- The
Abencerrages or
Abencerrajes (Modern Spanish: [aβenθeˈraxes], Old Spanish: [aβent͡s̻eˈraʒes̺]; from the
Arabic ابن سراج, Ibn Sarrāj, 'Saddler's Son'...
- the
person in
charge of the madrasa, and the Hall of the
Abencerrajes (Sala de los
Abencerrajes)
would have
served as the madrasa's
oratory and possibly...
- Younger, a
scion of the
Abencerrajes. Once the pre-eminent
noble family of Granada, the king of
Granada executed the
Abencerrajes and ten
others supposedly...
-
serves as a
Parador (state-owned hotel). The
Palace of the
Abencerrajes (Palacio de los
Abencerrajes) was one of the
largest palaces in the
Alhambra and may...
- owes his wide
celebrity to the
Historia de los
bandos de los Zegríes y
Abencerrajes (1595–1619),
better known as the
Guerras civiles de
Granada ("Wars of...
-
revolved around the Banu
Sarraj family (known in
Spanish sources as the
Abencerrajes) and
their rivals, who
ruthlessly pursued their own
interests at the...
- 1354–1391 –
Construction of the
muqarnas dome (plaster ceiling), Hall of the
Abencerrajes,
Court of the Lions,
Palace of the Lions, Alhambra, Granada, Spain. 1356...
- musk[ħb ʔlmsk] (listen).
abencerraje: used in expression: "Zegríes y
abencerrajes", "partisans of
opposite interests". The
Abencerrajes (in
Arabic aban as-sarráǧ)...
- al-Munya.
Through her father, she
belonged to the
powerful Banu
Sarraj (“
Abencerrajes”) clan.
Since her
father was
originally a
Christian slave,
there have...
- of the
Alhambra in Granada, Spain, are the 14th
century Hall of the
Abencerrajes and Hall of the two Sisters. In 14th
century Egypt, the
Mamluks began...