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Granada and the Alhambra / A brief description of the ancient city of Granada, with a particular account of the Moorish palace cover

Granada and the Alhambra / A brief description of the ancient city of Granada, with a particular account of the Moorish palace

Chapter 5: LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
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A concise historical and architectural account of Granada and its Moorish palace, tracing the city’s rise under Islamic rule and its subsequent decline after Christian conquest. The narrative combines political history and cultural context with detailed descriptions of the palace’s layout, ornamentation, and construction, and emphasizes the artistic motifs and craftsmanship of courts, chambers, and gardens. Designed as an illustrated souvenir and practical guide for visitors, the work pairs plans and numerous images with readable commentary to evoke the palace’s atmosphere while clarifying its architectural features and the historical circumstances that shaped the city.

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Title: Granada and the Alhambra

Author: Albert Frederick Calvert

Release date: February 24, 2021 [eBook #64620]
Most recently updated: October 18, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images available at The Internet Archive)

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Contents.

List of Illustrations
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Plan of Granada

(etext transcriber's note)

THE SPANISH SERIES

 

GRANADA AND
THE ALHAMBRA

THE SPANISH SERIES

EDITED BY ALBERT F. CALVERT

Goya
Toledo
Madrid
Seville
Murillo
Cordova
El Greco
Velazquez
The Prado
The Escorial
Royal Palaces of Spain
Granada and Alhambra
Spanish Arms and Armour
Leon, Burgos and Salamanca
Valladolid, Oviedo, Segovia
Zamora, Avila and Zaragoza

 

GRANADA  AND
THE ALHAMBRA

A BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE
ANCIENT CITY OF   GRANADA
WITH A PARTICULAR ACCOUNT
OF     THE    MOORISH   PALACE
BY       ALBERT     F.     CALVERT
WITH      460      ILLUSTRATIONS

LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD
NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY MCMVII


Printed by Ballantyne & Co. Limited
Tavistock Street, London



TO
H.I.M. THE EMPRESS EUGÉNIE
THIS SOUVENIR OF THAT FAIR GRANADAN HOME
FROM WHICH SHE CARRIED
THE CROWN OF SPANISH BEAUTY
TO GRACE THE THRONE OF FRANCE
IS DEDICATED
IN ACCORDANCE WITH HER MAJESTY’S
GRACIOUS PERMISSION

PREFACE TO FIRST EDITION

Although the admission may be construed by the censorious as betraying a lack of becoming diffidence, I am tempted to believe that no apology will be demanded for the publication of this volume by that section of the reading public for which it has been chiefly compiled. My temerity goes even further, and I anticipate with some confidence that visitors to the Alhambra, and pilgrims to that famous Mecca of Moorish workmanship, will recognise in this book an earnest attempt to supply a long-felt want. When I paid my first visit to Granada some years ago, I was surprised and disappointed to find that no such thing as an even fairly adequate illustrated souvenir of this “city of the dawn” was to be obtained. Many tomes, costly and valuable (not necessarily the same thing), have been written to place on record the wonders of “the glorious sanctuary of Spain,” but these are beyond the reach of the general public. Many beautiful pictures have caught odd ecstasies of this superb and perfectly harmonised palace of art, but these impressions are not available to the ordinary tourist.

What is wanted, as I imagine, is a concise history and description of the Alhambra, illustrated with a series of pictures constituting a tangible remembrancer of the delights of this Granadian paradise

“Where glory rests ’tween laurels,
A torch to give thee light!”

The Alhambra may be likened to an exquisite opera which can only be appreciated to the full when one is under the spell of its magic influence. But as the witchery of an inspired score can be recalled by the sound of an air whistled in the street, so—it is my hope—the pale ghost of this Moorish fairy-land may live again in the memories of travellers through the medium of this pictorial epitome.

I desire, however, to submit an explanation—or excuse—for the unusual form in which this volume is issued. At the commencement of my work I experienced no little difficulty in collecting the requisite illustrations, for most of the obtainable photographs were ill-chosen and but carelessly developed, and I was compelled to press my own cameras into the service of my scheme. But when my designs became known, I was inundated with offers of pictures of every description, until the embarrassment of artistic treasures entirely upset the original purpose of my book. Artists placed their studies at my disposal; collectors begged me, with irresistible Spanish courtesy, to regard their galleries as my own; and students directed my attention to little-known publications on the subject.

