Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - Museo Arqueológico
Córdoba - EUROTELSUR
Córdoba - Sombrerería Rusi
Córdoba - Plaza de las Tendillas
Córdoba - Plaza de las Tendillas
Córdoba - San Nicolás de la Villa
Córdoba - Santo Domingo de Silos
Córdoba - Santo Domingo de Silos
Córdoba - Mercado Victoria
Venta los Remedios
Marchena - Santa María de la Mota
Marchena - Santa María de la Mota
Marchena
Córdoba - Mezquita-Catedral
Córdoba - Mezquita-Catedral
Córdoba - Torre de San Juan
Córdoba
Jaén - Museo Íbero
Jaén - Museo Íbero
Jaén - Museo Íbero
Jaén - Museo Íbero
Jaén - Museo Íbero
Jaén - Museo Íbero
Jaén - Museo Íbero
Jaén - Museo Íbero
Jaén - Museo Íbero
Jaén
Jaén - Catedral de la Asunción
Jaén - Catedral de la Asunción
Jaén - Catedral de la Asunción
Jaén - Catedral de la Asunción
Jaén - Catedral de la Asunción
Jaén - Catedral de la Asunción
Jaén
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Córdoba - Mezquita-Catedral


Córdoba shares its history with many cities in Southern Spain. It was Carthaginian and Roman (from 260BC on), later it belonged to the Byzantine Empire for two decades, was looted by the Vandals before the Visigoths conquered it in 572. In 711 it was taken by the by the Umayyad army and became a provincial capital.
At that time a Christian church erected by the Visigoths was on the site, it was divided and shared by Muslims and Christians. The sharing agreement lasted until 784 when the Christian half was purchased by Emir Abd al-Rahman I, who then demolished the church and started to build the grand mosque of Córdoba on its ground. This narrative goes back to the tenth-century historian al-Razi.
The work of building the Mezquita employed thousands of artisans and laborers. After the first completion, it underwent numerous subsequent changes: Abd al-Rahman II ordered a new minaret, and Al-Hakam II enlarged the building and enriched the Mihrab. The Mezquita reached its current dimensions in 987 with the completion of the outer naves and courtyard.
It covers an area of more than 23.000 m².
The Mezquita still is one of the largest sacred buildings on earth. In the 10th century it was in the center of Cordoba, that with a population of upto 500.000, at that time it was one of the largest cities in the known world.
At that time a Christian church erected by the Visigoths was on the site, it was divided and shared by Muslims and Christians. The sharing agreement lasted until 784 when the Christian half was purchased by Emir Abd al-Rahman I, who then demolished the church and started to build the grand mosque of Córdoba on its ground. This narrative goes back to the tenth-century historian al-Razi.
The work of building the Mezquita employed thousands of artisans and laborers. After the first completion, it underwent numerous subsequent changes: Abd al-Rahman II ordered a new minaret, and Al-Hakam II enlarged the building and enriched the Mihrab. The Mezquita reached its current dimensions in 987 with the completion of the outer naves and courtyard.
It covers an area of more than 23.000 m².
The Mezquita still is one of the largest sacred buildings on earth. In the 10th century it was in the center of Cordoba, that with a population of upto 500.000, at that time it was one of the largest cities in the known world.
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