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Restoration of the Alcazaba

Entrada Alcazaba

Entrada Alcazaba

Fuente: Archivo fotográfico Temboury.

Entrada Alcazaba

Entrada Alcazaba

Fuente: Archivo fotográfico Temboury.

Barrio de viviendas

Barrio de viviendas

Fuente: Archivo Fotográfico de la UMA.

Barrio de viviendas

Barrio de viviendas

Fuente: Archivo Fotográfico de la UMA.

Arco del cristo

Arco del cristo

Fuente: Archivo fotográfico Temboury.

Arco del Cristo

Arco del Cristo

Fuente: Archivo fotográfico Temboury.

Arcos festoneados

Arcos festoneados

Fuente: Archivo fotográfico Temboury.

Torre de Maldonado

Torre de Maldonado

Fuente: Archivo fotográfico Temboury.

Torre de Maldonado

Torre de Maldonado

Fuente: Archivo fotográfico Temboury.

Torre de Maldonado

Torre de Maldonado

Fuente: Archivo fotográfico Temboury.

From the 18th century the Alcazaba began to lose its military function and to have a civil use . Due to the state of abandonment of the building, people of low social status took advantage of the ruins to build houses attached to the walls. These houses ended up forming a popular neighborhood , which was in very poor condition: it had no water, lighting, sanitation or cobbled / paved streets, according to the article El Teatro Romano de Málaga: evolution of a space (2007).

This situation lasted until the 19th century , when urban projects to improve the city began to emerge. One of them even contemplated the demolition of the Alcazaba and its surroundings, as reflected in the article The demolition and urbanization projects of the Alcazaba in Malaga in the late 19th and early 20th centuries (2005).

From 1931 is when everything changes. At the beginning of the Second Republic , the Alcazaba-Gibralfaro monumental complex was declared a historical-artistic monument . The Roman Theater of Malaga: evolution of a space (2007) highlights that, in that same year, the architect Antonio Palacios and the historian Juan Temboury drew up a project "for the consolidation and replacement of the monument." However, it was in 1933 when Ricardo de Orueta , the then director of the Madrid Academy of Fine Arts, commissioned the architect Leopoldo Torres Balbás to draw up a work plan for the recovery of the Alcazaba.

RTVE report on the restoration of the Alcazaba. Source: Historia TV YouTube channel.

The restoration work on the monument began and Juan Temboury played a key role in the building's recovery process. So much so that, currently, there is a sculpture of his bust at the entrance of the Alcazaba next to a tombstone to commemorate his performance.

2021-05-20 01.25.50 1.jpg

Bust of Juan Temboury, made by Adrián Risueño.

© 2021 created by Gabriela Rocha with Wix.com.

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