manuel cohen

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  • View of the town of Guadix, with the Alcazaba, the 11th century Moorish castle, declared a National Artistic Monument in 1931, and the cathedral, the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, built 16th - 18th centuries in Baroque style, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Half the population of Guadix live in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC309.jpg
  • Statue of St John the Baptist as a child, holding his cross and with a sheep, in a niche on one of the side altars, dedicated to St John, 18th century, in the Capilla de San Torcuato, an octagonal chapel designed by Diego de Siloe, in Guadix Cathedral, or the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, begun 16th century and completed mid 18th century, in Baroque style, in Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC248.jpg
  • Statue of Our Lady of Hope, with hands in gesture of begging for mercy, and large gilt aurora halo, on the 18th century Baroque altarpiece in the Capilla de Nuestra Senora de la Esperanza, in Guadix Cathedral, or the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, begun 16th century and completed mid 18th century, in Baroque style, in Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. This chapel was funded until 1745 by Bishop Andres Lich and Barretas and dedicated to the Virgen de Belen, a sculpture by Risueno which disappeared in 1936. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC245.jpg
  • Statue of Our Lady of Hope, with hands in gesture of begging for mercy, and large gilt aurora halo, on the 18th century Baroque altarpiece in the Capilla de Nuestra Senora de la Esperanza, in Guadix Cathedral, or the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, begun 16th century and completed mid 18th century, in Baroque style, in Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. This chapel was funded until 1745 by Bishop Andres Lich and Barretas and dedicated to the Virgen de Belen, a sculpture by Risueno which disappeared in 1936. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC244.jpg
  • View of the town of Guadix, with the Alcazaba, the 11th century Moorish castle, declared a National Artistic Monument in 1931, and the cathedral, the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, built 16th - 18th centuries in Baroque style, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Half the population of Guadix live in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC314.jpg
  • Main facade of Guadix Cathedral, or the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, designed by Gaspar Cayon de la Vega in the 18th century, with the upper part sculpted by Fernandez Pachote and Domingo Thomas, and the marble Incarnation by Antonio Valeriano Moyano, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The cathedral was built 16th - 18th centuries in Baroque style, by architects including Diego Siloe. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC328.jpg
  • Ecce Homo statue with Christ with hands bound and wearing the crown of thorns, in a niche on one of the side altars, dedicated to Ecce Homo, 18th century, in the Capilla de San Torcuato, an octagonal chapel designed by Diego de Siloe, in Guadix Cathedral, or the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, begun 16th century and completed mid 18th century, in Baroque style, in Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC247.jpg
  • View of the town of Guadix, with the Alcazaba, the 11th century Moorish castle, declared a National Artistic Monument in 1931, and the cathedral, the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, built 16th - 18th centuries in Baroque style, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Half the population of Guadix live in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC312.jpg
  • View of the town of Guadix, with the Alcazaba, the 11th century Moorish castle, declared a National Artistic Monument in 1931, and the cathedral, the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, built 16th - 18th centuries in Baroque style, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Half the population of Guadix live in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC308.jpg
  • Baroque altarpiece, 18th century, with central statue of the first bishop of Guadix, in the Capilla de San Torcuato, an octagonal chapel designed by Diego de Siloe, in Guadix Cathedral, or the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, begun 16th century and completed mid 18th century, in Baroque style, in Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. At the top is a polychrome relief of the baptism of St Luparcia, and at the sides, statues of the 6 apostolic companions of the bishop. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC246.jpg
  • Statue of St Sebastian pierced with arrows, from the 18th century Baroque altarpiece of the Capilla de San Sebastian, in Guadix Cathedral, or the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, begun 16th century and completed mid 18th century, in Baroque style, in Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC249.JPG
  • Main facade of Guadix Cathedral, or the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, designed by Gaspar Cayon de la Vega in the 18th century, with the upper part sculpted by Fernandez Pachote and Domingo Thomas, and the marble Incarnation by Antonio Valeriano Moyano, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The cathedral was built 16th - 18th centuries in Baroque style, by architects including Diego Siloe. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC334.jpg
  • The Alcazaba of Guadix, an 11th century Moorish castle, declared a National Artistic Monument in 1931, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Half the population of Guadix live in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC319.jpg
  • View of the town of Guadix, with the Alcazaba, the 11th century Moorish castle, declared a National Artistic Monument in 1931, and the cathedral, the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, built 16th - 18th centuries in Baroque style, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Half the population of Guadix live in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC332.jpg
  • Display of the kitchen of a house at the Centro de Interpretacion Cuevas de Guadix, in the Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC326.jpg
  • View of the town of Guadix, with the Alcazaba, the 11th century Moorish castle, declared a National Artistic Monument in 1931, and the cathedral, the Catedral de la Encarnacion de Guadix, built 16th - 18th centuries in Baroque style, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Half the population of Guadix live in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC311.jpg
  • Display of the bedroom of a house at the Centro de Interpretacion Cuevas de Guadix, in the Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC327.jpg
  • The Iglesia de la Ermita Nueva, rebuilt in the 20th century and dedicated to the Virgen de Gracia or Our Lady of Grace, in the Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC317.jpg
  • Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC313.jpg
  • Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC324.jpg
  • Nuestra Senora de Gracia or Our Lady of Grace, patron of the cave dwellers of Guadix, painted 4th October 1960 on tiles by J Gabarron, on the wall of a house in the Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC320.jpg
  • The Iglesia de la Ermita Nueva, rebuilt in the 20th century and dedicated to the Virgen de Gracia or Our Lady of Grace, in the Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC316.jpg
  • Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC315.jpg
  • Narrow street of traditional whitewashed houses at night, in Guadix, Granada Province, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Guadix also has many troglodyte homes, underground cave dwellings built to stay cool in the summer heat. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC243.jpg
  • Small troglodyte church in the Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC325.jpg
  • Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC333.jpg
  • The Iglesia de la Ermita Nueva, rebuilt in the 20th century and dedicated to the Virgen de Gracia or Our Lady of Grace, in the Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC318.jpg
  • Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC323.jpg
  • Whitewashed houses and chimneys in the Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC321.jpg
  • Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC310.jpg
  • Barrio de la cuevas or Barrio troglodyte, an area housing half the population of Guadix in troglodyte dwellings, underground cave homes dug into the rock built to keep out the heat of the summer and the cold of the winter, Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. The strange rock formations or badlands are formed by erosion of marine geological deposits. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC322.jpg
  • Area of troglodyte homes, underground cave dwellings cut into the hillsides to stay cool in the summer heat, in Guadix, Granada Province, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC242.jpg
  • Andasol solar power station, Europe's first commercial parabolic trough solar thermal power plant, using tanks of molten salt to store solar energy, thus generating electricity even when the sun isn't shining, near Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Andasol 1 went online in 2009, and now the 3 power plants at Andasol make up the largest solar power station in the world. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC229.jpg
  • Parabolic troughs at Andasol solar power station, Europe's first commercial parabolic trough solar thermal power plant, using tanks of molten salt to store solar energy, thus generating electricity even when the sun isn't shining, near Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Andasol 1 went online in 2009, and now the 3 power plants at Andasol make up the largest solar power station in the world. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC241.jpg
  • Parabolic troughs at Andasol solar power station, Europe's first commercial parabolic trough solar thermal power plant, using tanks of molten salt to store solar energy, thus generating electricity even when the sun isn't shining, near Guadix, Andalusia, Southern Spain. Andasol 1 went online in 2009, and now the 3 power plants at Andasol make up the largest solar power station in the world. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC14_GRANADA_MC240.jpg
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