Garden C

Keeping up with the Jones'
The 7th Marquis of Villaseca wanted to compete in fashion with the other early XIXth C families so he commissioned this garden.
Common Box, German Iris, DeLavay's MagnoliaBaca lagi
Well C

Water from the Colodro river enters through the well and into the decorated sink before being ducted throughout the garden.
Bougainvillea and arborvitae
Gardeners' C

or the vertical courtyard.
Used for tool storage, this one is notable for the wall of Plumbago and Elephant's food.
Quite a comfortable bench too.
Chapel C

The yard was too gloomy to photograph but the reconstructed chapel has some interesting items.
Archives C

Mandarin and Violets in the innermost courtyard next to the archives - more like a storage shed for old stuff.
Random patterns

One feature of Cordoba or is it of the Muslim influence is the use of repetitive pattern to create an overwhelming effect. So here are a few other ones I found.
Tilting at windmills

The Flamenco holds exhibits relating the history of the guitar and all the flamenco greats. Touch-screen videos demonstrate the techniques of flamenco song, guitar, dance and percussion. One canBaca lagi
Triumph

Alongside the Mesquite is the Triunfos erected in honour of St Raphael. It was finished by Miguel Verdiguier, a Frenchman who settled in Cordoba in the 18th century and is responsible for theBaca lagi
Hammer and sycle

A little way towards Malaga, I came across the small town of Marinaleda. This was or is famous for being a successful Communist town.
As in Emiglia Romana after WW2, a Communists was elected Mayor inBaca lagi
Lake District

This geographical area is known in the Tourist Industry as the "Spanish Lake District" but don't look for any cottages offering Devonshire Teas.
In 1914 the Turon river was dammed to regulate waterBaca lagi
Olvera

There is archaelogical evidence of human habitation in this area for more than 12,000 years (Palaeolithic) and historic for 2,000. Another town settled by the Phoenicians and Romans, whonamed it HippaBaca lagi
Olvera 2

The XIIth C Fortelleza, built as part of the Nasrid Kingdom of Granada's defensive perimeter, (and manned by the famous Granadiers,) has been well restored and commands the countryside at 623m aboveBaca lagi
Olvera town

Leaving town.
I could have bought 190 sq m of house - a do-er upper -in the old town for 30,000 Euros. But so many Brits have built inappropriate dwellings in Spain that the authorities have made itBaca lagi
Setenil de las Bodegas

This intriguing little town originated in caves along the Trejo river, which at least from Arabic times have been turned into houses by the simple addition of facades. Continuous human occupation hasBaca lagi
Moving on

Before the Romans got here and cleaned up the place, it was inhabited by the Turdistan people. They were not expelled or squeezed out by the invaders: on the contrary of all vanquished people theyBaca lagi
La Línea de la Concepción

Homer records that the Pillars of Heracles were created when Heracles broke the mountain that had connected Africa and Europe. I walked around the British one, 5 km long and 1.2 km wide. Since weBaca lagi
Bordering on the suicidal

The land entry to Gibralter is famous because traffic and pedestrians have to cross the main runway to get in.
It is also famous for the Barbary Macaques whose presence ensures the possession of theBaca lagi
Emmental cheese

“A mountain with wonderful concavities, which has its western side almost opened by a large cave which may be penetrated far into the interior.” [Pomponius Mela a geographer from Algeciras]
TheBaca lagi
Time for a pipe

The Great Siege from 1779-1783 was an attempt by France and Spain to capture Gibraltar while Britain was otherwise engaged with the American Revolution. A fascinating page describing it isBaca lagi
Chas' wall

You may recognise this wall from the pre-title sequence of "The Living Daylights", where James Bond pursues an assassin escaping in a Land Rover.
It was built in 1540 and strengthened in 1552 byBaca lagi
Dome of the Rock

Standing on a monolithic limestone promontory at about 426m ASL. The right side is nearly vertical, all the way down to the Med. The left, West side slopes down at 45 degrees.
It is blowing a galeBaca lagi
Morter the point

Bill Scunthorpe was a solid and unassuming man: when the Governor told him to make a gate in the wall, he asked "With what Sir?"
Well the boss was a Yorkshire man and new exactly how to make aBaca lagi
Tarifa

Guess who got here first. Yup, evidence that Palaeolithic and Bronze ages visitors followed by Phoenicians, Greeks and Carthaginians all came for their holidays before the Roman real estate developersBaca lagi
Twixt the deep blue sea & the not so dps

As far South as you can get on the Spanish mainland. On the left is the Atlantic and on the right the Med.
In the distance, on a site identified in 1567 by Anton Van der Wyngaerde (a prolific FlemishBaca lagi
Casa de la Luz

is about 3 km West of Vejer de la Frontera, still in Andalucia. The land, a rough uncultivated campo covered in native, wild (and uneatable ) olive trees, was acquired in by a young English couple inBaca lagi
Tony HammondVery much oakay with me...
Rose SivaAge old gardens....