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Historic mosque-cathedral reopens after blaze, 'saved', in southern Spain

Firefighters work to extinguish a fire in the historic mosque-turned-cathedral in the southern Spanish city of Cordoba © Madero CUBERO / AFP

Madrid (AFP) – A fire broke out in the historic mosque-turned-cathedral in Cordoba on Friday but the monument was saved as firefighters quickly contained and then extinguished it, the Spanish city's mayor said.

The historic mosque-turned-cathedral in Cordoba in southern Spain reopened on Saturday, a day after a blaze that was quickly contained by firefighters, a spokesman for the site said.

The spectacular blaze had broken out on Friday around 9:00 PM (1900 GMT), raising fears for the early medieval architectural gem and evoking memories of the 2019 fire that ravaged Notre Dame cathedral in Paris.

The site opened at 10:00 am (0800 GMT) and will close at 7:00 pm -- its regular hours -- with only the area where the fire broke out cordoned off to the public, a spokesman for the site told AFP.

Widely shared videos had shown flames and smoke billowing from inside the major tourist attraction, visited by two million people per year.

"The monument is saved. There will be no spread, it will not be a catastrophe, let's put it that way," Mayor Jose Mara Bellido said on Cadena television.

Later, he said the fire, which the fire brigade had earlier described as under control, was now extinguished.

"Luckily, the rapid and magnificent intervention of the Cordoba firefighters averted a catastrophe. The fire is now out, and tonight firefighters and local police teams will remain on site to avoid any risk," the mayor posted on X.

ABC and other newspapers reported that a mechanical sweeping machine had caught fire in the site.

Several fire engines and police lined a street near the building on Saturday morning as tourists lined up to get inside, images broadcast on Spanish media showed.

The fire-damaged section, known as the Almanzor nave, was cordoned off with waist-high barriers.

Considered a jewel of Islamic architecture, the site was built as a mosque -- on the site of an earlier church -- between the 8th and 10th centuries by the southern city's then Muslim ruler, Abd ar-Rahman, an emir of the Umayyad dynasty.

After Christians reconquered Spain in the 13th century under King Ferdinand III of Castile, it was converted into a cathedral and architectural alterations were made over following centuries.

(AFP)

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