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Détails Architecturaux Détails Architecturaux



Keywords

Spain
Guadalevín
El Mercadillo
La Ciudad
Moriscos
Suebi
Arunda
Reconquista
Berbers
Plaza de Toros
Visigoths
Hemingway
Andalusia
Ronda
Andalucía
Death in the Afternoon


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Ronda - Plaza de Toros

Ronda - Plaza de Toros
Ronda was known to the Romans by the name of Arunda. At the end of the Roman Empire it was taken by the Suebi and later part of the Visigoth realm. In 713 it fell to the Berbers, who built a castle on the Roman foundations. The troops of the Marquis of Cádiz conquered Ronda after a siege in 1485.

The Spanish decreed that all Muslims must either convert to Christianity or leave Spain without their belongings. Muslims who converted were called Moriscos, they had to wear upon their hats a blue crescent. In 1566 Philip II decreed the use of the Arabic language illegal, required that doors open on Fridays to verify that no Muslim Friday prayers were conducted. This led to a rebellion. The Muslim soldiers defeated the Spanish army sent to suppress them. The massacre prompted Phillip II to order the expulsion of all Moriscos in Ronda.

Ronda´s Moorish old town, La Ciudad, is located on a steeply sloping rock plateau. The old town is separated from the younger part, El Mercadillo, by the "Tajo de Ronda" a narrow gorge almost 100 meters deep, formed by the Guadalevín River.

The "Plaza de Toros" in Ronda is the oldest bullfight ring in Spain, Construction of the bullring started in 1779 and finished in 1785. It has a capacity of 6000. Ernest Hemingway, who spent some summers in Ronda, for sure visited this bullring very often, before he wrote "Death in the Afternoon".

aNNa schramm, Marco F. Delminho have particularly liked this photo


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