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El Bañuelo

Coordinates:37°10′42.4″N03°35′34.7″W / 37.178444°N 3.592972°W /37.178444; -3.592972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historic site in Granada, Spain
Interior of theBañuelo bath complex, showing thebayt al-wastani (the warm room), the largest and central chamber

TheBañuelo orEl Bañuelo (a diminutive ofSpanishbaño "bath"), also known as theBaño del Nogal ("Bath of the Walnut") orHammam al-Yawza, is a preserved historichammam (Islamicbathhouse) inGranada,Spain.[1][2] It is located in theAlbaicin quarter of the city, on the banks of theDarro River. It was used as a bathhouse up until the 16th century at least, before becoming defunct and being converted to other uses. In the 20th century it underwent numerous restorations by Spanish experts and is now open as a tourist attraction.

History

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Bathhouses (hammams) of this type were a common feature of Muslim cities across theMuslim world, serving both a social and religious purpose. They assisted Muslims in the performance ofablutions, especially the full-body ablutions orghusl, which were required for certain situations. They also served the general purpose of hygiene as well as being a place for socialization. Their layout and function was modeled on theRoman bathhouses which preceded them and which had already been part of urban life in the region for generations.[3][4][5]

About a dozen historic remains of Islamic bathhouses (hammams) have been found in Granada, though most are of modest form, with the exception of the lavish 14th-centuryComares Baths in theAlhambra.[6] The Bañuelo is the only hammam in Granada, outside the Alhambra, which has been restored and made accessible to the public.[7] It is traditionally dated to the time of theZirids (aTaifa kingdom based in Granada) in the 11th century, during the reign ofBadis orAbdallah, based on an early study byLeopoldo Torres Balbás.[1] Later researchers have suggested that the building dates from the 12th century or later, based on its layout and the style of itsmasonry.[8][1][2] The baths would have been located inside theal-Qasaba al-Qadima or Old Alcazaba, the former royal citadel located over what later became the Albaicin, before the Alhambra became the seat of power.[1][9]

After the fall of Granada to Spanish Catholic in 1492, at the end of the Reconquista, the bathhouse continued to be repaired and maintained during the 16th century as it continued to be used by the city'smorisco population.[10] In later centuries the baths ceased their original function and were used as a public laundry facility and later as a dwelling (a later residential structure was built over a part of the structure, fronting the street). In 1918 the site was declared aCultural Heritage Property of Spain, and in 1927-28 Torres Balbás carried out the first restoration works. Restoration works continued throughout the 20th century, and the building is currently open as a tourist and historic site.[10]

Architecture

[edit]

The baths consisted of several main rooms arranged in sequence. The first room, upon entering from the street, was a reception or relaxation room centered around a square water basin. Although today this room is open to the sky, it was once covered by a large wooden cupola ceiling. At its southwest corner a doorway led to three small rooms withlatrines, while a doorway to at its northwestern corner led to the changing room (equivalent to the ancient Romanapodyterium). From here visitors entered the steam rooms, which consisted of three chambers: the cold room (bayt al-bārid), the warm room (bayt al-wasṭānī), and the hot room (bayt al-sakhūn).[2] These corresponded, respectively, to the Roman equivalents of thefrigidarium,tepidarium, andcaldarium.[4] Bathers visited the cold room first, then moved progressively to the warm room and then the hot room, whose purpose was to induceperspiration as part of the cleaning or purification process. Visitors were also cleaned with vigorous rubbing and massaging by bathhouse staff. As was common to other Muslimhammams, and in contrast with other versions of steam baths, bathers did not actually immerse themselves in water but instead washed themselves at the end of the process by having warm water poured onto them.[4][11]