Don Mariano Contreras, Conservator of the Alhambra, the son of the gifted Raphaël Contreras, who devoted thirty-seven years of his life to the restoration of the Palace—gave me the benefit of his knowledge of this unique treasure-house of art; and I have also laid under contribution the beautiful plates of Owen Jones, who disposed of a Welsh inheritance in order to produce his great work on the Plans, Elevations, Sections, and Details of the Alhambra. Jones’s Grammar of Ornament, which has been described as “beautiful enough to be the horn-book of the Angels,” also contains the result of his researches in the Alhambra, which occupied him for the greater part of eleven years. A selection of these illustrations is here rescued from the obscurity of public libraries and the inaccessible fastnesses of private collections. The inclusion of John F. Lewis’s drawings, and the reproduction of a series of pictures by James C. Murphy, who spent seven years in the study of the artistic marvels of the Alhambra, I do not feel called upon to defend. The photographs, several of which were placed at my disposal by Don Rafaël Garzón, represent the buildings as they appear to-day; the drawings were made before the Palace was damaged by the disastrous fire of September, 1890.

For the historical portions of the description contained in the letterpress I have levied tribute on a variety of authors. The History of the Mohammedan Dynasties in Spain, by the learned Spanish Orientalist, Don Pascual de Gayángos; Raphaël Contreras’ Étude Descriptive des Monuments Arabes; Richard Ford’s reverent appreciations; Dr. R. Dozy’s history; Mr. Stanley Lane-Poole’s The Moors in Spain; Washington Irving’s fascinating writings; and The Alhambra Album, presented by Prince Dolgorouki in 1829, containing the autographs, poems, and thoughts of succeeding generations of visitors to Granada, these and many others have been drawn upon in the following pages.

But the multiplicity of my illustrations convinced me that if I adhered to my idea of furnishing an amount of letterpress sufficient to “carry” the blocks, I should only end in producing a book that would tax the physical endurance of my readers by reason of its bulk, and exhaust their patience with a tedious super-abundance of minute descriptive pabulum. I resolved, therefore, to give pride of place to the pictorial side of the volume; to abandon the traditions regulating the proportions of prose to pictures; and make my appeal to the public by the beauty and variety of the illustrations I have collected, and the immensity of elaborate letterpress which I have not written.

A. F. C.

Royston,”
Hampstead, N.W., 1904.

PREFACE TO SECOND EDITION

The compilation of a book of this kind reveals in the author a refreshing optimism which does not always survive the ordeal of publication, and it is, perhaps, out of sympathy with the misgivings that assail him as he approaches the bar of public and critical opinion, that convention cedes to him the privilege of making some apology for the faith that is in him. In his preface he is permitted to explain himself, and this apologia or justification, call it which you will, stands as the last word in his own defence. But the demand for a further edition is the outcome of an amiable conspiracy on the part of the public, and it is not required of the author to explain, justify, or excuse an issue for which he is not directly responsible. Any revision or amplification, however, which is to be found in a second impression, may be briefly referred to, and at the same time tradition allows him to express the feelings of gratitude and gratification that the occasion inspires.

It has been my ambition to acknowledge the favour with which this book has been received, by having the present edition produced with the greatest care on special paper, and by the addition of a number of new illustrations, including some half-tone and coloured plates reproduced from the Monumentos Arquitectónicos de España and other sources, which I have acquired since it was first produced. It will be seen that several of the coloured pictures in this book illustrate designs which are common to the Arabian ornamentation to be found in Cordova and Seville, and, as being representative of the Moresco work of the period, they also appear in the companion volume on Moorish Remains in Spain, but it may be stated that the whole of the plates reproduced here are from photographs and drawings secured or specially made to illustrate The Alhambra. In its pictorial appeal it has been my ambition to make this edition as worthy of its subject as means and ability permit, and I offer this assurance as an earnest of my sincere appreciation of the generous manner in which the Press and public rewarded my previous effort.

