Category
page 1Moorish Revival architecture
Tbilisi Opera and Ballet Theatre
opera house in Tbilisi, Georgia
Moorish architecture
architectural style historically developed in the western Islamic world
Moorish Revival architecture
style in 19th-century European architecture and decorative arts characterized by Hispano-Moresque forms and motifs such as honey comb vaulting, arabesques, and horseshoe arches
Cathedral of St. Vincent de Paul
cathedral in Tunisia
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neo-Mudéjar
Neo-Mudéjar is a type of Moorish Revival architecture practised in the Iberian Peninsula and to a far lesser extent in Ibero-America. This architectural movement emerged as a revival of Mudéjar style. It was an architectural trend of the late 19th and early 20th centuries that began in Madrid and Barcelona and quickly spread to other regions in Spain and Portugal. It used Mudéjar style elements such as the horseshoe arch, arabesque tiling, and abstract shaped brick ornamentations for the façades of modern buildings.
Madrasa Thaalibia
madrasa in Algiers, Algeria

Heliopolis Palace
one of the Egyptian presidential palaces and residences
Central Bathhouse Vienna
Residential building with traditional bathing house (now a gay sauna) in Vienna
Church of Saint Andrew
building in Morocco
Casamaures
thumb|275px|Moorish Revival architecture|Moorish Revival styleLa Casamauresthumb|250x250px|left|View of restored eaves ornamentationLa Casamaures is a historic 19th century villa, in the commune of Saint-Martin-le-Vinoux near Grenoble, in the Department of Isère, within the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region of France. A listed French Monument historique, it is undergoing restoration.
Morisco Kiosk
pavilion in Mexico City
Bullring of Toledo
bullring in Toledo, Spain
Central Post Office
building