Alhambra comes from the Moroccan Arabic word "Alhamra" which means The Red, it shares many engineering similarities with what was practiced at the time in what is today considered Morocco, some examples include:
- The Kasbah of Moulay Ismail in Meknes, a parallel to the Alhambra’s engineering sophistication, particularly in its hydraulic systems.
- Khettara Networks: Underground water channels designed to transport water down slopes without active pumping with gravity-fed systems that tap into aquifers, there are extensive networks of these particularly around Marrakech and southern regions.
I'm not sure i believe that bit. If you can lift a flow of water from one level to a higher level without an input of energy, you have a perpetual motion machine. And those aren't allowed.
I assume that what happened here is that some fraction of the input flow was drained to a lower level, and the liberated potential energy captured and used to lift the remaining fraction to a higher level. That's not what's shown in the video, though.
There's a description starting on page 369 here, although it's not completely clear how it works (the author is an archaeologist, not an engineer!): https://sci-hub.se/10.1093/jis/etw016
Indeed. Fascinating puzzle. Without an external source of energy there must be a volume of water leaving the system that doesn't make it to the higher level. If it was possible to partition the water and the energy but not with the same partition (ie, 40% of the water gets 80% of the energy, 60% of the water the other 20%) then the system would be thermodynamically legal. So maybe the vortex was to create a high- and low- pressure mass of water.
This mechanism is ingenious in the best meaning of the word.
Yep, saw this video a while ago and came here to say that there’s multiple clever systems in place, but that bit’s definitely worth a watch. It’s at about ~7:30
Funnily enough, the “Alhambra Palace” is a hotel that opened at the beginning of the XX century, while the “Alhambra” is the monument from the medieval age.
The Alhambra is not a palace, well it was actually a castle (the meaning of Alhambra is “red castle”). It had a palace inside but it was a fortification mainly.
Of course as Boabdil surrended the city of Granada to the Catholic Monarchs (Isabel and Fernando) in 1492, the Nazari dinasty did not enjoyed the palace many years.
This is really cool video. This Palace is also significant if you are into garden design. As it holds a kind of best in its class of Arabic/Islamic gardens. You would be surprised how much rich people care about their gardens. So this one is an inspiration. And not just to the leather panted garden designers. But lots of people that visit this palace get inspired by the graden there.
I saw this as well in my youtube recommendations and this post made me wonder how many people have a similar recommendation feed.
I watch YouTube for my interests/hobbies, so this does not reflect a "normal" profile (I think). My feed is full of cooking, paintings restoration, coding, action movies, history of the middle ages in western Europe, hoof trimming (I saw a real cow close twice in my life) etc.
I was always wondering if there are people wil a similar feed, but never found research on that.
Yes, I know, but it would be interesting (at least for me) to know how interests of people are clustered and interconnected - and how much of outliner one is.
Only 5 seconds into the video they show plate amor in the year 1236. This is a disappointing start, I kinda like the rest, though. They have a wide reach and Alhambra is a good example to present a fascinating topic to a wide audience. It would have been great, though, to give more historical context.
Water management systems in the middle ages in general were incredible sophisticated and widespread. Hydropower was in use for basically everything. There are dozens of examples of castle wells more than a hundred meters deep, all cities in the late middle ages had systems of wells and channels, often cooperatively organized. Impressive examples include the water supply for breweries in Lübeck, the Stiftsarmstollen in Salzburg or the Wasserkunst of Augsburg.
Agreed, but it's still some kind of Youtube garbage. The funk beat kicking in at the 90 second mark is a big turn off, not so much because of how weird a juxtaposition it is, but because its inclusion smacks of free stock music.
- The Kasbah of Moulay Ismail in Meknes, a parallel to the Alhambra’s engineering sophistication, particularly in its hydraulic systems.
- Khettara Networks: Underground water channels designed to transport water down slopes without active pumping with gravity-fed systems that tap into aquifers, there are extensive networks of these particularly around Marrakech and southern regions.
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