#ThursdayDoors The Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba, Spain. Part I

Thursday Doors is a weekly feature allowing door lovers to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos from around the world. Feel free to join in on the fun by creating your own Thursday Doors post each week and then sharing it, between Thursday morning and Saturday noon and linking up on Norm’s blogContinue reading “#ThursdayDoors The Mosque-Cathedral of Cordoba, Spain. Part I”

Rate this:

#ThursdayDoors ‘Patios’ Courtyards in Cordoba

Thursday Doors is a weekly feature allowing door lovers to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos from around the world. Feel free to join in on the fun by creating your own Thursday Doors post each week and then sharing it, between Thursday morning and Saturday noon and linking up on Norm’s blogContinue reading “#ThursdayDoors ‘Patios’ Courtyards in Cordoba”

Rate this:

#ThursdayDoors May Crosses and Doors in Cordoba, Spain

Thursday Doors is a weekly feature allowing door lovers to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos from around the world. Feel free to join in on the fun by creating your own Thursday Doors post each week and then sharing it, between Thursday morning and Saturday noon and linking up on Norm’s blogContinue reading “#ThursdayDoors May Crosses and Doors in Cordoba, Spain”

Rate this:

#WordlessWednesday ‘Crosses of May Festivity’ in Córdoba, Spain. #Haiku

This Cross won First Prize Close up of the fountain where the cross is placed Another prize-winning cross I love the idea of a mirror on the cross, looking back at the viewer, who then looks at him/herself. This idea of searching for inspiration inspired this Haiku: * See my reflection, Search deep in myContinue reading “#WordlessWednesday ‘Crosses of May Festivity’ in Córdoba, Spain. #Haiku”

Rate this:

#ThursdayDoors Gates Seen in Cordoba

I live in Cordoba, Spain, which is surrounded by hills, called Sierra Morena. Towards the north of the city, away from the historic Old Town and the busy modern town centre lies a residential area, where I often go for long sunny walks. These photos of some gates of the villas I walk past wereContinue reading “#ThursdayDoors Gates Seen in Cordoba”

Rate this:

#SilentSunday Almeria to Cordoba by Car #SundayBlogShare

Seen today during the three-hour trip from Almería to Córdoba: Is it only me, or do any of you find you get inspiration as someone else is driving you, while you’re taking photos, jotting ideas, writing some flash fiction, checking blog posts and twitter messages etc. The journey always seems so short! It was sadContinue reading “#SilentSunday Almeria to Cordoba by Car #SundayBlogShare”

Rate this:

#ThursdayDoors The Haunted Faculty in Cordoba, Spain

Thursday Doors is a weekly feature, hosted by Norm 2.0 allowing door lovers to come together to admire and share their favorite door photos from around the world. Everyone is invited to join in on the fun by creating their own Thursday Doors post each week and then sharing it, between Thursday morning and Saturday noon (North AmericanContinue reading “#ThursdayDoors The Haunted Faculty in Cordoba, Spain”

Rate this:

#WordlessWednesday & #OneLinerWednesday On Life, Birth and Death

 (Almost) Wordless Wednesday.  Birth: The source of the Spanish River Ebro, the second longest river in the Iberian peninsula, in Fontibre (in Spanish the source of a river is called its birth: nacimiento).   Death: Ancient Cemetery next to the Romanic style Visigothic church at Retortillo, Cantabria, Spain built on the ruins of a Roman necropolisContinue reading “#WordlessWednesday & #OneLinerWednesday On Life, Birth and Death”

Rate this:

Centuries of Worship: A Roman, Visigothic, Muslim, and Christian Temple

The previous MIT chapel is beautiful in its contemporary simplicity. On the other hand, there are ancient places which fill your senses with calm, and love, and peace, like the Mosque in Cordoba. I’m fortunate enough to walk past it every day on my way to work. Sometimes I pop inside. just for a fewContinue reading “Centuries of Worship: A Roman, Visigothic, Muslim, and Christian Temple”

Rate this: