Cordoba - the mezquite, tradition and flamenco
Cordoba is mainly flat in the farmland regions which border the Guadalquivir river, and mountainous near Sierra Morena, which rises like a wall, and offers abundant hunting grounds for big and small game.
The capital of the same name is a World Heritage City and home to one of Spain’s great monuments: the Mezquita, the most beautiful mosque ever built by the Moors in Spain.
But other monuments include the Fortress of the Christian Kings, a gothic style military fortress built by the order of Alfonso XI and the Synagogue constructed in 1315 during the Mudejar period. In fact, the Jewish Cordoba was centred on a medieval district beginning at the northwestern end of the Mosque. Remains of the buildings still survive from this period, when they spread as far as the Puerta del Hierro.
There were other Jewish areas in Cordoba, with the old Realejo in the San Andrés district being a fine example. The remains that you can see today are found in the narrow, winding and uneven street called Judíos.