A. F. C.

PREFACE TO NEW EDITION

The generous appreciation with which my larger book on the Alhambra was received by both the Press and the public in Spain and America, as well as in this country, encourages me to hope that the present volume will prove a popular addition to this Spanish Series. Three years ago, when I published The Alhambra to supply what my own experience taught me to be a real want, the scale and quality of the illustrations made it impossible to issue the work at a popular price. I am now enabled to present an inexpensive and, I trust, adequate souvenir of the fascinating city of Granada and its Red Palace. The text is no mere reprint of the matter which appeared in my former work, but embodies the results of a more critical, though not less appreciative, survey of the last monuments of the Spanish Moor. Bearing in mind, too, that the illustrations, being on a reduced scale, called for fuller explanation, I have endeavoured to condense as much detail and descriptive matter into the letterpress as the limits I had laid down for myself admitted. Those limits were still further encroached upon by the additional wealth of illustration which resulted from the decision to include the city of Granada in a work which, in previous issues, had been devoted entirely to the palace of the Alhambra, and the new pictorial matter so acquired threatened to annex all the space allotted for the text. But little as I liked the idea of further condensing the letterpress, I was even less inclined to neglect the opportunity of enhancing the pictorial value of the volume. In dealing with the Moorish art of Spain, I have always recognised that the popular want is for pictures rather than the printed word, and I venture to hope that the present volume, which surpasses its costlier predecessors in the number of the plates reproduced, will constitute a serviceable if not exhaustive guide to the beautiful Moorish capital, and an artistic remembrancer of its fascinating monuments.

I have to acknowledge my obligations to Mr. E. B. d’Auvergne for his kind and valuable assistance in the compilation of the text, and for permission to reproduce many of the additional photographs I am indebted to the courtesy of Don Senan y Gonzalez, of Herr Ernst Wasmuth of Berlin, publisher of Uhde’s Baudenkmaeler in Spanien und Portugal, and of Herr Eugen Twietmeyer of Leipzig, publisher of Junghandel’s Die Baukunst Spaniens.

As I have remarked in the preface to the volume on Cordova, it may be thought that in the present work I have given an excess of detail of Arabian decoration and ornament, but it has been my aim to provide the last word on Moorish art—so far at least as the pictorial representation of it is concerned—wherever I have dealt with it in Spain. To the general reader these reproductions of tracery and elaborate detail may seem superfluous, but they will, I trust, lend to the book an additional interest in the eyes of students and artists, for whose delectation they are included here.

A. F. C.

CONTENTS

 PAGE
The City of the Moor1
The Alhambra25
The Generalife61
Catholic Granada65

 

 

