Granada
Town|name = Granada|name_local = |country = Spain|image_coat_of_arms = EscudoGranada.png|region_type = Autonomous community|region_type_local = |region_name = Andalusia|region_link = Andalusia|region_name_local = Andalucía|population = 236,982|population_as_of = 2005|area = 88|founded = 7th century BC|founded_type = Settled since|elevation = 738|lat_deg = 37| lat_min = 11|lat_hem = N|lon_deg = 3|lon_min = 36|lon_hem = W|website =
www.andalusia.com|image_location = Granada, Spain location.png}}
Granada –
Greek: (
Steph. Byz.) -
Elibyrge;
Latin:
Illiberis (
Ptol. ii. 4. § 11) or
Illiberi Liberini (
Pliny iii. 1. s. 3);
Arabic: غرناطة – is a city and the capital of the province of
Granada, in the
autonomous region of
Andalusia,
Spain. It is situated at the foot of the
Sierra Nevada mountains, at the confluence of two rivers,
Darro and
Genil, at an elevation of 738 metres above sea level. At the
2005 census, the population of the city of Granada proper was 236,982, and the population of the entire urban area was estimated to be 472,638, ranking as the 13th-largest urban area of the Spanish Kingdom. About 3.3% of the population did not hold Spanish citizenship, the largest number of these (31%) coming from
South America.
The
Alhambra, a famous
Moorish citadel and palace, is in Granada. It is the most remarkable item of the
Muslim,
Jewish, and
Christian historical legacy that makes Granada a hot spot among cultural and tourist cities in Spain.
Granada is also well-known within Spain due to its prestigious
university and, nowadays, wild night-life (though in the
1920s
Federico García Lorca described the
granadinos as "the worst bourgeoisie in Spain"). In fact, it is said that it is one of the three best cities for college students (the other two are
Salamanca and
Santiago de Compostela).
The
pomegranate (in Spanish,
granada) is the
heraldic device of Granada.
The
beauty of the sights of Granada is famous. A well known verse says:
« Dale limosna, mujer que no hay en la vida nada como la pena de ser ciego en Granada » | "Give him some money, woman because there is nothing like the pity of being blind in Granada" | | — Francisco de Icaza |
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|
View of Granada from an upper balcony of the Alhambra |
Pre-Nasrid
The city has been inhabited from the dawn of history. There was an
Ibero-Celtic settlement here, which made contact in turn with
Phoenicians,
Carthagenians and
Greeks. By the
5th century BCE, the Greeks had established a colony which they named
Elibyrge or
Elybirge (Greek: ). Under
Roman rule, in the early centuries CE, this name had become "Illiberis". As Illiberis, the city minted its own coins. The
Visigoths maintained the importance of the city as a centre of both ecclesiastical and civil administration and also established it as a military stronghold.
 |
Side Courtyard entrance to the Cathedral |
A
Jewish community established itself in what was effectively a suburb of the city, called "Gárnata" or "Gárnata al-yahud" (Granada of the Jews). It was with the help of this community that Moorish forces under
Tariq ibn-Ziyad first took the city in
711, though it was not fully secured until
713. They referred to it under the Iberian name "Ilbira", the remaining Christian community calling this "Elvira", and it became the capital of a province of the
Caliphate of Cordoba. Civil conflicts that wracked the Caliphate in the early eleventh century led to the destruction of the city in
1010. In the subsequent reconstruction, the suburb of Gárnata was incorporated in the city, and the modern name in fact derives from this. With the arrival of the
Zirid dynasty in
1013, Granada became an independent sultanate. By the end of the eleventh century, the city had spread across the Darro to reach what is now the site of the Alhambra.
 |
Alhambra, Courtyard of the Lions built by the Nasrid sultans |
In
1232 the progress of the Spanish
Reconquista led to the subjugation of the last Islamic stronghold of Granada under
Mohammed ibn Alhamar to the
Christian forces of
Ferdinand III of Castile. Thus the city of Granada became the seat of the Nasrid sultanate (until
1238) and kingdom (from 1238), one of the longest-lasting Islamic dynasties in the history of
al-Andalus. The Nasrid sultans and kings were responsible for building most of the palaces in the
Alhambra. The
taifa became a vassal state of the Christian kingdom of Castile for the next 250 years. The Nasrid sultans and kings paid tribute to the Christian kings and cooperated with them in the battle against rebellious Muslims under Castilian rule.
Initially the kingdom of Granada linked the commercial routes from Europe with those of the
Maghreb. The territory constantly shrank, however, and by 1492, Granada controlled only a small territory on the Mediterranean coast. Muslim Granada was the sole remaining religiously homogenous area in the peninsula: those Christians who did not convert to Islam had been deported to North Africa or escaped to Christian countries. The only religious minority was a small
Jewish community.
