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azulejo

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azulejo

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Azulejos from Seville, late 16th century; in the Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam
(credit: Courtesy of Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam)
Spanish and Portuguese glazed, polychromed tile produced from the 14th century. Introduced into Spain by the Arabs during the Moorish occupation, azulejos were used in Islamic architecture for facing walls and paving floors. Early designs were geometric and 5–6 in. (13–15 cm) square. In the 15th–16th centuries Portugal imported the tiles from Spain for use in religious and private buildings. The Portuguese exported them in the 17th century to the Azores, Madeira, and Brazil, and the Spaniards introduced them to their American colonies. In the 18th century, interiors and exteriors in Puebla, Mex., were covered with azulejos in brilliant colours on a scale unequaled elsewhere.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Richly tiled facades and interiors have come to characterise Portuguese architecture and few things are as expressive as its painted ceramic tiles, or azulejos.
The VIP suite, for instance, is surfaced in white tiles lovingly hand painted with florid blue motifs in the traditional azulejo manner.
There is even a tile museum in Lisbon - the Museu Nacional do Azulejo - housed in the cloisters of a Manueline convent, which contains some extraordinary examples of the art that has made such a poetic contribution to Portugal's buildings and cities.
 
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