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

TITLE PLATE
View of Granada, showing the Alhambra and the Sierra Nevada1
General View of the Alhambra2
View of the Alhambra from the Sacromonte Road3
The Alhambra from the Moor’s Seat—La Silla del Moro4
General View of the Alhambra from San Nicolás5
View of the Gate of Elvira6
A View of the Alhambra from the Albaicin (Sketch)7
View of the Cathedral and the Alhambra from San Gerónimo8
View of the Sierra Nevada from the Carrera de las Angustias9
View of the Royal Gate10
View from the Tower in the Alhambra11
La Plaza Nueva12
Monument to Columbus in the Paseo del Salon; the Sierra Nevada in the Distance13
The Street of the Catholic Sovereigns14
Arab Silk Market15
La Casa de los Tiros16
Church of Santa Ana17
Limoges Enamel Triptych which belonged to the Gran Capitán. (Provincial Museum, Granada)18
Altar in the Church of San Gerónimo19
House in the Calle de Darro. The Palacio de Justicia20
The House of Castril21
Typical Gypsies and their Quarters22
Gypsies in Front of their Dwellings23
Gypsy-dwellings in the Sacromonte24
General View of the Gypsy Quarters25
Interior of a Gypsy’s Cave26
Group of Gypsies27
A Gypsy Family28
Gypsies bivouacking29
Gypsies30
Gypsies clipping a Mule31
Gypsies32
Gypsies33
Gypsy Dance34
Interior of the Sacristy of the Cartuja35
Interior of Cartuja: The Sacristy36
Interior of the Cartuja Church37
Saint Bruno, by Alonso Cano, at the Carthusian Monastery of Granada38
Exterior of the Royal Chapel39
The Gate of Pardon and the Exterior of the Cathedral40
Façade of the Cathedral41
Exterior Gate of the Royal Chapel42
Detail in the Royal Chapel43
Ancient Gothic Entrance to the Royal Chapel44
General Exterior View of the Royal Chapel, Upper Part45
General Exterior View of the Royal Chapel46
Façade of the Cathedral. Exterior of the Royal Chapel47
General View of the Interior of the Cathedral48
The Cathedral. General View of the Interior49
The Cathedral. View of the Principal Nave50
The High Altar in the Cathedral51
Altar-piece in the Royal Chapel, by F. de Borgoña52
The Cathedral. Boabdil giving up the Keys of Granada to the Catholic Sovereigns. Fragment of the Altar-piece in the Royal Chapel53
The Inner Choir of the Cathedral54
The Cathedral. Tombs of the Catholic Sovereigns in the Royal Chapel55
View of the Royal Chapel and Tombs of the Catholic Sovereigns, by P. Gonzalvo56
Royal Chapel. Tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella57
Vault of the Catholic Sovereigns at Granada58
Tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella, Doña Juana and Philip the Handsome59
Tombs of Ferdinand and Isabella, Doña Juana and Philip the Handsome60
Sceptre, Crown, Sword, Mass-book, and Coffer of the Catholic Sovereigns61
Relics of the Catholic Sovereigns62
Royal Chapel: Statue of Queen Isabella the Catholic63
Statue of Isabella the Catholic64
Chapel of San Miguel in the Cathedral, Marble Sculpture65
Plan of the Alhambra Palace at Granada66
General Plan of the Alhambra67
General View of the Alhambra from San Nicolás68
The Red Towers from the Ramparts69
View of the Alhambra from the Sacromonte70
General View of the Alhambra and Algibillo Promenade71
View of the Alhambra from the Cuesta del Chapiz72
The Red Towers73
General View of the Alhambra74
The Tower of the Peaks75
The Infantas’ Tower and Captive’s Tower76
View of the Watch Tower and Granada77
View of the Ramparts and the Watch Tower78
The Aqueduct Tower and the Aqueduct79
The Gate of Justice. Detail of a Door in the Court of the Myrtles80
The Alhambra and the Sierra Nevada81
Granada, from the Homage Tower82
“The Queen’s Dressing-room,” at the Summit of the Mihrab Tower, with Distant View of the Generalife 83
The Gate of Justice, erected by Yúsuf I.84
The Tower of the Peaks85
The Captive’s Tower86
Exterior of the Mosque, Private Property87
Tower of the Aqueduct88
Ascent to the Alhambra by the Cuesta del Rey Chico—Lesser King Hill89
The Ladies’ Tower90
Part of the Alhambra, Exterior91
The Homage Tower. Ancient Arab Ruins in the Alcazába92
Gate of Justice, the Alhambra93
Gate of Justice (Sketch)94
The Gate of Justice95
Plan, Height, and Details of the Gate of the Law, commonly called of Justice96
Elevation of the Ancient Gate of Justice97
Portal commonly called the Wine Gate98
Porch of the Gate of Judgment99
