• Roland Routier
  • Roland Routier

Roland Routier

Et eventyr med en åben slutning af Roland Routier Læs mere
  • Winning the Pools

    8. marts 2018, Spanien ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

    The Nazarie Palaces, owned by Ismail (1314-1325), Yusuf I (1333-1354) and Muhammad V (1362-1391) are the principal attraction. Like Moroccan houses to this day, they are not very attractive on the outside but splendid on the inside. Plenty of water to keep the air temperature comfortable.Læs mere

  • Alkazaba

    8. marts 2018, Spanien ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

    The Alcazaba, or citadel, along with the towers known as the Torres Bermejas, is the oldest part of the Alhambra and served as usual to watch over and control the city rather than to resist foreign enemies. It dates back to the 9th century.
    Unfortunately, there isn't a great deal left.
    Maybe the fountain holds a clue to the fate of the garrison: eaten by fish.
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  • Alhambra

    8. marts 2018, Spanien ⋅ ⛅ 13 °C

    All instructions for obtaining a ticket to the Alhambra insisted that it must be bought online, over the phone or at a ticket vending machine.As my Mastercard did not work in these cases, (though fine elsewhere,) and cash was not acceptable, I decided to front up to the office on the day. In the event, I arrived in the rain at about 09:30, walked up to the counter without queueing and purchased an entry ticket with my card! So much for trying to do the right thing, although Summertime must be a different matter. (By lunchtime there were queues to get in.)Læs mere

  • Arab quarter

    23. februar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

    The Albaycin is the old Arab Quarter in the shadow of the Alhambra. It covers the area between the hill of the Alhambra, the hill of San Cristobal, the Sacromonte and Elvira.
    It was the place where the first Siri court was built in the eleventh century and consequently displays a strong Muslim influence.
    The Albaycin descended from Saint Nicholas on the top of a hill to the banks of the River Darro. At its height in the last years of Nazarid dominance the quarter comprised a population of more than forty thousand inhabitants and thirty mosques.
    The streets are very narrow and small with clean houses, plus numerous wells, some of which are still in the Albaycin.
    The Moors left behind their homes, which were used by wealthy Christians to build their carmenes.
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  • Basilica of St J

    22. februar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 10 °C

    This is where the Pope gets his fillings. All his medical and dental needs are met by the brothers Hospitallers of Saint John of God.

    This order was founded by San Juan de Dios, a Portugese shepherd and soldier born in 1495 and died in Granada on his birthday just 55 years later. He can now be found behind the altar in a silver urn, surrounded by authentic body parts from like-minded individuals.Læs mere

  • Basilica

    22. februar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 10 °C

    The Iglesia de San Juan de Dios Granada was built in the popular Baroque style between the years 1737 and 1759.
    Highlights include the altar that can only be described as ornate, covered in gold leaf, fine frescoes, and sculptures by local artist Diego Sanchez de Sarabia.Læs mere

  • Justice

    20. februar 2018, Spanien ⋅ 🌙 4 °C

    The Tribunal of the Office of the Holy Inquisition operated in Spain under a papal Bull. When heated with a suspect inside, the shrieks of the victim made the Bull bellow amusingly
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    I have been relieved to discover in the museum dedicated to the practice that the Spanish Inquisition and the Catholic Church were not as bad as we thought. It was all the fault of the secular authorities if there was any nastiness.
    Catholic Monarchs Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile persuaded the Pope Sixtus IV to establish a Tribunal in Spain, commonly known as the Spanish Inquisition. Their aim was to create religious unity and weaken local political authorities and family alliances in the newly united Aragon and Castile.
    Another motive was money. The Church made a profit by confiscating property from the accused in order to fund the administration of the Tribunals. The government made a profit by confiscating what was left of their property when found guilty of heresy. Historians speculate that the monarchy convinced Pope Sixtus IV to allow the inquisition by threatening to remove Spanish troops from Rome, where they were needed to prevent an attack by Turkey.
    The museum is full of the standard methods of interrogation of the time, invented to inflict the maximum amount of pain without spilling blood which the Dominicans were expressly forbidden to do. Although mutilation was technically forbidden, Pope Alexander IV had decreed previously in 1256 that inquisitors could clear each other from any wrongdoing they might have done during torture sessions. Capital punishment did allow for burning at the stake, although the church kept its hands clean by allowing the secular authorities to carry out the sentence. In some cases, accused heretics who had died before their final sentencing had their corpses or bones dug up, burned and cast out.
    In Spain we are told that most people who confessed, (which entailed dobbing in someone else,) were not killed. And most of them were not real Christians anyway. Many Sephardic Jews converted to Catholicism rather than lose their capital and right of residence. They were called marranos (Spanish for "pig",) and accused of secretly continuing to practice Judaism, so became targets of the Inquisition.
    After the 'Reconquista' of Moorish Spain Muslim converts to Catholicism, called Moriscos (Spanish for "Moorish"), were targeted for the same reasons as Jewish converts. In the late 16th century, Protestants, mainly Lutherans, also became the target of the Inquisition.

    I was inspired to build my own bonfire after my visit, and all the heretical prunings from the garden have now been saved for eternity.

