posted on 2017-07-05, 00:00authored byG. Massiot & cie
Muhammad V built the Riya\u1E0D Palace (known since the Reconquest as the Palacio de los Leones) which contains the cruciform Patio de los Leones at the heart of the palace, which has a central fountain with twelve stylized standing lions, carved in white marble to fit exactly the proportions of the patio; the lions support a polygonal basin inscribed with a poem by Ibn Zamrak, a pupil of Ibn al-Kha\u1E6Dib.\u000a\u000aThe palaces of the Alhambra and Generalife form the most important architectural ensemble to survive from the Nasrid period (1232\u20131492). The walled Alhambra city which sits on a steep hill, comprised the Alcazaba (alqa\u1E63aba: 'fortress'), palaces, mansions, two mosques, baths (\u1E25ammams), an industrial zone with tanneries, a mint, kilns, workshops, and some adjacent royal estates such as the Generalife. The Generalife was built on ascending terraces. The sovereign reached the Generalife's royal mansion, the Dar al-Mamlaka al-Sa'ida ('royal house of felicity'), from the Alhambra's Puerta de Hierro, also built by Muhammad II. He ascended through orchards, crossed a first courtyard and entered the second through a guarded south portico, to ascend to a vestibule with a structural bench and up a steep staircase to the Patio de la Acequia. Gardens and fountains are interspersed throughout the palace complex. A UNESCO World Heritage Site.