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cordoba
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the Mezquita |
002 Alcazar de los Reyes |
003 Puente Romano |
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Córdoba, also called Cordova, is a city in Andalucía, southern Spain, and
the capital of the province of Córdoba. Located at 37.88° North, 4.77°
West, on the Guadalquivir river, it was founded in ancient Roman times
as Corduba by Claudius Marcellus. Its population is 321,164 as of 2005.
Today a moderately sized modern city, the old town contains many
impressive architectural reminders of when Córdoba was the thriving
capital of the Caliphate of Cordoba that governed almost all of the
Iberian peninsula. It has been estimated that Cordoba, with up to
500,000 inhabitants, was the largest city in the world in the tenth
century aside from Byzantium.
Córdoba was the birthplace of four famous philosophers: the Roman stoic
Seneca, the Muslim Averroes, and the Jewish Maimonides and possibly
Abraham Cohen de Herrera. Córdoba was also the birthplace of the Roman
poet, Lucan and (more recently) of several flamenco artists including
Paco Peña, Vicente Amigo, and Joaquín Cortés.
History of Córdoba
Roman Córdoba in Hispania Baetica
In Roman times, the city had more cultural buildings than Rome. It was
the capital of the province of Hispania Baetica. Remains of the Roman
Temple built by Claudius Marcellus, the Roman Bridge (illustration,
right) and other Roman remains can still be seen around the city.
Caliphate of Córdoba
Córdoba (Arabic قرطبه Qurṭubah) was conquered by the Moors in 711, and
Moorish influence can still be felt in the city. During the time of
Islamic rule, Córdoba was the largest city and arguably embodied the
most sophisticated culture and the most developed bureaucracy in Europe.
When the Umayyad Caliphs were deposed in Damascus in 750, the dynasty
relocated to Córdoba, ruling an emirate there until 929. When
Abd-ar-rahman III submitted a rival claim to the title of Caliph, then
held by the Abbasids in Baghdad, he assumed the title Caliph of Cordoba
and transformed his kingdom from an emirate or sultanate into a
caliphate.
Córdoba reached its peak in the 10th century, under three great rulers:
the first Caliph, Abd-ar-rahman III ("al-Nasir," 912–61), his son al-Hakam
II (961–76) and the dictator Al-Mansur Ibn Abi Aamir, more familiar as
Almansor, "the Victorious," (981–1002). The 10th century Caliphate of
Córdoba was the largest, culturally the most sophisticated polity in all
Europe. Contemporary chroniclers, all of them Arabic, like the
geographer Ibn Hawkal in 948, marveled, "The amount of coins in
circulation! The variety of crops grown! the people! "the textiles! the
gardens! the mosques!" — there were more than 1,000 mosques and 600
public baths.[citation needed]
It is believed that Córdoba was the largest city in the world from 935
to 1013.
The German Emperor Otto I sent his emissaries to the Caliph; But in the
1020s and 1030s the whole imposing political structure collapsed,
fissioning into more than a dozen successor statelets, known to
historians as (the reinos de taifas) such as Seville, Badajoz, Toledo,
Saragossa, Albarracín, Valencia, Almería and Granada. While they were
heirs to the wealth of the Caliphate, their instability and endemic
hostilities among themselves made them vulnerable to attacks from the
Christian north. The history of Córdoba after the mid 11th century
shrinks to the story of the city and its immediate hinterland.
The most important monument in the city is the former Mosque (the 3rd
largest mosque in the world), known as the Mezquita. After the conquest,
the Christians rebuilt the cathedral that had once stood before it was
'converted' into the mosque.[citation needed]
Another splendid monument is the city (in ruins) Medina Azahara (Arab:
Madinat Al-Zahra). Other important monuments are the Alcázar de los
Reyes Cristianos, where in 1492, Christopher Columbus got permission to
travel to the "Indies". The califal baths and its churches and typical
streets of the Jewish quarter Judería.
Christian Córdoba
Córdoba was recovered from the Muslims by the Christians as part of the
Reconquista in 1236, and the city became a center of activity against
the remaining Islamic regions.
Modern Córdoba
Córdoba currently is the only provincial capital in Spain where the city
government is controlled by a leftist coalition named Izquierda Unida
which main component is the Communist Party of Spain.
Surviving Renaissance monuments in Córdoba include the Palacio de Viana,
the city's Ducal Palace.
Córdoba is also known for its floral patio arrangements. Residents take
great pride in their patios and compete to have the most beautiful.
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www.essential-architecture.com
the architecture you must see
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