Site Logo
  • HOME
  • TRAVEL
    • BOOK HOTEL
    • BOOK INSURANCE
    • BOOK EXCURSIONS
    • BY LAND
    • BY SEA
    • BY RIVER
    • BY RAIL
    • ALL-INCLUSIVE
    • LUXURY VILLAS
  • GOLF
    • GOLF SCOTLAND
    • GOLF IRELAND
    • GOLF SPAIN
    • GOLF PORTUGAL
    • GOLF WALES
    • GOLF ENGLAND
    • American River Golf Classic
  • DESTINATIONS
  • BOOK NOW
  • RESOURCES
    • COVID-19 UPDATE
  • OUR STORY
  • CONTACT
    • WHY USE A TRAVEL AGENT?
    • IN THE NEWS
Site Logo
  • HOME
  • TRAVEL
    • BOOK HOTEL
    • BOOK INSURANCE
    • BOOK EXCURSIONS
    • BY LAND
    • BY SEA
    • BY RIVER
    • BY RAIL
    • ALL-INCLUSIVE
    • LUXURY VILLAS
  • GOLF
    • GOLF SCOTLAND
    • GOLF IRELAND
    • GOLF SPAIN
    • GOLF PORTUGAL
    • GOLF WALES
    • GOLF ENGLAND
    • American River Golf Classic
  • DESTINATIONS
  • BOOK NOW
  • RESOURCES
    • COVID-19 UPDATE
  • OUR STORY
  • CONTACT
    • WHY USE A TRAVEL AGENT?
    • IN THE NEWS

Córdoba

Slideshow Placeholder
 Photo Credit: Saad Chaudhry
Photo Credit: Saad Chaudhry
 Photo Credit: Saad Chaudhry

Córdoba, located in the heart of Andalusia, was once the most advanced city in Western Europe. During the 10th century, it served as the capital of Al-Andalus and was a center for learning, science, and art. Today, visitors walk the same streets that philosophers, poets, and physicians once crossed. The city’s most famous landmark, the Mezquita-Catedral, reflects its layered past. The red and white horseshoe arches inside are one of the most photographed interiors in Spain.

Just outside the city lies the archaeological site of Medina Azahara, a 10th-century palatial city built by the Umayyad caliph Abd-ar-Rahman III. Once filled with gardens, fountains, and ceremonial halls, it was destroyed less than a century after its construction and buried under olive groves. Now partially excavated, visitors can tour the ruins and visit the on-site museum, which explains the city’s brief but impressive history.

Córdoba is also known for its patios, interior courtyards filled with flowers, fountains, and tiled walls. Each May, the city hosts the Patio Festival, during which private homes open their doors to the public in a competition that dates back to 1921. These patios are not just decorative; they reflect a traditional architectural style designed to keep homes cool during the hot Andalusian summers. Many are located in the San Basilio neighborhood, where visitors can explore narrow alleyways and whitewashed houses draped with geraniums and jasmine.

Placeholder


Placeholder


Skads Travel


Minneapolis, MN
952-927-7311
skads@skadstravel.com

Skads Travel acts only in the capacity of a sales agent for any airline, hotel, car-rental company, tour operator, cruise line, or other service provider named in your itinerary or confirmation.  Skads Travel does not own, operate, manage or control these independent suppliers of services and is not liable for their acts or omissions or their failures to adhere to their own schedules, provide services or refunds, financial default, or failure to honor future trip credits.  Your legal recourse is against the specific provider, not Skads Travel.  We have no special knowledge regarding financial condition of the suppliers and no liability for recommending a trip credit in lieu of a refund.