Seville: an historical and descriptive account of 'the pearl of Andalusia' - Albert Frederick Calvert - Book

Seville: an historical and descriptive account of "the pearl of Andalusia"

THE SPANISH SERIES
S E V I L L E
THE SPANISH SERIES EDITED BY ALBERT F. CALVERT

AN HISTORICAL AND DE- SCRIPTIVE ACCOUNT OF “THE PEARL OF ANDALUSIA” BY ALBERT F. CALVERT WITH 300 ILLUSTRATIONS
LONDON: JOHN LANE, THE BODLEY HEAD NEW YORK: JOHN LANE COMPANY MCMVII TURNBULL AND SPEARS. PRINTERS, EDINBURGH
There is a charm and compelling fascination about Seville which produces in the traveller visiting the city for the first time a sensation of physical ecstasy. The spell of the Pearl of Andalusia is instant and enduring; I have not met a man or woman proof against its witchery. George Borrow shed tears of rapture as he beheld Seville from the Cristina Promenade, and “listened to the thrush and the nightingale piping forth their melodious songs in the woods, and inhaled the breeze laden with the perfume of its thousand orange gardens.” The Moors left their beloved capital at the height of its prosperity, in the full flower of its beauty; change has not affected its material importance, and time has not staled its infinite variety. A Christian Cathedral now stands on the foundation of the great mosque of Abu Yakub Yusuf; but the Moorish Giralda, the most expressive monument of the Mohammedan occupation, still beckons the distant traveller onwards to the promised land; the Alcazar breathes the spirit of its Oriental masters; and the shim mering Torre del Oro still reflects the light of the setting sun upon the broad bosom of the rose-coloured river.
The history of Seville from the time of its subjugation by Musa is a volume of romance; its pages are illumined by the cold light of flashing steel and stained with the blood of tyrants, traitors, and innocent men; but it forms a chronicle which the reader will follow with absorbing interest. The more exacting student will satisfy his thirst for knowledge in Dr Dozy’s “History of the Mohammedans of Spain,” in Gayangos’ translation of El Makkari’s “History of the Mohammedan Dynasties in Spain,” in Coppee’s “History of the Conquest of Spain,” and Pedro de Madrazo’s “Sevilla”—to refer to only a few of the many learned works that have been published on the subject. Many will continue to be content with the few pages of Notes which appear in the various Spanish Guides; but a certain section, it is hoped, of the English travelling public, will find in this book an album, a handbook, and a history which will supply a long-felt want.

Albert Frederick Calvert
Содержание

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2021-03-24

Темы

Painters -- Spain; Art -- Spain -- Seville; Seville (Spain) -- Description and travel

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