• 19th-century drawings of the façade and the cross-section of the Maristan. The Maristan of Granada (Spanish: Maristán de Granada) was a bimaristan (hospital) in Granada...
  • The Maristan of Granada was strongly influenced by the Maristan of Fez and has the same function and architectural structure.
  • Granada Maristanı ( İspanyolca Maristán de Granada ) , İspanya'nın Granada kentinde bir bimaristan ( hastane ) idi . 14. yüzyılda inşa edilmiş ve 19. yüzyılda yıkılmıştır .
  • The hospital, or maristan, of Granada is the sole remaining example of this type of civic institution to have survived from the Nasrid period.
  • Granada’s maristan, or hospital, was founded during the second sultanate of Muhammad V, who reigned from 1354 to 1359 and from 1362 to 1391.
  • The Maristan of Granada was a bimaristan in Granada, Spain. It was built in the 14th century during the Nasrid period and demolished in the 19th century.
  • The maristan of Cairo, Egypt (872), was the earliest identified as primarily psychiatric (3,4). ... ... The Granada Maristan was one of the earliest European...
  • The Lions of Granada Maristan. ... In 1365, Granada’s Sultan Muhammed V (1338–1391) initiated construction of a maristan at the foot of his palace, the Alhambra.
  • El Maristan Nazarí de Granada. Su nombre significa lugar para enfermos, siendo por tanto la finalidad del mismo. Fundando por el sultán Muhammad V en el.
  • Granada/En los primeros años 60 del siglo XIV, Muhammad V, probablemente el rey más importante de la historia de Granada, fundó el Maristán...
  • which can be seen in every collection of Granada’s views, from Spain and abroad” was dismantled to reuse its materials, and also, how another remarkable house...
  • 5. Carrera del Darro. 6. El Bañuelo. 7. El Maristan. 8. Paseo de los Tristes. 9. Carmen de la Victoria. 10. Granada Cathedral. 11. Royal Chapel of Granada.
  • ...Moorish and Christian mental asylums in Europe, including This statue of a lion is one of two that sprayed water jets into the pool of Granada Maristan (1365).