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Alfarje
Type of wooden ceiling
Type of wooden ceiling
Alfarje (meaning "paneled ceiling" in Spanish) is a type of horizontal wooden ceiling primarily found in Islamic (or Moorish) architecture and Mudéjar architecture. The word derives from Andalusi Arabic al-farsh, meaning "bed", related to Classical Arabic farsh (فرش), meaning "tapestry". The ceiling structure is made through a series of beams called girders, sometimes intricately carved and stylized with geometric patterns. Typically, such ceilings are employed when they support a floor above that can be walked on.
One decorative technique that creates geometric patterns by nailing and interlacing pieces of wood onto a flat ceiling is known as ataujía in Spanish (adjective form: ataujerado/ataujerada). Examples of such ornamental ceilings are found in the Alhambra of Granada, and the same technique is also found in other types of woodwork from the same period.
Other notable buildings that have alfarje ceilings include the Alcázar of Seville, the Mosque of Cordoba, the Church of San Millán in Segovia, and the Aljafería Palace of Zaragoza. It is also found in the ceilings of many convents and churches in central Mexico, where the influence of the Spanish Mudéjar style is apparent.
References
References
- Harris, Cyril. (1977). "Illustrated Dictionary of Historic Architecture". Courier Dover Publications.
- Jackson, Robert H.. (2018). "Communities on a Frontier in Conflict: The Jesuit Guaraní Mission Los Santos Mártires del Japón". Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
- Corriente, Federico. (2008). "Dictionary of Arabic and Allied Loanwords: Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, Galician and Kindred Dialects". BRILL.
- López Guzmán, Rafael. (2000). "Arquitectura mudéjar". Cátedra.
- (1997). "The Alhambra". Saqi Books.
- (2009). "Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture". Oxford University Press.
- López, Jesús Bermúdez. (2011). "The Alhambra and the Generalife: Official Guide". TF Editores.
- Garcia Porras, Alberto. (2020). "The Nasrid Kingdom of Granada between East and West: (Thirteenth to Fifteenth Centuries)". Brill.
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