    CODA
    In the end even Pope Sixtus IV was disgusted with the Spanish Inquisition: on 18th April 1482, wrote to the bishops of Spain:
    "In Aragon, Valencia, Mallorca, and Catalonia the Inquisition has for some time been moved not by zeal for the faith and the salvation of souls but by lust for wealth. Many true and faithful Christians, on the testimony of enemies, rivals, slaves, and other lower and even less proper persons, have without any legitimate proof been thrust into secular prisons, tortured and condemned as relapsed heretics, deprived of their goods and property and handed over to the secular arm to be executed, to the peril of souls, setting a pernicious example, and causing disgust to many."

    But he did not stop it.
    The Office survives as the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
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  • Granada

    19. februar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ⛅ 8 °C

    Granada . Is it named after a fruit, (Spanish "granada" = pomegranate, which is abundant hereabouts and appears on the city's coat of arms,) or from its Moorish name, Karnattah (Gharnatah), possibly meaning "hill of strangers" ?
    In either case, it was originally called Elibyrge, (an Iberian 5th century BC settlement,) and Illiberis under the Romans
    By the early 13th century, the founder of the great Nasrid Dynasty, Ibn al-Ahmar, had aligned himself with Castile's ruler and formed the Emirate of Granada, (Al-Andalus,) establishing its position on the Arab-African gold trading routes. The move ensured the city's prosperity and created vast wealth, enabling the creation of the city's magnificent Moorish architecture, much of which is still visible today and a continuing source of revenue from tourists .
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  • Host gives a concert

    16. februar 2018, Spanien ⋅ 🌙 14 °C

    Monica plays viola for the Granada symphony orchestra and scored me a ticket to their weekly performance in the Auditorio Manuel de Falla. This week they invited to direct them an American Josep Svensen whose Japanese-American mother and Norwegian-American father left him with a wicked sense of humour. He conducted Beethoven's 4th and then 5th Symphonies with boisterous enthusiasm and turned conducting into a performance piece in its own right.
    It was so exciting one old dear lost her head.
    Another had so many ideas going through his brain that his head lit up.
    I can't explain the slaughtered dog in the foyer - perhaps it was an offering to the Gods.
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  • Inland

    14. februar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 11 °C

    Arrived at my new workaway in the town of Otura which is a village on the outskirts of Granada. Once again I scouted the place on foot as the lanes are so narrow and reversing impossible - but I made it. The house is a neat little place owned by 2 musicians with 2 teenage daughters and an old dog. From the garden there is a beautiful view of the Sierra Nevada ski fields, but fortunately the temperature here is above 0 degrees even in the early morning.Læs mere

  • When she sings I'm gone

    8. februar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 13 °C

    Fixed computer by paying €25 to reload Windows10. Of course I lost all the settings and am still trying to get everything to work.
    The oil leak was fixed by replacing the sump gasket, but not 100% sure about it yet.
    Bought a new relay for the diesel glow plugs, so they work well.
    Found a guy who could fit a Spanish gas bottle to the van, so now I have cooking, heating and hot water. Have to dismantle the fridge to clean the contacts before I can use it on gas.
    And I bought a new sender unit for the engine temperature indicator for all of €8.20!
    So it's time to move on down the coast to look for another host! Shan't wait for the singing though
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  • Load of balls

    22. januar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    One of the well known problems with warfare is troop boredom. To combat this, officers spend much time devising amusing training exercises.
    The Arabs had such an exercise for their artillery soldiers, who had to remain strong and dexterous to roll and load cannon balls during the heat of battle. They called this exercise al Bok'har.
    It apparently was very popular with the lads, so much so that they and foreign forces adapted it to play at home. Over time it evolved and the balls became more civilian friendly, until today it remains and is nown as "bocce".
    Not a lot of people know this.
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  • The Jayran Wall

    22. januar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    The Jayran Walls head North to the "Cerro de San Cristobal", built during the Kingdom of Jairán (1012-1028) in the 11th century .
    The Muslims built 3 square towers on this hill, known by them as Laham hill, and the Knights Templar added four semicircular ones after the Christian conquest of the city ​​by Alfonso VII in 1147. They are all ruins.
    The statue shown through the wall was erected around 1930 to represent the Sacred Heart of Jesus blessing the city and the Mediterranean Sea. It is carved out of marble from the nearby village Macael .
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  • Alcazaba 3rd court

    22. januar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    The third and highest compound was adapted after the reconquista by the Catholic monarchs. It’s built on a triangular ground plan and is guarded by three semi-circular towers, including the Tower of Homage.
    Once there was a market here, frequented by Harrison Ford, (for evidence see "Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade")
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  • Alcazaba 2nd court

    22. januar 2018, Spanien ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    The second compound was once the royal enclave containing public baths, a mosque, homes and a palace. Strong evidence that this was The Water Gardens palace, the seat of Prince Oberyn Martell, (the Red Viper) and his consort Ellaria Sand in Lanza del Sol, the capital of Dorne.
    It was on these stairs that she murdered him, assuming the crown for her and her lovely Sand Snakes.
    OTOH the garden was designed and built in the 1920's so I am not sure about the stories.
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