In the Bañuelo the largest room is the warm room (bayt al-wasṭānī) at the middle of the complex. This feature of the layout was also common to many other bathhouses in al-Andalus.[12][3] It is covered by a large centralvault ordome ceiling surrounded on three sides by smallerbarrel vault sections, all of which rested onmarblecolumns betweenhorseshoe arches. Many of the capitals of the columns were reused from structures of earlier periods, including theRoman period andCaliphal period.[2] The ceilings are pierced with small star-shaped andoctagonalskylights, which provided lighting and could allow excess steam to escape. Both the cold room which preceded it and the hot room which followed it were rectangular rooms covered by barrel vaults, again pierced with skylights, and marked at either end by a column between two horseshoe arches. Beyond the hot room was the service area of the baths which was set lower than the other rooms and contained thefurnace and boiler. This furnace provided hot water for the steam rooms, and also generated hot air and smoke which was then channeled through pipes and conduits under the floors of the hot and warm rooms (similar to the Romanhypocaust system) before being evacuated through the walls and up to thechimneys.[2][12][4]

  • The street entrance of the bathhouse today
    The street entrance of the bathhouse today
  • The water basin in the relaxation room at the entrance of the complex
    The water basin in the relaxation room at the entrance of the complex
  • The cold room (bayt al-barid)
    The cold room (bayt al-barid)
  • The warm room or central room (bayt al-wastani) of the bathhouse
    The warm room or central room (bayt al-wastani) of the bathhouse
  • The vaulted ceiling of the warm room and its skylights
    The vaulted ceiling of the warm room and its skylights
  • A Caliphate-era capital, one of several older capitals reused in this part of the baths
    ACaliphate-eracapital, one of several older capitals reused in this part of the baths

See also

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References

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toEl Bañuelo.
  1. ^abcd"El Bañuelo".Patronato de la Alhambra y Generalife. Retrieved2020-10-05.
  2. ^abcdeOrihuela, Antonio (2021). "From the Private to the Public Space: Domestic and Urban Architecture of Islamic Granada". In Boloix-Gallardo, Bárbara (ed.).A Companion to Islamic Granada. Brill. pp. 425–427.ISBN 978-90-04-42581-1.
  3. ^abMarçais, Georges (1954).L'architecture musulmane d'Occident. Paris: Arts et métiers graphiques. pp. 215–216.
  4. ^abcdM. Bloom, Jonathan; S. Blair, Sheila, eds. (2009). "Bath".The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture. Oxford University Press.
  5. ^Sourdel-Thomine, J.; Louis, A. (2012). "Ḥammām". In Bearman, P.; Bianquis, Th.; Bosworth, C.E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs, W.P. (eds.).Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Brill.
  6. ^Bloom, Jonathan M. (2020).Architecture of the Islamic West: North Africa and the Iberian Peninsula, 700-1800. Yale University Press. pp. 169, 171.
  7. ^Orihuela, Antonio (2021). "From the Private to the Public Space: Domestic and Urban Architecture of Islamic Granada". In Boloix-Gallardo, Bárbara (ed.).A Companion to Islamic Granada. Brill. p. 425.ISBN 978-90-04-42581-1.
  8. ^Navarro-Palazón, J.; Jiménez-Castillo, P. (2012). "El Bañuelo de Granada en su contexto arquitectónico y urbanístico".Revista el Legado Andalusí.45:1–9.
  9. ^Barrucand, Marianne; Bednorz, Achim (1992).Moorish architecture in Andalusia. Taschen. p. 127.ISBN 3822896322.
  10. ^abLópez-Osorio, J.M.; Bel-Anzué, P. (2020)."Experimental Consolidation Works in Rammed Earth Walls: the Case of the Bañuelo in Granada (Spain)".The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. XLIV-M-1:1103–1110.Bibcode:2020ISPAr44M1.1103L.doi:10.5194/isprs-archives-XLIV-M-1-2020-1103-2020.S2CID 222124404.
  11. ^"Mapa del conjunto - Baños del Alcázar Califal | Visita Virtual".banosdelalcazarcalifal.cordoba.es. Retrieved2020-10-04.
  12. ^abFournier, Caroline (2016).Les bains d'al-Andalus: VIIIe-XVe siècle. Presses universitaires de Rennes.
Historical monuments ofGranada
Alhambra
Albaicín
City centre
other districts

37°10′42.4″N03°35′34.7″W / 37.178444°N 3.592972°W /37.178444; -3.592972

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