Showing posts with label Al Hambra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Al Hambra. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2024

Alhambra, le trésor du dernier sultanat d'Espagne | ARTE

Oct 20, 2024 | Documentaire disponible jusqu'au 24/11/2024

Exploration inédite de l’Alhambra, à Grenade, cité palatiale fortifiée embrasée par le soleil andalou, joyau de l’art islamique et témoin de l’ultime royaume musulman en Espagne.

Lorsqu'en 1492 les couronnes d'Aragon et de Castille font tomber le sultanat de Grenade et pénètrent à l'intérieur des dix hectares cernés de muraille de sa forteresse, au sommet de la colline qui domine la ville, les envahisseurs restent muets devant la magnificence du lieu. C'est que l'Alhambra ("Al Hamra", littéralement "la rouge", en arabe, la couleur caractéristique de ses murs), dont les travaux ont débuté en 1238, demeure la plus importante merveille architecturale des sultans nasrides, la dernière dynastie musulmane d’Espagne. Les murs des palais, recouverts de calligraphie arabe, racontent par la voix des vizirs, les Premiers ministres également poètes, huit siècles de splendeurs de l'art islamique. Les jardins, joyaux de verdure au cœur d'une région aride, sont irrigués par un ingénieux système développé au XIIIe siècle, qui continue en partie à fournir aujourd’hui l'eau nécessaire aux nombreuses essences d'arbres fruitiers, plantées pour créer une impression d’éden terrestre. Au cœur de la cité palatiale, la célèbre fontaine aux douze lions, alimentant des canaux qui représentent les quatre fleuves du paradis décrit dans le Coran, apporte la preuve que la figuration, tant qu'elle n'investissait pas le domaine religieux, avait toute sa place dans le monde musulman.

En compagnie d’experts, d’archéologues et de restaurateurs de l'Alhambra, tous passionnés, Marc Jampolsky (Versailles – Le palais retrouvé du Roi-Soleil) révèle le destin aussi exceptionnel que tragique de ce chef-d’œuvre arabo-andalou. Une exploration privilégiée d'un site à la beauté exubérante, prouesse architecturale qui fit de la géométrie une ressource formelle et expressive sans égale.

Documentaire de Marc Jampolsky (France, 2024, 1h32mn)


Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Al-Andalus : L'Alhambra, joyau éternel de l'art islamique | Part 2 | SLICE Histoire

Oct 21, 2024 | Dès 711, l’invasion fulgurante des troupes arabo-berbères marque le début d’une transformation historique de la péninsule ibérique. Partant du sud, à Gibraltar, face au Maghreb, les forces musulmanes remportent la victoire décisive à la bataille de Guadalete contre le roi wisigoth Rodrigue, ouvrant ainsi la voie à l’expansion d’Al-Andalus. En seulement 5 ans, les conquérants musulmans dominent toute la péninsule, jusqu'à la Galice, à 900 kilomètres au nord.

Sous domination musulmane pendant près de huit siècles, Al-Andalus devient un carrefour de cultures, où sciences, arts et savoir prospèrent. L’influence musulmane redessine le territoire espagnol, érigeant des palais somptueux, des mosquées grandioses et des infrastructures urbaines qui enrichiront durablement le patrimoine culturel de l'Espagne moderne. Cette présence marque un tournant dans l’histoire de la péninsule, dont les trésors architecturaux, comme l’Alhambra ou la Grande Mosquée de Cordoue, sont parmi les plus beaux joyaux de l’Espagne d’aujourd'hui.

Documentaire : Histoire de L’Espagne Vue du Ciel – Ep2 : Al Andalus, l’Espagne Musulmane
Réalisateur : Mike Magidson
Production : Point du Jour


Saturday, May 20, 2023

The Alhambra Explained

Premiered Oct 13, 2022 | Explore with me the medieval citadel of the Alhambra in Granada, Spain, and its precious Nasrid Palaces seen from an architectural point of view. I'll point out all the details you need to know to understand the Architecture of Islam.


WIKIPEDIA: Alhambra.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

In Search of the Spirit of Al-Andalus

With the Moorish architecture of Granada's Alhambra and Córdoba cathedral as a backdrop, Marcel Theroux meets a group of Spanish Muslims who are drawing on the area's Islamic legacy to a promote a new religious tolerance







Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Granada: The Magic of the Moors

THE TELEGRAPH: Now's the time to enjoy the stunning sights of Granada, says Anthony Jefferies.

The Alhambra is Spain's most visited tourist attraction but will be relatively quiet in February Photo: The Telegraph

The Alhambra is heart-flutteringly beautiful at any time but with southern Spain warming up in the early spring sunshine and the crowds yet to arrive, this is the perfect season to visit the great Moorish palace complex and the lovely city fanning out from its flanks. Old Moorish and gipsy quarters, vast cathedrals and churches, tree-lined plazas and great restaurants will provide an antidote to the cold British winter. >>> | Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Europe Just Got a Little Dhimmier

Photobucket
Photo of Al Hambra courtesy of Google Images

SPIEGELONLINE INTERNATIONAL: After centuries of denying a common history with Islam, Spaniards are once again trying to live together with Muslims. In Granada, home of the Alhambra and former center of Moorish Spain, a multicultural revival is taking shape that sees Christians and Muslims coexisting in mutual respect.

The panoramic terrace of the Plaza San Nicolas becomes a magical setting at sunset. Gypsy boys play deeply melancholic melodies on the guitar while their girls dance to the music and whirl brightly colored ribbons. Bohemians pass around liter bottles of beer and cheap red wine, Japanese tourists set up their cameras, and Latin Americans sing cheerfully.

From the head of this square on the Albaicin hill sounds the lingering call of "Allahu akbar." The muezzin has climbed the 59 steps of the tower. He stands between the open Moorish arches and cups a hand to his mouth so everyone who is listening for his call can hear "God is great." In the day's last rays of light, the gilded outlines of Arabic ornate lettering glitter mysteriously under the pointed roof.

Across from the brand new, whitewashed mosque, the floodlights are lit, bathing the Alhambra palace and its ramparts, located on the other side of the river, in a rosy sheen that transforms the architectural ensemble into a veritable "red fortress." Off in the distance, the snows of the Sierra Nevada gleam in the setting sun. As men -- and the occasional woman dressed in a long coat -- hasten from the windy, narrow cobbled streets of the Albaicin district to pray in the mosque, the evening bells of the cathedral ring out over the city.

Today's Granada is a cultural melting pot. Five centuries after the Christian royalty known as the Catholic Monarchs drove the last Muslim ruler from what is now Spain and raised their cross in the throne room of the Alhambra, Muslims and Christians in the city of Granada are once again living side by side in peace. For nearly 800 years, the inhabitants of al-Andalus, as the Arab dynasties called their empire on the Iberian Peninsula, allowed Jews, Christians and Muslims to coexist in a spirit of mutual respect -- a situation that benefited all. The red fortress symbolizes this period. Originally, a rich Jewish merchant had the walls of red clay built on the ruins of an old castle. Later, the Muslim Nasrid Dynasty expanded the complex of palaces up until the late 14th century, creating shady gardens and fountains and building a splendid mosque. The house of worship was consecrated as a church by the Christian conquerors 150 years later.

It is here, in this last bastion of the old multicultural society of Moorish Spain, that an extremely vibrant Islamic community is taking shape today. Thanks to its rich history, many even see Granada as the future Islamic capital of Europe. Others fear that Andalusia could once again become the gateway for a "reconquista" -- this time under the green banner of the Prophet.

After the death of the Prophet Mohammed, and once the rule of Islam had been firmly established on the Arabian Peninsula, the first wave of conquest began. The Berber tribes of North Africa were converted to the new faith. As early as 710, the first Berber leader, Tarif Abu Sura, crossed the Straight of Gibraltar. To this day, the place where he made landfall is called Tarifa. One year later, some 7,000 Muslim warriors defeated the army of the Visigoth king Rodrigo. Afterwards, the Hispanic-Latin inhabitants offered little resistance, and a quarter of them became Muslims within the first generation. The Visigoth nobles even fled Toledo, leaving the field open for the conquerors to advance to the Cantabrian Mountains of northern Spain in just three years. At his point, the invaders were halted by the Asturian resistance.

Starting in 1055, a number of Christian kingdoms began to expand south of their northern mountain refuges as part of the "Reconquista" -- the so-called reconquest of al-Andalus under the banner of the Crusades. The successors to the Castilian throne, Isabella of Castile and Ferdinand of Aragon -- the Catholic Monarchs -- united the Christian military forces through their marriage and, following the fall of Granada in 1492, formed a purely Catholic kingdom on the Iberian Peninsula. They immediately banished the Jews. The Muslims, who represented the vast majority of the population of al-Andalus, were forcibly baptized, and the last group was permanently expelled in 1614. The Spanish Inquisition guarded over the "purity of the blood," under threat of torture and execution by being burned alive at the stake. A Multicultural Model for Europe >>> By Helene Zuber in Granada, Spain | May 22, 2008

The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Paperback - UK)
The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Hardback - UK)