Preview
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Creation Year
1974
Image ID
CS.051
Alternate Identifier
B49.232
Subcollection
CS: Granada
Abstract
A wall in the Comares Court framed within arches of the portico, at the Alhambra in Granada. The upper half consists mainly of stucco work, while the lower presents mosaic dados, all framed within an equally embellished arch.
Description
This wall formed the façade of the Comares palace which was constructed under Muhammad V. The wall is an outstanding example of Islamic decoration—the whole surface is covered in elaborate stucco, faience and woodwork. The right-hand door leads to the Sultan’s private suite, while the left hand door, via a convoluted passage, leads to the Comares palace. Between the two doors was the Sultan’s throne, no longer there. The Alhambra as a whole is one of the most fantasized monuments of Islamic Architecture, captivating the imagination of a vast number of writers and artists, including Washington Irving and the French author Chateaubriand, to name just a couple. Indeed, some parts of the Alhambra, such as the Court of the Lions, are commonly written about examples of the most beautiful architecture in the world. The palace-complex as it stands today was built mostly in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries under the Nasrid dynasty (1238-1492), in particular by Yusuf I (1333-54) and his son Muhammad V (1354-59, 1362-1391). Out of six royal palaces, only two survive (the Comares palace and the Palace of the Lions). A summer palace called the Generalife (from the Arabic jannat al-arif, ‘the garden of the architect’) is also extant. – SK
Image Notes
Photograph created 1974. Photograph processed June 1974. Formerly catalogued as B49.232. Notes written on the slide or index: Pavilion + pool.
Image Format
35 mm slide
Geographic Reference
Granada, Spain
Keywords
Moorish, Muslim, Fourteenth Century, Fifteenth Century, Reconstructed, Palace, Stucco, Stone, Masonry, Stucco Carving, Tiles, Mosaic, Arches, Vaulting, Portico