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The Alhambra of Granada with Charles V's Palace
The Alhambra with Charles V's Palace — a view from the Mirador de San Nicolás

Granada

Site of the eternal Alhambra — a visit in August 2017

The cover of the e-book shows a familiar view of the Alhambra ("The Red One") from the Mirador de San Nicolás on the parallel ridge. The walls, gardens and layout of the ninth-century Moorish fortress still shine against the horizons of the Sierra Nevada.

There is much more to Granada in Andalusia than the Alhambra. There is a very fine Cathedral built on the plan of the Toledo Cathedral, over the site of the Great Mosque. There is also the historic Albaicín district. Yet the Alhambra, by its grandeur, gardens, rich decorations and visual prominence, overshadows all.

It was constructed first (880 CE) over the ruins of a Roman fortress by the Emir of Granada as a stronghold of the Umayyad Caliphate. The fortress — which encompassed the gardens and "pleasure palaces" of the Generalife — was finally ceded by its last Emir ('Boabdil') to the armies of Ferdinand and Isabella in the ultimate surrender of the Reconquista in 1492. From here Columbus received his commission to sail West to "the Indies", so it is fitting that the last great architect of the Palaces in the Alhambra was the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V (Charles I of Spain), the first global ruler of whom it could truly be said that the sun never set upon his Empire.

Pages from the Granada photo-book