manuel cohen

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Cathedral-Great Mosque, Cordoba, Andalusia, Spain

Fluted arch with red and white painted stripes, in the area built under Prince Abd Al-Rahman II, begun 832, adjacent to the 16th century cathedral, in the Cathedral-Great Mosque of Cordoba, in Cordoba, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The first church built here by the Visigoths in the 7th century was split in half by the Moors, becoming half church, half mosque. In 784, the Great Mosque of Cordoba was begun in its place and developed over 200 years, but in 1236 it was converted into a catholic church, with a Renaissance cathedral nave built in the 16th century. The historic centre of Cordoba is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen

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Filename
LC15_SPAIN_MC249.jpg
Copyright
© Manuel Cohen
Image Size
4724x4734 / 5.1MB
www.manuelcohen.com
9th century Abd Al-Rahman II al-Andalus Andalucia Andalucian Andalusia Andalusian arch architecture belief building caliph Catedral de Cordoba Catedral de Nuestra Senora de la Asuncion cathedral Cathedral of Cordoba Cathedral of Our Lady of the Assumption ceiling color colour column Cordoba Cordova double arch Europe European faith fluted arch Grand Mosque Great Mosque Great Mosque of Cordoba heritage history hypostyle Iberia Iberian Peninsula image indoors inside interior Islam Islamic architecture maghreb Mezquita de Cordoba Mezquita-Catedral moslem mosque muslim polylobated arch prayer hall religion religious Roman sacred Southern Europe Southern European Spain Spanish square image tourism tourist attraction travel UNESCO UNESCO World Heritage Site
Contained in galleries
Cordoba (Spain)
Fluted arch with red and white painted stripes, in the area built under Prince Abd Al-Rahman II, begun 832, adjacent to the 16th century cathedral, in the Cathedral-Great Mosque of Cordoba, in Cordoba, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The first church built here by the Visigoths in the 7th century was split in half by the Moors, becoming half church, half mosque. In 784, the Great Mosque of Cordoba was begun in its place and developed over 200 years, but in 1236 it was converted into a catholic church, with a Renaissance cathedral nave built in the 16th century. The historic centre of Cordoba is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen