Special programs
Index / Activities / Special programs / Guided tours of the Casa Mudéjar
Guided tours of the Casa Mudéjar
From February 11, 2021 until November 26, 2021Check dates and times for each tour.
CORDOBA
Casa Árabe headquarters (at Calle Samuel de los Santos Gener, 9).
Check dates and times for each tour.
The first tour is free of charge, though prior registration is required. Small audience capacity [no more than 8 people].
The decision to hold these activities in person will depend upon the health situation at the time. Thank you for your patience.
In Spanish.
This year Casa Árabe is celebrating the tenth anniversary of the official opening of its Cordoba headquarters, and these guided tours are just another of the many activities planned throughout the year to commemorate this important date.
These tours provide the opportunity to get a first-hand view of a whole set of remains from the thirteenth century, containing features from the Mudéjar, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque eras, all in a unique space that reflects admixture, diversity, multiculturalism and cultural encounters in the city of Cordoba.
The Casa Mudéjar building is a group of five different houses linked together by galleries, passageways and stairwells, with four courtyards and a turret. The original building dates back to the fourteenth century, though most of the current structures are from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is located within the southern part of the Historical Center of Cordoba, near the Mosque-Cathedral, within the area declared to be a World Heritage Site.
The building’s ancient structure and layout remain intact, providing an important example of domestic manorial architecture that is purely Mudéjar in style. Formerly the dwelling of important families from Cordoba like the Venegas and the Córdobas, it currently maintains a large number of its original architectural features despite the different uses given to the building across time: a palace, a home, the site of Cordoba’s Archeology Museum from 1923 to 1959, an ethnology museum planned in the eighties, and administrative and cultural offices in the nineties.
Most notable are its fifteenth-century mural paintings, two-thirds of which are attributed to the painter Pedro Romana, and one of the finest examples of the scarce Mudéjar painting that has been left behind and found in the city. It is a recent finding which dates back to 1928, a time when the house was being prepared to house the Archeological Museum of Cordoba.
The State’s Directorate General of Heritage ceded the historical building to Casa Árabe for use as its Cordoba headquarters, and the refurbishment and adaptation work on Casa Mudéjar to become Casa Árabe’s headquarters, directed by the Municipal Government of Cordoba itself, was bestowed with the first World Heritage City Award of 2011, bestowed by Spain’s Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports.
Price per tour: 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters. 3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
Capacity is limited due to the health situation, and you are required to wear a mask in order to take the tour.
The Casa Mudéjar building is a group of five different houses linked together by galleries, passageways and stairwells, with four courtyards and a turret. The original building dates back to the fourteenth century, though most of the current structures are from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is located within the southern part of the Historical Center of Cordoba, near the Mosque-Cathedral, within the area declared to be a World Heritage Site.
The building’s ancient structure and layout remain intact, providing an important example of domestic manorial architecture that is purely Mudéjar in style. Formerly the dwelling of important families from Cordoba like the Venegas and the Córdobas, it currently maintains a large number of its original architectural features despite the different uses given to the building across time: a palace, a home, the site of Cordoba’s Archeology Museum from 1923 to 1959, an ethnology museum planned in the eighties, and administrative and cultural offices in the nineties.
Most notable are its fifteenth-century mural paintings, two-thirds of which are attributed to the painter Pedro Romana, and one of the finest examples of the scarce Mudéjar painting that has been left behind and found in the city. It is a recent finding which dates back to 1928, a time when the house was being prepared to house the Archeological Museum of Cordoba.
The State’s Directorate General of Heritage ceded the historical building to Casa Árabe for use as its Cordoba headquarters, and the refurbishment and adaptation work on Casa Mudéjar to become Casa Árabe’s headquarters, directed by the Municipal Government of Cordoba itself, was bestowed with the first World Heritage City Award of 2011, bestowed by Spain’s Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports.
Price per tour: 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters. 3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
Capacity is limited due to the health situation, and you are required to wear a mask in order to take the tour.
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Second guided tour of the Casa Mudéjar
March 26, 2021 From 5:00 to 6:00 p.m.CORDOBACasa Árabe headquarters (at Calle Samuel de los Santos Gener, 9). From 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters.In Spanish.On Friday, March 26, we will be giving the second guided tour of Casa Árabe’s headquarters in Cordoba, to commemorate the tenth anniversary of its official opening.These tours provide the opportunity to get a first-hand view of a whole set of remains from the thirteenth century, containing features from the Mudéjar, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque eras, all in a unique space that reflects admixture, diversity, multiculturalism and cultural encounters in the city of Cordoba.The Casa Mudéjar building is a group of five different houses linked together by galleries, passageways and stairwells, with four courtyards and a turret. The original building dates back to the fourteenth century, though most of the current structures are from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is located within the southern part of the Historical Center of Cordoba, near the Mosque-Cathedral, within the area declared to be a World Heritage Site.The building’s ancient structure and layout remain intact, providing an important example of domestic manorial architecture that is purely Mudéjar in style. Formerly the dwelling of important families from Cordoba like the Venegas and the Córdobas, it currently maintains a large number of its original architectural features despite the different uses given to the building across time: a palace, a home, the site of Cordoba’s Archeology Museum from 1923 to 1959, an ethnology museum planned in the eighties, and administrative and cultural offices in the nineties.Most notable are its fifteenth-century mural paintings, two-thirds of which are attributed to the painter Pedro Romana, and one of the finest examples of the scarce Mudéjar painting that has been left behind and found in the city. It is a recent finding which dates back to 1928, a time when the house was being prepared to house the Archeological Museum of Cordoba.The State’s Directorate General of Heritage ceded the historical building to Casa Árabe for use as its Cordoba headquarters, and the refurbishment and adaptation work on Casa Mudéjar to become Casa Árabe’s headquarters, directed by the Municipal Government of Cordoba itself, was bestowed with the first World Heritage City Award of 2011, bestowed by Spain’s Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports.Price per tour: 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters. 3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).Capacity is limited due to the health situation, and you are required to wear a mask in order to take the tour.
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Third visit guided tour of the Casa Mudéjar
April 30, 2021From 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.CORDOBACasa Árabe headquarters (at Calle Samuel de los Santos Gener, 9). From 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. 4 euros for the general public at the Casa Árabe headquarters.3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).In Spanish.On Friday, April 30, we will be giving the third guided tour of Casa Árabe’s headquarters in Cordoba, to commemorate the tenth anniversary of its official opening, as part of the Nights of Ramadan. Tickets are now on sale.These tours provide the opportunity to get a first-hand view of a whole set of remains from the thirteenth century, containing features from the Mudéjar, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque eras, all in a unique space that reflects admixture, diversity, multiculturalism and cultural encounters in the city of Cordoba.
The Casa Mudéjar building is a group of five different houses linked together by galleries, passageways and stairwells, with four courtyards and a turret. The original building dates back to the fourteenth century, though most of the current structures are from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is located within the southern part of the Historical Center of Cordoba, near the Mosque-Cathedral, within the area declared to be a World Heritage Site.
The building’s ancient structure and layout remain intact, providing an important example of domestic manorial architecture that is purely Mudéjar in style. Formerly the dwelling of important families from Cordoba like the Venegas and the Córdobas, it currently maintains a large number of its original architectural features despite the different uses given to the building across time: a palace, a home, the site of Cordoba’s Archeology Museum from 1923 to 1959, an ethnology museum planned in the eighties, and administrative and cultural offices in the nineties.
Most notable are its fifteenth-century mural paintings, two-thirds of which are attributed to the painter Pedro Romana, and one of the finest examples of the scarce Mudéjar painting that has been left behind and found in the city. It is a recent finding which dates back to 1928, a time when the house was being prepared to house the Archeological Museum of Cordoba.
The State’s Directorate General of Heritage ceded the historical building to Casa Árabe for use as its Cordoba headquarters, and the refurbishment and adaptation work on Casa Mudéjar to become Casa Árabe’s headquarters, directed by the Municipal Government of Cordoba itself, was bestowed with the first World Heritage City Award of 2011, bestowed by Spain’s Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports.
Price per tour: 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters. 3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
Capacity is limited due to the health situation, and you are required to wear a mask in order to take the tour.
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New guided tour of Casa Mudéjar
May 28, 2021From 7:00 to 8:00 p.m.CORDOBACasa Árabe headquarters (at Calle Samuel de los Santos Gener, 9). From 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters.3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
In Spanish.On Friday, May 28, we will be giving the fourth guided tour of the Casa Mudéjar, Casa Árabe’s headquarters in Cordoba. The activity will be taking place on the tenth anniversary of its opening. Tickets are now on sale.These tours provide the opportunity to get a first-hand view of mixture of remains from the thirteenth century, along with features from the Mudéjar, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque eras,all in a unique space that reflects admixture, diversity, multiculturalism and cultural encounters in the city of Cordoba.The Casa Mudéjar building consists of a set of five different houses linked together by corridors, passageways and stairwells, with four courtyards and a turret. The original building dates back to the fourteenth century, though most of the current structures are from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is located within the southern part of Cordoba’s Historical Center near the Mosque-Cathedral, within the area declared to be a World Heritage Site.The building’s ancient structure and layout remain intact, providing an important example of domestic manorial architecture that is purely Mudéjar in style. Formerly the dwellings of important families from Cordoba like the Venegas and the Córdobas, it still maintains a large number of its original architectural features despite the different uses given to the building across time: a palace, a home, the site of Cordoba’s Archeology Museum from 1923 to 1959, an ethnology museum planned in the eighties, and administrative and cultural offices in the nineties.Most notable are its fifteenth-century mural paintings, two-thirds of which are attributed to the painter Pedro Romana, and one of the finest examples of the scarce Mudéjar painting that has been left behind and found in the city. It is a recent finding which dates back to 1928, a time when the house was being prepared to house the Archeological Museum of Cordoba.The State’s Directorate General of Heritage ceded the historical building to Casa Árabe for use as its Cordoba headquarters, and the refurbishment and adaptation work on Casa Mudéjar to become Casa Árabe’s headquarters, directed by the Municipal Government of Cordoba itself, was awarded the first World Heritage City Award of 2011, bestowed by Spain’s Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports.Price per tour: 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters. 3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).Seating capacity is limited due to the health situation, and you are required to wear a mask in order to take the tour -
Get to know the Casa Mudéjar in Cordoba
June 25, 2021From 7:00 to 8:00 p.m.CORDOBACasa Árabe headquarters (at Calle Samuel de los Santos Gener, 9). From 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters.3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
In Spanish.On Friday, June 25, we will be giving yet another guided tour of our Cordoba headquarters, to mark our tenth anniversary inside this emblematic building. Reserve now to attend.These tours provide the opportunity to get a first-hand view of a whole set of remains from the thirteenth century, containing features from the Mudéjar, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque eras,all in a unique space that reflects admixture, diversity, multiculturalism and cultural encounters in the city of Cordoba.
The Casa Mudéjar building, is a set of five different houses linked together by corridors, passageways and stairwells, with four courtyards and a turret. The original building dates back to the fourteenth century, though most of the current structures are from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is located within the southern part of the Historical Center of Cordoba, near the Mosque-Cathedral, within the area declared to be a World Heritage Site.
The building’s ancient structure and layout remain intact, providing an important example of domestic manorial architecture that is purely Mudéjar in style. Formerly the dwelling of important families from Cordoba like the Venegas and the Córdobas, it currently maintains a large number of its original architectural features despite the different uses given to the building across time: a palace, a home, the site of Cordoba’s Archeology Museum from 1923 to 1959, an ethnology museum planned in the eighties, and administrative and cultural offices in the nineties.
