Lingscape
Lingscape Public Image Repository

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ID Nickname Country / City Languages Taxonomies Comment Project / Group Map
Pin 14731 Spain Alcalá la Real
Español (Spanish)
Pin 146315 Naomi_Heller Spain Valencia
Valencia
Pin 146827 Naomi_Heller Spain València
Valencia
Pin 135820 Laura_Pizarro_Jacinto Spain San Martín de Trevejo
Fala (Fala) Español (Spanish)
recognized commercial informatory operative bottom-up linguistic duplicating paper positioning size handwritten note typeface fixed ephemeral bilingual A4 – A3 complete text door business hospitality
PALRA | Documenting Living Languages in Western Iberia SM | San Martín de Trevejo Corpus ID : 079 -155820 PALRA
Pin 136076 Laura_Pizarro_Jacinto Spain Cáceres
Español (Spanish)
PALRA
Pin 136332 Laura_Pizarro_Jacinto Spain Cáceres
No language
PALRA
Pin 14476 Spain Priego de Córdoba
Español (Spanish)
Pin 14732 Spain Alcalá la Real
Español (Spanish)
Pin 146316 Naomi_Heller Spain Valencia
Valencia
Pin 146828 Naomi_Heller Spain València
Valencia
Pin 68749 Spain Sevilla
English (English) Español (Spanish)
Pureza 74
Pin 135821 Laura_Pizarro_Jacinto Spain San Martín de Trevejo
Fala (Fala) Español (Spanish)
recognized artistic commercial expressive folklore operative bottom-up cultural linguistic mixing color overlapping paper positioning size handwritten printed wood object (non-sign) stand typeface mobile ephemeral bilingual other 1m² – 4m² image-text superimposed display business hospitality
PALRA | Documenting Living Languages in Western Iberia SM | San Martín de Trevejo Corpus ID : 080 -155821 PALRA
Pin 136077 Laura_Pizarro_Jacinto Spain Cáceres
Español (Spanish)
PALRA
Pin 136333 Laura_Pizarro_Jacinto Spain Cáceres
עברית (Hebrew) Español (Spanish)
Spanish: “CAMINOS DE SEFARAD – RED DE JUDERÍAS DE ESPAÑA” : “Routes of Sefarad, Network of Jewish Quarters of Spain” “CÁCERES” : identifies the city Hebrew word in the center: The large letters spell ספרד (Sefarad), which is the Hebrew word for Spain. In Jewish tradition, Sefarad is the name for the Iberian Peninsula, where Sephardic Jews lived until their expulsion in 1492. Cáceres is a member of the Red de Juderías de España, an association of cities preserving their Jewish heritage. The plaque is placed in the Jewish Quarter (Judería Vieja, Barrio de San Antonio) to signal its historical importance. It helps visitors follow the Sephardic heritage route, which includes the San Antonio Hermitage (former synagogue), traditional houses, and alleys where Jewish families once lived. https://redjuderias.org/ https://caminosdesefarad.com/ PALRA
Pin 14477 Spain Priego de Córdoba
Español (Spanish)
Pin 14733 Spain Alcalá la Real
Español (Spanish)
Pin 146317 Naomi_Heller Spain Valencia
Valencia
Pin 135822 Laura_Pizarro_Jacinto Spain San Martín de Trevejo
Fala (Fala) Español (Spanish)
recognized artistic commercial expressive folklore operative bottom-up cultural complementary background material size carved wood typeface fixed permanent bilingual material other other other 1m² – 4m² image-symbol-text superimposed wall artist business hospitality
PALRA | Documenting Living Languages in Western Iberia SM | San Martín de Trevejo Corpus ID : 081 -155822 PALRA
Pin 136078 Laura_Pizarro_Jacinto Spain Cáceres
No language
PALRA
Pin 136334 Laura_Pizarro_Jacinto Spain Cáceres
No language
Ceramic tile in the Hermitage of San Antonio (formerly a synagogue) in the Barrio de San Antonio, Cáceres depicts Saint Anthony of Padua with the Child Jesus. Saint Anthony of Padua: shown as a Franciscan, wearing a brown habit, with a halo, holding the Child Jesus in his arms. The Child Jesus: also with a halo, blessing or holding a symbol (often a book or cross). Lily branch in St. Anthony’s left hand: a classic attribute, symbol of purity. Cloud with cherub heads under his feet: sign of holiness and heavenly glory. Baroque-style ceramic frame with black floral motifs on a white background, reinforces the Christian dedication of the former synagogue to Saint Anthony. Saint Anthony of Padua is the patron of many hermitages and popular neighborhoods in Spain. The placement of devotional ceramic tiles on facades and hermitages became a widespread tradition from the 17th century onward, especially in Extremadura and Andalusia, so that neighbors and passersby could entrust themselves to the saint. PALRA