Elevation of the Wine Gate100
Transverse Section of Part of the Alhambra101
Section showing Heights of the Alhambra102103
Promenades at the Entrance to the Alhambra104
The Hall of Justice and Court of the Lions105
Hall of Justice. Left Side106
Hall of Justice, showing Fountain of Court of the Lions107
Section of the Hall of Justice (looking East)108
Section of the Hall of Justice (looking towards the Court of the Lions)109
Vertical Section of the Hall of Justice110
Details of the Hall of Justice111
Plan and Window of the Hall of Justice112
Painting on the Ceiling of the Hall of Justice. No. 1113
Painting on the Ceiling of the Hall of Justice. No. 3114
Part of Picture in the Hall of Justice—The Moor’s Return from Hunting115
Hall of Justice—The Death of the Lion at the Hands of a Christian Knight116
Part of Picture in the Hall of Justice representing a Christian Knight rescuing a Maiden from a wicked Magician, or Wild-Man-o’-the-Woods117
Part of Picture in Hall of Justice—Moorish Huntsman slaying the Wild Boar118
Hall of Justice—Three Figures from the Picture of the Moorish Tribunal119
The Mosque and Generalife120
Court of the Mosque121
Façade of the Mosque122
Interior of the Mosque in the Alhambra123
Interior of the Mosque124
Elevation of the Portico adjacent to the Mosque125
Detail of the Entrance Door of the Mosque126
An Arched Window of the Mosque127
An Arched Window of the Mosque128
The Koran Recess in the Mosque, the Scene of Yusuf’s Assassination129
The Mosque from Koran Recess130
Details of Ornament of Koran Recess near the Entrance Door of the Mosque131
Cornice and Window in the Façade of the Mosque132
Vertical Section of the Mosque133
Arab Lamp in Mosque134
Details of the Front of the Mosque of the Harem135
Details of Ornament in the Court of the Mosque136
Details in the Court of the Mosque, Eastern Façade137
Ornament in Panels, Court of the Mosque138
Window in the Hall of Ambassadors139
Entrance to the Hall of Ambassadors140
Hall of Ambassadors141
Section and Elevation of the Interior of the Hall of Ambassadors142
Encaustic-tile Work of the Hall of Ambassadors143
Ornament in Panels, Hall of Ambassadors144
Inscriptions in the Hall of Ambassadors145
Kufic Inscriptions, Hall of Ambassadors146
“Wa la Ghálib ila Alá”—There is no Conqueror but God!—The famous Motto of Mohammed I. and his Successors. An Example from the Hall of Ambassadors147
The Court of the Lions from the Templete Pomiente148
Entrance to the Court of the Lions through the Pomiente Corner149
North Gallery and Façade of the Hall of the Abencerrages150
The Court of the Lions from the Pomiente Corner151
View in the Court of the Lions152
View in the Court of the Lions from the Hall of Justice153
The Court of the Lions154
General View of the Court of the Lions155
Court of the Lions156
North Gallery in the Court of the Lions157
Section, Court of the Lions158
Pavilion in the Court of the Lions159
Fountain and East Temple in the Court of the Lions160
Hall of Justice and Court of the Lions161
Angle in the Hall of Justice162
Hall of Justice163
Ceiling of the Hall of Justice164
The Mosque, and View of the Generalife165
Exterior of a Window in the Mosque166
The Mosque, and View of the Generalife167
Interior of the Mosque168
Court of the Mosque, West Façade169
Interior of the Mosque, converted into a Roman Catholic Church170
Interior of the Mosque, converted into a Roman Catholic Church171
Jalousies in the Court of the Mosque172
Entrance to the Hall of Ambassadors173
Balcony in the Hall of Ambassadors174
Detail of the Hall of the Arched Windows175
Detail in the Hall of the Abencerrages176
The Court of the Lions177
General View of the Court of the Lions178
The Fountain and West Temple of the Court of the Lions179
Elevation of the Fountain of the Court of the Lions180
The Fountain of the Court of the Lions, with Details of the Ornament181
Plan of the Basin of the Fountain in the Court of the Lions182
Section of the Pavilion in the Court of the Lions183
Section of the Hall of the Two Sisters, and Section of Part of the Court of the Lions184185
Capital in the Court of the Lions, with a Scale of One Metre186
Details of the Centre Arcade of the Court of the Lions187
Frieze over Columns, Court of the Lions188
Detail of the Central Arch in the Court of the Lions189
