Granada Cathedral

Granada Cathedral is a Renaissance building, built from 1518, making it the very first church built in the Renaissance style in Spain. After the reconquest of the city in 1492, the Catholic Monarchs planned the construction of a cathedral on the site of the former Great Nasrid Mosque of Granada. In 1505, the construction was planned and its design was entrusted to Juan Gil de Hontañón and Enrique Egas, who were already working on the city's royal chapel, and work began in 1518.

About this building

Key Features

  • Architecture
  • Monuments

Visitors information

  • Bus stop within 100m
  • Parking within 250m
  • Café within 500m

Other nearby buildings

Wikimedia Commons/Berthold Werner

Madrasah of Granada

Founded by the Sultan of Granada himself in the 14the century, the Madrasah of Granada is located in the heart of Granada's old city. The only surviving part of the madrasah is the prayer room with carved, polychrome plaster covers the upper portions of the walls.

Wikimedia Commons

The Royal Chapel of Granada

The Royal Chapel of Granada was commissioned by the monarchs of Spain in 1504 as a funerary chapel. The chapel was completed during the reign of Charles V, who began to bury most of his family here. Among the Spanish monarchs buried here are Ferdinand and Isabella, as well as princess Maria of Portugal.

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Church of Santa Ana

A small, elegant 16th century church, it is one of the city’s most sought after wedding venues for the wealthy middle class of Andalucía. The church was designed by renowned local architect Diego de Siloe, and was built in the Renaissance style.