Everyone visits the Alhambra, but few explore the vibrant medieval city that built it. This walking tour reveals the sophisticated urban machine that powered the Nasrid Kingdom for 250 years.
Forget postcard clichés. This is Granada as a living organism: where silk caravans unloaded at dawn, where medical students studied by candlelight, where water flowed through ingenious underground channels, where aristocratic women wielded power from behind latticed windows, where Sufis sought God in music and madness, where the Mediterranean trade routes converged into narrow streets thick with Arabic, Hebrew, and the smell of saffron.
This isn't monument-hopping. It's urban archaeology. Through carefully selected sites—some standing, some lost, all essential—you'll decode how this medieval metropolis actually functioned.
The Alhambra is extraordinary—but it's a consequence.
See Granada first. Then climb to the Alhambra. Everything will make sense.