Alcázar

An alcázar (Spanish: [alˈkaθar], Galician: [alˈkaθaɾ]), alcácer (Portuguese: [ɐɫˈkasɛɾ]) or alcàsser (Catalan: [əɫˈkasər]) is a type of castle in Spain and Portugal. The term derives from the Arabic word القصر (trans. al-qasr) meaning "fort, castle or palace"; and the Arabic word is derived from the Latin word, 'castrum', meaning an army camp or fort. Many cities in Spain have a castle or alcázar; Spain also has Moorish citadels known as alcazaba. Not every 'alcazar' or 'alcazaba' in Iberia was built by Arabs; many castles with these names were built after the Arabs had withdrawn from the peninsula.

Contents

Landmark alcázars

Outside Spain

Outside Spain, in Palermo, Sicily, the district called Cassaro corresponds to the Punic settlement of Zis, on high ground that was refortified by Arabs and called القصر al qasr, and was further expanded as the site of the later Norman palace.

In Portugal there is a city called Alcácer do Sal (Al Qaşr), which was an administrative regional seat for the Moors during the Islamic Al-Andalus era on the Iberian Peninsula.

Notes

  1. ^ Philip of Spain by Henry Kamen
  2. ^ Hugh Thomas, The Spanish Civil War, revised and enlarged edition (1977), New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-06-014278-2. p. 324
  3. ^ Reed, Tony (2005). "Alcazar de los Reyes Cristianos - Cordoba". Infocordoba.com. http://www.infocordoba.com/spain/andalusia/cordoba/cordoba_alcazar.htm. Retrieved April 4, 2006. 

External links