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What was unique about Cordoba that made it a cultural center?

Historical background By the 10th century, as the Caliphate of Córdoba it had become one of the most advanced cities in the world, recognized for its culture, learning and religious tolerance. It addition to a huge library, the city enclosed over 300 mosques and a multitude of palaces and administrative buildings.



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Cordoba was a spot of peaceful coexistence of three different cultures: Jews, Muslims and Christians. Cordoba's Mezquita is the largest mosque in the entire world, as well as the world's largest temple. Cordoba has tuneful surnames such as “Constantinople of the Occident” or “Pearl of Moorish Spain”.

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What is Cordoba Most Famous For? Cordoba is famous for its interesting mix of ancient Roman, Moorish, and Spanish culture. Once the capital of El Andalus, the city's most iconic feature is the Mezquita-Catedral, an elegant mosque converted into a Renaissance-style church.

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Yet, it was not just its intellectual and scientific sophistication that made Córdoba medieval Europe's greatest city. It was also a place of remarkable religious pluralism, in which Jews and Christians – despite being subjects of Moorish rule – were able to practise their beliefs without persecution.

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Jews, Christians, and Muslims had figured out how to live together more or less harmoniously. Everyone spoke the same language, cooked the same dishes, wore the same type of clothes, and shared the same public baths. It was one culture, with three religious traditions.

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Córdoba is home to one of the 12 Treasures of Spain It was once one of the biggest mosques in the world (constructed in A.D 785) before becoming a Catholic Cathedral in 1236. Its history is even older than that, however, as some believe that a Visigoth church once stood on the site before the mosque was built.

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