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Mihrab
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Symbolism
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Loving Mezquita
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It is almost impossible to portray this masterpiece of architecture appropriately in photographs. However, I tried my best
. Please see the amazing works in marble and stone, and the byzantine mozaics…
Under the Moors, Mezquita was known as the Aljama Mosque, at its time the second largest mosque in the world. Taking over 200 years to complete, the Mosque’s construction started in 784AD. With the capture of Cordoba by Fernando III in 1236AD the mosque was converted into a cathedral and almost all the outer doors were sealed. During Moorish times, the many open doors of the mosque let in light which made the structure brighter, and, one would imagine, a more welcoming place than it is today.
When the mosque was converted into a cathedral, a third of the pillars were removed for a courtyard. In the centre of what is left of the mosque, the arches were reworked and the ceiling raised, this space is now the heart of the cathedral.
Inside the Mezquita are row after row of arches and pillars. Many of the pillars in the Mezquita were pilfered from Roman ruins. If a pillar was too long, it was sunk into the ground and reshaped to fit in with the other columns.
Today, the Mezquita is the cathedral of Cordoba (officially the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Assumption) and no longer a mosque.
Note: After the first irritation (which took quite a while, poor Alex got the whole load of it) I tried to see it from a different perspective: as a symbol for unity and faith, as a testimony that whatever differences we have, we all pray to the same God. Maybe one day the nations will see the futility of fighting for the own religion and start praying together to the one God.
This is my ardent hope for all of us.