The First Six Verses of the Inscription around the Basin of the Fountain of the Court of the Lions190
Entablature in the Court of the Lions191
Cupola of the Pavilion in the Court of the Lions192
Entrance to the Court of the Lions. Little Temple, the Court of the Lions193
The Court of the Lions194
The Little Temple, and the Fountain, the Court of the Lions195
The Court of the Lions196
The Court of the Lions, West Angle197
Morocco Embassy, December 1885198
The Court of the Lions from the West Temple199
The Court of the Lions from the West Temple200
West Gallery in the Court of the Lions201
The Court of the Lions, Façade of the Hall of the Two Sisters202
The Court of the Lions, Left-hand Angle203
The Court of the Lions, Façade of the Hall of Two Sisters204
The Court of the Lions from the Entrance205
Detail of the Entrance to the Court of the Lions206
Detail in the Court of the Lions207
Mosaics, North and South Sides, the Court of the Lions208
Hall of the Abencerrages209
Hall of the Abencerrages210
Hall of the Abencerrages211
Hall of the Abencerrages212
Wooden Doors, Hall of the Abencerrages213
Gallery in the Court of the Fish-pond; or, of the Myrtles214
Court of the Myrtles; or, of the Fish-pond. Façade of the Hall of Ambassadors215
Court of the Myrtles; or, of the Fish-pond216
General View of the Court of the Myrtles; or, of the Fish-pond217
North Side of the Court of the Fish-pond; or, of the Myrtles218
Entrance to the Court of the Fish-pond; or, of the Myrtles219
Gallery in the Court of the Myrtles; or, of the Fish-pond220
General View of the Court of the Myrtles and Comares Tower221
Court of the Myrtles, East Façade222
Detail in the Court of the Myrtles223
Court of the Myrtles, East Façade224
Exterior of the Gallery in the Court of the Fish-pond; or, of the Myrtles225
The Court of the Fish-pond; or, of the Myrtles226
Ornament in the Court of the Fish-pond; or, of the Myrtles227
Court of the Myrtles; or, of the Fish-pond, formed by Yúsuf I.228
The Court of the Fish-pond; or, of the Myrtles. Gallery in the Court of the Fish-pond; or, of the Myrtles229
The Hall of the Baths230
The Sultan’s Bath231
The Sultana’s Bath232
The Baths, Hall of Repose233
Chamber of Repose234
Section of the Hall of the Baths235
Longitudinal Section through the Baths236
Ground Plan of the Baths in the Alhambra237
Ceiling of the Hall of the Baths238
Plan and Section of the great Cistern in the Alhambra239
A Section of the Baths in the Alhambra240
Chamber of Repose. Sultan’s Bath constructed by Yúsuf I.241
Interior of the Infantas’ Tower242
Sections of the Infantas’ Tower243
Interior of the Tower of the Infantas, Upper Part244
Balcony of the “Captive” (Isabel de Solis), overlooking the Vega, or Plain, of Granada245
Alcove of the “Captive” (Isabel de Solis)246
Interior of the Tower of the “Captive” (Isabel de Solis)247
The “Captive’s” Tower from the Entrance248
Interior of the Mosque. Room in the “Captive’s” Tower249
Hall of Justice. Baths, the Chamber of Repose250
Balcony of the Favourite, “Lindaraja”251
Alcove in the “Lindaraja” Apartments252
Garden of “Lindaraja,” and the Apartments traditionally said to have been occupied by “Lindaraja,” a favourite Sultana253
Detail, Interior of the Balcony of “Lindaraja”254
Detail, Lower Part of the Balcony of “Lindaraja”255
Detail of the Central Part of the Balcony of “Lindaraja”256
The Queen’s Boudoir and Distant View of the Generalife257
The Queen’s Boudoir and View of the Generalife258
The Queen’s Boudoir and old Albaicin Quarter259
The Queen’s Boudoir and Defile of the Darro260
“Lindaraja’s” Garden and the Apartments in which Washington Irving stayed261
Angle of the Balcony of “Lindaraja”262
Balcony of the favourite “Lindaraja”263
Interior of the Tower of the Captive, Isabel de Solis264
Exterior of the Captive’s Tower265
The Tower of the Captive, Isabel de Solis266
Interior of the Infantas’ Tower, Upper Part267
Interior of the Infantas’ Tower268
Detail of the Upper Part of the Balcony of “Lindaraja”269
Hall of the Two Sisters270
Entrance to the Hall of the Two Sisters271
Interior of the Hall of the Two Sisters272
Hall of the Two Sisters273
Hall of the Two Sisters274
Temple and Façade of the Hall of the Two Sisters275
View in the Hall of the Two Sisters276
Hall of the Two Sisters from the Entrance Door, built by Yúsuf I.277
