An Andalusian Bridge over the Llobregat River

  • Ángel Manuel Hernández Cardona
  • Eleuterio Navarro Herrerías
Palabras clave: Andalusian, Bridge, Castles, Catalonia, 8th and 9th Century, Etimology, Fishery, Mill, Mirror, Place-names, Waterwheel, Roads

Resumen

Remains of an Andalusian bridge over the Llobregat river are found in el Cairat, a Catalonian town near Montserrat. It was 60 metres long and 2.5 metres wide and had five archs. It has proved to be an Andalusian bridge because of its construction characteristics: mainly basket-handle archs and building stones arranged by alternating courses of headers (short side of the brick facing out) with courses of stretchers (long side of the brick facing out). It can’t be a Roman bridge because of its width and other features, nor a bridge of Romanesque or Gothic styles because of the shape of the archs and the absence of opus vittatum. Early Middle Ages roads and fortifications (some Andalusian) and pre-Romanesque churches (some Visigothic or Mozarabic) are analyzed. Between the interesting place-names of Arabic origin, a mirror of signals, a mill, a waterwheel, a fishery, and a pass dedicated to the emir are discussed in this study.

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Publicado
2007-11-27
Cómo citar
Hernández Cardona Á. M. y Navarro Herrerías E. (2007). An Andalusian Bridge over the Llobregat River. Anaquel de Estudios Árabes, 18, 137-155. https://revistas.ucm.es/index.php/ANQE/article/view/ANQE0707110137A
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Artículos