Most notable are its fifteenth-century mural paintings, two-thirds of which are attributed to the painter Pedro Romana, and one of the finest examples of the scarce Mudéjar painting that has been left behind and found in the city. It is a recent finding which dates back to 1928, a time when the house was being prepared to house the Archeological Museum of Cordoba.
The State’s Directorate General of Heritage ceded the historical building to Casa Árabe for use as its Cordoba headquarters, and the refurbishment and adaptation work on Casa Mudéjar to become Casa Árabe’s headquarters, directed by the Municipal Government of Cordoba itself, was awarded the first World Heritage City Award of 2011, bestowed by Spain’s Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports.
Price per tour: 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters. 3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
Seating capacity is limited due to the health situation, and you are required to wear a mask in order to take the tour.
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Visit our courtyards on a tour of our Cordoba home
July 16, 20218:00 p.m.CORDOBACasa Árabe headquarters (at Calle Samuel de los Santos Gener, 9). 8:00 p.m. 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters.3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
In Spanish.On July 16, we have organized yet another guided tour of our headquarters in the city of Cordoba, the last we will be hosting until October. Sign up so you don’t miss your chance to see the Mudéjar House from the inside.These tours provide the opportunity to get a first-hand view of a whole set of remains from the thirteenth century, containing features from the Mudéjar, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque eras,all in a unique space that reflects admixture, diversity, multiculturalism and cultural encounters in the city of Cordoba.
The Casa Mudéjar building, is a set of five different houses linked together by corridors, passageways and stairwells, with four courtyards and a turret. The original building dates back to the fourteenth century, though most of the current structures are from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is located within the southern part of the Historical Center of Cordoba, near the Mosque-Cathedral, within the area declared to be a World Heritage Site.
The building’s ancient structure and layout remain intact, providing an important example of domestic manorial architecture that is purely Mudéjar in style. Formerly the dwelling of important families from Cordoba like the Venegas and the Córdobas, it currently maintains a large number of its original architectural features despite the different uses given to the building across time: a palace, a home, the site of Cordoba’s Archeology Museum from 1923 to 1959, an ethnology museum planned in the eighties, and administrative and cultural offices in the nineties.
Most notable are its fifteenth-century mural paintings, two-thirds of which are attributed to the painter Pedro Romana, and one of the finest examples of the scarce Mudéjar painting that has been left behind and found in the city. It is a recent finding which dates back to 1928, a time when the house was being prepared to house the Archeological Museum of Cordoba.
The State’s Directorate General of Heritage ceded the historical building to Casa Árabe for use as its Cordoba headquarters, and the refurbishment and adaptation work on Casa Mudéjar to become Casa Árabe’s headquarters, directed by the Municipal Government of Cordoba itself, was awarded the first World Heritage City Award of 2011, bestowed by Spain’s Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports.
Price per tour: 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters. 3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
Seating capacity is limited due to the health situation, and you are required to wear a mask in order to take the tour. -
Get to know the Casa Mudéjar in Cordoba
From October 08, 2021 until October 22, 2021From 5:00 to 6:00 p.m.CORDOBACasa Árabe headquarters (at Calle Samuel de los Santos Gener, 9). From 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters.3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
In Spanish.On Friday, October 22, we will be giving yet another guided tour of our Cordoba headquarters, to mark our tenth anniversary inside this emblematic building. Reserve now to attend.These tours provide the opportunity to get a first-hand view of a whole set of remains from the thirteenth century, containing features from the Mudéjar, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque eras,all in a unique space that reflects admixture, diversity, multiculturalism and cultural encounters in the city of Cordoba.