Upper Balcony of the Hall of the Two Sisters278
Hall of the Two Sisters from the Entrance Door279
Ceiling of the Hall of the Two Sisters280
Detail of the Upper Story, Hall of the Two Sisters281
Detail of the Lateral Windows of the Hall of the Two Sisters282
Detail in the Hall of the Two Sisters283
Panel, Ornament, and Inscriptions in the Hall of the Two Sisters284
Inscription in the Hall of the Two Sisters285
Frieze in the Hall of the Two Sisters286
Panel on Jambs of Doorways, Hall of the Two Sisters287
Details of the Glazed Tiles in the Dado of the Hall of the Two Sisters288
Band round Panels in Windows, Hall of the Two Sisters289
Mosaic in Dado of Recess. Mosaic in Dado of the Entrance to the Hall of the Two Sisters290
Mosaic in Dado of Hall of Ambassadors. Mosaic in Dado of the Hall of the Two Sisters291
Wine Gate. West Façade292
Detail of the only ancient “Jalousie” remaining in the Alhambra293
El Jarro. Arab Vase now in the Museum of the Palace294
El Jarro. The Arabian Vase and Niche in which it formerly stood, Hall of the Two Sisters295
An Arab Vase of the Fourteenth Century in the Niche wherein it stood until the Year 1837296
Sword of the last Moorish King of Granada, commonly called “The Sword of Boabdil”297
The Surrender of Granada by Boabdil to Ferdinand and Isabella, January 2, 1492298
Gold Coin (obverse and reverse) of Mohammed I., the Founder of the Alhambra, who reigned 1232-1272 A.D.299
Details and Inscriptions, and Arabian Capitals300
The Gothic Inscription set up in the Alhambra by the Count of Tendilla, to commemorate the Surrender of the Fortress in 1492301
Mosaic Pavement in the Queen’s Dressing-room (Tocador de la Reyna.) Mosaic, from a Fragment in the Alhambra302
The House of Carbon303
The ancient Granary Market and House of Carbon304
Elevation of the Casa del Carbon, or House of Carbon, once known as the House of the Weathercock305
Courtyard of a Moorish House in the Albaicin306
Interior of an Arab House in the Albaicin307
The Proclamation of Boabdil. By Plácido Frances (National Exhibition of Beaux Arts, 1884)308
The Author in the Alhambra309
Cornices, Capitals, and Columns in the Alhambra310
Miscellaneous Ornament in the Alhambra311
The Fable of Jupiter and Leda in the Alhambra312
Bas-relief, now in the Museum of the Alhambra313
Arabian Sword314
Capitals from the Courts and Halls of the Alhambra315
Encaustic-tile Work in the Royal Room of Santo Domingo316
Various Mosaics from the Alhambra317
Inscriptions in the Alhambra318
Plan of the Palace of Charles V. and of the Subterranean Vaults of the Alhambra319
General View of the Alhambra from the Homage Tower320
Ancient Cistern. Early Fourteenth Century321
The Alhambra (Specially drawn for the Spanish Series)322
Part of Exterior of the Palace of Charles V.323
Elevation of the Palace of Charles V.324
Section of the Palace of Charles V.325
Fountain of the Emperor Charles V.326
View of the Alhambra from the Homage Tower327
Interior of the Palace of Charles V.328
Doorway of the Palace of Charles V.329
Bas-relief in the Palace of Charles V.330
Porch of the Palace of Charles V. from the West331
Roman Court, Palace of Charles V.332
Ground Plan of the Generalife at Granada333
The Generalife334
The Principal Court of the Generalife335
The Court of the Fish-pond in the Generalife336
Promenades and Gardens of the Generalife337
The Generalife338
Front View of the Portico of the Generalife339
Transverse Section of the Royal Villa of the Generalife340
Gallery in the Generalife341
The Generalife. Gallery in the Acequia Court342
The Generalife. Entrance to the Portrait Gallery343
Garden of the Generalife344
Elevation of the Portico of the Generalife345
The Acequia Court in the Generalife346
A Corner of the Acequia Court in the Generalife347
Cypress Court. A Corner in the Acequia Court348
The Cypress of the Sultana in the Generalife349
A Ceiling in the Generalife350
The Generalife. The Acequia Court from the Main Entrance351
The Generalife. The Acequia Court from the Interior352
Exterior View of the Generalife353
Entrance to the Generalife354
The Generalife. Court of the Sultana’s Cypress355
The Generalife. The Acequia Court from the Interior356
South Façade of the Palace of Charles V.357
Bas-relief in the Palace of Charles V.358
Bas-relief in the Palace of Charles V.359
