem>
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<center><wz tip="View of Granada at the feet of the Alhambra, December 2018.">[[File:Granada-Dec17-7.jpg|650px]]</wz></center>
<div style="position:relative;top:-10px;z-index:20;text-align:right;"><span style="background-color: rgba(228, 188, 118,.75)!important; color: white;">The Umayyad conquest of Hispania established Al-Andalus with Ġarnāṭah (غرناطة) as its capital, later passing to the hands of the Nasrid dynasty, the longest reigning Muslim rule in the Iberian peninsula. Its defeat to the Catholic kings made Spain one of the leading powers of the time, proceeding to discover and then conquer (colonize) the new word. This city on the flanks of the Sierra Nevada is one of the points where the fate of civilisations has been decided. It retains to this day a spirit and some atmosphere of its great Moorish heritage, which shaped modern Spain and Spaniards.</span></div>
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'''''Granada''''' in [[Andalusia]], [[Spain]], is one of the mythic cities of the world, funded by the Moors and conquered by the Catholic kings as the apogee of their ''reconquista'', for which reason they made it the nervous point of their new kingdom (they are buried there).
left:-20px;top:-220px;margin-bottom:-170px;z-index:10;">[[File:GranadaMuralDecember2018.jpg|link=|779px]]</div></wz>
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Its most famous highlight is the ''Alhambra'', a military and palace complex from the Muslim leaders, in particular from the Nasrid dynasty. It became the Royal Court of Ferdinand and Isabella (this is where Columbus received his royal mandate for his expeditions that were to change the face of the world). Charles V built a palace at the heart of the Alhambra but eventually decided to move back to the North (in [[Toledo]]), and is himself buried in [[El Escorial]], so that Granada had served its political purpose and would forever remain as the symbol of the defeated Muslim rule in Spain.
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== Gallery ==
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Granada was the highlight of our [[trip to Granada and the Sierra Nevada (December 2017)]].
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<gallery perrow=3 widths=200 px>
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File:Granada-Dec17-1.jpg|Inside the Alhambra: the ''Alcazaba'', the military residential area where lived the soldiers defending the Sultan and the palace. This is the oldest part.
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File:Granada-Dec17-2.jpg|The impressive patio of the Palace of Charles V, bringing new shapes to the Alhambra.
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File:Granada-Dec17-3.jpg|Windows of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Court_of_the_Myrtles Court of Myrtles], displaying the exquisite Muslim attention to details.
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File:Granada-Dec17-4.jpg|The famous [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Court_of_the_Lions Patio of the Lions].
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File:Granada-Dec17-5.jpg|The ''Puerta de la Justicia'': a hand, at the very top, and a key, below, are sculpted a distance apart. When the hand will grab the key, the world will end.
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File:Granada-Dec17-6.jpg|A view of the Alhambra from the streets of the old Moorish medieval quarters: the Albaicín.
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</gallery>

Latest revision as of 09:54, 27 June 2020

Granada

Granada-Dec17-7.jpg

Granada in Andalusia, Spain, is one of the mythic cities of the world, funded by the Moors and conquered by the Catholic kings as the apogee of their reconquista, for which reason they made it the nervous point of their new kingdom (they are buried there).

Its most famous highlight is the Alhambra, a military and palace complex from the Muslim leaders, in particular from the Nasrid dynasty. It became the Royal Court of Ferdinand and Isabella (this is where Columbus received his royal mandate for his expeditions that were to change the face of the world). Charles V built a palace at the heart of the Alhambra but eventually decided to move back to the North (in Toledo), and is himself buried in El Escorial, so that Granada had served its political purpose and would forever remain as the symbol of the defeated Muslim rule in Spain.

Gallery

Granada was the highlight of our trip to Granada and the Sierra Nevada (December 2017).