The Casa Mudéjar building, is a set of five different houses linked together by corridors, passageways and stairwells, with four courtyards and a turret. The original building dates back to the fourteenth century, though most of the current structures are from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is located within the southern part of the Historical Center of Cordoba, near the Mosque-Cathedral, within the area declared to be a World Heritage Site.
The building’s ancient structure and layout remain intact, providing an important example of domestic manorial architecture that is purely Mudéjar in style. Formerly the dwelling of important families from Cordoba like the Venegas and the Córdobas, it currently maintains a large number of its original architectural features despite the different uses given to the building across time: a palace, a home, the site of Cordoba’s Archeology Museum from 1923 to 1959, an ethnology museum planned in the eighties, and administrative and cultural offices in the nineties.
Most notable are its fifteenth-century mural paintings, two-thirds of which are attributed to the painter Pedro Romana, and one of the finest examples of the scarce Mudéjar painting that has been left behind and found in the city. It is a recent finding which dates back to 1928, a time when the house was being prepared to house the Archeological Museum of Cordoba.
The State’s Directorate General of Heritage ceded the historical building to Casa Árabe for use as its Cordoba headquarters, and the refurbishment and adaptation work on Casa Mudéjar to become Casa Árabe’s headquarters, directed by the Municipal Government of Cordoba itself, was awarded the first World Heritage City Award of 2011, bestowed by Spain’s Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports.
Price per tour: 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters. 3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
Seating capacity is limited due to the health situation, and you are required to wear a mask in order to take the tour.
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Last guided tour of Casa Mudéjar
November 26, 2021From 5:00 to 6:00 p.m.CORDOBACasa Árabe headquarters (at Calle Samuel de los Santos Gener, 9). From 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. 4 euros for the general public at the venue.3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
In Spanish.On Friday, November 26, we will be opening up our Cordoba headquarters for the last time this year, on the tenth anniversary of its official opening. Those attending will get to see the inside along with a tour guide. You may now register.These tours provide the opportunity to get a first-hand view of mixture of remains from the thirteenth century, along with features from the Mudéjar, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque eras,all in a unique space that reflects admixture, diversity, multiculturalism and cultural encounters in the city of Cordoba.
The Casa Mudéjar building consists of a set of five different houses linked together by corridors, passageways and stairwells, with four courtyards and a turret. The original building dates back to the fourteenth century, though most of the current structures are from the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It is located within the southern part of Cordoba’s Historical Center near the Mosque-Cathedral, within the area declared to be a World Heritage Site.
The building’s ancient structure and layout remain intact, providing an important example of domestic manorial architecture that is purely Mudéjar in style. Formerly the dwellings of important families from Cordoba like the Venegas and the Córdobas, it still maintains a large number of its original architectural features despite the different uses given to the building across time: a palace, a home, the site of Cordoba’s Archeology Museum from 1923 to 1959, an ethnology museum planned in the eighties, and administrative and cultural offices in the nineties.
Most notable are its fifteenth-century mural paintings, two-thirds of which are attributed to the painter Pedro Romana, and one of the finest examples of the scarce Mudéjar painting that has been left behind and found in the city. It is a recent finding which dates back to 1928, a time when the house was being prepared to house the Archeological Museum of Cordoba.
The Spanish State’s Directorate General of Heritage ceded the historical building to Casa Árabe for use as its Cordoba headquarters, and eventually the refurbishment and adaptation work on Casa Mudéjar to become Casa Árabe’s headquarters, directed by the Municipal Government of Cordoba itself, was awarded the World Heritage City Prize of 2011, bestowed by Spain’s Ministry of Education, Culture and Sports.
Price per tour: 4 euros for the general public at the headquarters. 3 euros: tickets purchased online, the officially unemployed, Casa Árabe Language Center students and Youth Card holders. Pay for your ticket through our website (by clicking on the “purchase tickets” button) or in person at the Casa Árabe headquarters in Cordoba (payment by cash or credit card).
Seating capacity is limited due to the health situation, and you are required to wear a mask in order to take the tour.