Gate of the Granadas360
Promenades and Hotels of the Alhambra361
The Gate of Justice and Fountain of Charles V.362
Environs of the Alhambra. Fountain of Charles V.363
Gate of Justice. Principal Entrance to the Alhambra364
Gate of Justice365
Wine Gate. East Façade366
Environs of the Alhambra. Tower of the Peaks367
Tower of the Peaks368
General View of the Alhambra from the Silla del Moro369
General View of the Alhambra from the Gypsy Quarters370
General View of the Alhambra from the Generalife371
View of Granada and the Alhambra from the Sacromonte372
General View of the Alhambra from San Nicolas373
The Watch Tower, the Cathedral, and Granada374
Villas on the Banks of the River Darro375
A View of the Alhambra376
Villas on the Banks of the River Darro377
The Watch Tower and Cathedral378
The Red Tower379
The Homage Tower and Gypsy Quarters: exterior of their Caves380
Carrera del Rio Darro381
The Gate of Elvira. The old Entrance to the Fortifications382
Washing Place in the Puerta del Sol383
Courtyard of an Arab House384
A Moorish Archway385
Interior of an old House in the Calle del Horno de Oro386
Interior of an old House in the Albaicin387
The Cathedral and General View388
General View of the Cathedral389
General View of the Exterior of the Cathedral390
Entrance to the Royal Chapel391
Exterior of the Royal Chapel of the Catholic Sovereigns392
Detail of the Exterior of the Royal Chapel393
Exterior of the Royal Chapel394
Exterior of the Cathedral395
Exterior of the Royal Chapel396
Exterior of the Cathedral. The Gate of Pardon397
Gothic Pinnacle on the Royal Chapel398
The Cathedral. View from the Choir399
The Cathedral. General View of the Chancel and High Altar400
Bas-relief in the Altar-piece of the Royal Chapel401
General View of the Chancel in the Cathedral402
The Royal Chapel. Sepulchre of the Catholic Sovereigns403
The Royal Chapel. Detail of the Sepulchre of the Catholic Sovereigns404
The Royal Chapel. Sculpture of King Ferdinand the Catholic405
Sepulchre of Ferdinand406
Sepulchre of Isabella the Catholic407
Portal of the Church of San Juan de Dios408
Sepulchre of Alonso Caño in San Gerónimo409
Head of John the Baptist410
Head of John the Baptist411
Head of John the Baptist412
Exterior of the Cartuja Monastery413
Sacristy in the Cartuja, Left Side414
Sacristy in the Cartuja, Right Side415
Cartuja. Sancta Sanctorum416
Cartuja. Detail of the Cupboards in the Sacristy417
Altars in the Cartuja. Pictures by Sanchez y Cotán, a Monk of the Order418
Cartuja. The Immaculate Conception. By Murillo419
Cartuja. The Virgin of the Rosary. By Murillo420
Cartuja. St. Joseph and the Child. Sculpture by Alonso Caño421
Cartuja. St. Mary Magdalene. Sculpture by Alonso Caño422
Cartuja. Horsemen hanging Martyrs. By Sanchez Cotán423
Cartuja. The Baptism of Our Lord. By Sanchez Cotán424
Cartuja. The Holy Family. By Sanchez Cotán425
The Crucifixion of Our Lord. By Morales426
The Conception of Our Lady. By Morales427
The Gypsy Quarters. Exterior of the Caves428
The Gypsy Quarters. An “At Home”429
Gypsy Dance in their Quarters430
Gypsy Types at the Doors of their Caves431
Gypsy Dance in their Quarters432
Gypsy Dancers and their Captain, J. Amaya433
Bridge of the Genil434
General View435
General View of the old Albaicin436
General View from the Watch Tower437
Old Arab Palace, now the Property of a Spanish Nobleman438
The old Town Hall439
The Royal Gate and Street of the Catholic Sovereigns440
Monument to Columbus in the Paseo del Salon441
The Raw Silk Market442
The Raw Silk Market. Ancient Arab Silk Market443
Exterior of an old House, Cuesta del Pescado444
The Court of Justice445
Carrera del Darro446
Market and Gypsy Fair in the Triunfo447
Calle de San Anton448
Antequeruela Quarter, Sierra Nevada, and the “Last Sigh of the Moor”449
Carrera de Genil and View of the Sierra Nevada450
Plaza de Mariana Pineda, Arab House, and View of the Sierra Nevada451
General View of the Alhambra and of the Sierra Nevada from St. Michael452
Huétor High Road and View of the Sierra Nevada453
Villas on the Borders of the River Darro454
Defile of the Darro455
The Green Bridge and View of the Sierra Nevada456
View of the Sierra Nevada457
General View of the Sierra Nevada and the River Genil458
Granada. (Specially drawn for the Spanish Series)459
Arms of Granada460
Plan of GranadaPage 89