Arabic was the official language, and was the mother tongue of the majority of the population, Muslim and Jew alike.
On
January 2,
1492, the last Muslim leader
Boabdil surrendered complete control of the remnants of the last Moorish stronghold of Granada, to
Ferdinand and
Isabella,
Los Reyes Católicos ("The Catholic Monarchs").
See
Nasrid dynasty for a full list of the Nasrid rulers of Granada. The most prominent members of the dynasty were:
*
Mohammed ibn Alhamar (died
1273), the founder of the dynasty
*
Yusuf I (
1334–
1354)
*
Muhammed V (
1354–
1391, builder of the royal palace within the Alhambra
*
Boabdil of Granada, the last of the line, who was defeated and deposed in
1492 by
Ferdinand and
IsabelThe fall of the Moors is one of the more significant events in Granada's history. The
Alhambra decree of the Christian Monarchs asked the predominantly
Muslim population to convert to
Roman Catholicism or to return to their ancestral lands in North Africa.
Arabic lost its place in everyday life and was replaced by
Castilian. The
mosques, some on sites of former Christian churches, were converted to Christian uses. Part of the predominantly
Muslim population was gradually converted to
Roman Catholicism and remaining muslims were eventually expelled to surrounding rural areas, leading to the Revolt of the Alpujarras in 1568.
Jews were immediately expelled following the
Alhambra decree of 1492.
The fall of Granada holds an important place among the many significant events that mark the latter half of the
15th century. It ended, the eight hundred years Islamic presence in the
Iberian Peninsula. Freed from conflicts with the Muslims, a united
Spain advanced to first rank among the nations of
Europe, and embarked onto its greatest phase of expansion around the globe leading to the discovery of the
Americas by
Isabella's prodigy
Christopher Columbus and followed by what was to become the
Spanish Empire, one of the largest empires of the world for the coming centuries.
 |
El Albaicín |
There are many important Moorish and Catholic architectural sites in Granada:
# The
Alhambra and
Generalife# Granada's Cathedral #Capilla Real. Royal Chapel, with the tombs of Ellisabeth an Ferdinand, the
Catholic Kings.# El Albaicín (Albayzin): The ancient Arab quarter, containing many original houses from the
16th century# The
Charterhouse: One of the most impressive pieces of ornamental
Baroque in Spain.# Calle Calderería: An Albayzin street where you can taste Arab typical food, especially teas and desserts from North Africa# El Cármen de los mártires: A lovely palace with a beautiful botanic garden near the Alhambra# Santa Ana Church: 16th century,
Mudejar Style# San Salvador Church: 16th century,
Mudejar Style. With moorish
Almohad patio from the former mosque.# El Corral del carbón: Deposit of merchandise and shelter of merchants. Adapted after 16th century for theater plays.# Hospital Real: Funded in 1504 by the ''
Reyes Católicos, now part of the University.# Santo Domingo Church: Funded in 1512 by the Reyes Católicos.# San José Church: On the site of the "moans" Almorabitín, the
mosque of the morabites, one of oldest in Granada, dating from the 10th century.#
Sacromonte Abbey: Founded in the 17th century. Legend says that the catacombs under the church were the site of the martyrdom of San Cecilio, the city's first bishop and now its patron saint.# Old University: Now the School of Law, it retains its original 17th century facade.# Bermejas Towers: Strongpoints on the encircling wall of the Alhambra, they date from the 8th and 9th centuries.# Basilica San Juan de Dios: Basilica where the rest of this saint rest. Sample of Granada's baroque.# The Gate of Elvira: The principal Gate to the old city Part of the moorish wall.# Casa de los Tiros, 16th century. With a complex iconographic program of sculputure and painting about Spanish history and full of cryptograms, it was the palace of Gil Vázquez-Rengifo, who helped the Catholic Kings in the fight for the City. Nowadays it is a museum where visitors can follow the History of Granada from the Middle Age to our days.
Although many Muslim buildings were destroyed by the Christian era in Granada those that are remaining make the most complete group of moorish housing architecture in Europe. Palaces like Dar al Horra, or Alcazar Genil, or houses like the house of the Horno de Oro, the house of Chapiz, or the house of Abén Humeya, are oly some of the most famous. Public Baths Like El Bañuelo or Alhambra Baths, and the complex of arab public fountains and wells (
aljibes), are unique in Europe. The nasrid infrastructure net that feeds them (
acequias) still functions in its majority: The Royal Acequia and the Cadí acequia are some of them.
*
*
Information on the city from the databases of the Andalucian Statistical Institute.
*
Granada: local tourist guide*
Web of Granada Tourist Office*
Festivals and celebrations in Granada*
Granada at the
Open Directory Project