Granada
A Pomegranate in the Hand of God
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- 10,99 €
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- 10,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Andalusia: ancient homeland of the mysterious Iberians, birthplace of Roman emperors, seedbed of modern Anarchism, and unmarked gravesite of Spain's greatest lyric poet. Perhaps most importantly, Andalusia is home to the city of Granada, where a hybrid culture composed of Islamic, Jewish, and Christian traditions gave rise to an intellectual vanguard whose achievements can be compared only with those of classical Athens, Ming China, or Renaissance Italy.
Granada resident Steven Nightingale excavates the rich past of his adopted city and its surrounding countryside, finding there a lavish story of utopian ecstasy, political intrigue, and finally anguish. Part of that region in southern Spain named by its Islamic rulers "Al–Andalus," medieval Granada witnessed a flourishing of poetry in several languages, the first modern translations of Greek philosophy, the birth of algebra, and the construction of architectural masterpieces such as the Alhambra and the Generalife. Yet with Ferdinand and Isabella's sack of Granada in 1492, regarded as the culmination of the Reconquista, which sought to reclaim Spain for the Vatican, a Catholic mythology of Spain began to erode Granada's centuries–old reputation as an artistically vital haven for multiple ethnic and religious groups.
Linking the disastrous afterlife of the Reconquista to the Catholic nationalism of the Franco regime—whose execution of Granadan poet Federico Garcia Lorca symbolizes the suppression of Andalusia's cultural heritage—Nightingale demonstrates the extent to which this Catholic triumphalism also obscured the source of much cultural wealth bequeathed by Al–Andalus to Christian Europe. Nightingale's own account of the region's medieval zenith recovers the intellectual pageantry and aesthetic splendor of this astounding period in Western history and the marvelous city that was its cultural center.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Writing in poetic prose, Nightingale (The Lost Coast) presents a historical, mystical, and personal travelogue of Granada, Spain. More broadly, Nightingale introduces readers to the amalgamated Andalusian culture of Islamic, Jewish, and Christian roots. Contemplating the intellectual corpus of al-Andalus an 800-year kingdom ruled by Muslim emirs and Christian kings, advised by Jewish courtiers Nightingale sketches out the far-reaching influence of Andalusian civilization. He invites readers into his labyrinthine neighborhood in Granada, the Albayz n, and into the lush love and tender repose of his own garden and family. Weaving the two together, al-Andalus and the Albayz n, Nightingale unleashes centuries of the "uncommon energies, exploratory zeal, and systematic rigor" of Granada, presenting its poetry, philosophy, music, art, mysticism, mathematics, literature, governance, and religious pluralism as "a schoolroom where we might learn." Nightingale's intimate reflections and succulent style present a textured picture of the city and its people, culture, and antiquity. Armchair travelers will find themselves easily lured through the portals of history hidden in brick and mortar, tiles and tilled gardens. Photos.