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Azamara

Destination Immersion

Granada: Moorish Sighs in Andalusian Spain

More than 500 years have passed since the fall of the final caliphate in Andalusian Spain, but the Moorish influence still whispers down backstreets and echoes off tiled courtyards. You’ll see it in the city’s architecture and taste it in the local cuisine. You’ll hear it in the plucked-string sounds of Flamenco played in hidden corners.

Until the mid-8th century, the Umayyads ruled the Islamic empire, a swathe of territory that covered much of the modern-day Middle East as well as the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa. The Abbasids overthrew the Umayyads in 750 A.D., and the young Umayyad prince fled across the Straights of Gibraltar to form a new capital in exile at Cordoba, in southern Spain. This began the Moorish reign in Al-Andalus, the Arabic name for the Iberian terrain, a period of time marked by artistic excellence and scientific progress.

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Destination Spotlight: Angkor Wat

Visitors to the Vatican are often awestruck by the immensity of the Catholic spiritual center, but it is actually a visit to Cambodia’s Angkor Wat that will take you to the largest religious building in the world. With an area of almost 2 square miles, this massive temple and surrounding complex have served as a spiritual beacon for Hindus and Buddhists for nearly 900 years.

Angkor Wat was built in honor of the Hindu god Vishnu by Khmer king Suryavarman II in the early 1100’s to serve as his temple and capital city. Located in Angkor, Cambodia, the name is directly translated as “Angkor School” (though the term wat is used to refer to most Southeast Asian monasteries) as there is no inscription or record of its original name. While it was a Hindu temple for over 200 years, it was converted to Theravada Buddhism with the entire empire when King Srindravarman deposed his father-in-law after spending 10 years in Sri Lanka becoming ordained as a Buddhist monk.

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Destination Spotlight – Dubrovnik, Croatia

Situated in the far south of the Dalmatia region, this Croatian port was thought to have been settled in the 7th century CE, however, recent evidence points to an even earlier founding. No matter its age, this city is as rich with history as its famed walls are thick.

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Destination Spotlight: Istanbul, Turkey

Situated at the crossroads of Asia and Europe, it is no wonder that Istanbul has been a major cultural and political center for over 2,000 years. New archeological findings suggest that settlements existed on Istanbul’s peninsula over 9,000 years ago and there were also Thracian and Phoenician settlements, but the history of Istanbul itself dates to the 7th century BCE.

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