In 1238, Granada's engineers pulled off the biggest feat in medieval history:
They built a self-sustaining water system 200 meters up a mountain.
But what they created next nearly destroyed physics forever.
Here's the full story: 🧵
While other medieval cities fell to Christian armies during the Reconquista, Granada remained unconquered for over 250 years.
The secret?
The Alhambra Palace - a fortress of such genius engineering that even modern NASA scientists study its systems.
The challenge seemed impossible:
Power an entire city 200 meters above the Darro River without modern pumps.
For context: That's like running water up a 60-story skyscraper using only medieval technology.
The margin for error? Zero.
First came the Royal Canal - "Acequia Real":
A 6km channel carved through mountainous terrain.
Each meter required perfect calculations.
A slope of just 1%: Too steep = erosion. Too shallow = no flow.
It took 3 generations of engineers to perfect.
But they had a bigger problem:
Medieval pipes couldn't handle high pressure.
Traditional fountains required immense force.
Every meter of height reduced water pressure.
Their solution? It revolutionized hydraulic engineering.
They built the massive Tower of Water (Torre del Agua):
• 45 meters tall
• Multiple storage chambers
• Pressure regulation systems
• Backup reservoirs
The tower became the heart of the entire water network.
The Alhambra's animal-powered water wheel was ingenious:
• 12-meter diameter
• Ceramic pots attached to rim
• Counter-weighted for efficiency
• Could lift 1,500 liters per hour
It ran continuously for 500 years.
The Court of Lions fountain was their masterpiece:
12 marble lions, each precisely engineered.
Water flowed through hidden channels in their bodies.
A complex mechanism rotated water flow hourly.
It became medieval Spain's most accurate timekeeper.
Their greatest achievement? The "impossible" whirlpool lift:
Using principles of fluid dynamics unknown to Europe for 600 years, they created:
• Self-sustaining water lift
• Air bubble propulsion
• Natural pressure regulation
Physics textbooks had to be rewritten.
The thermal baths were a feat of thermal engineering:
• Hypocaust heating system (like Roman baths)
• Graduated temperature rooms
• Steam generation chambers
• Marble heat-retention floors
• Natural ventilation ducts
All powered by a single wood furnace.
Their climate control system was centuries ahead:
• Strategic fountain placement for maximum cooling
• Wind-tunnel effects through narrow passages
• Water wall cooling systems
• Evaporative cooling chambers
Temperature difference from outside: Often 10°C cooler
The redundancy systems were brilliant:
3 separate water sources:
• Royal Canal (primary)
• Darro River lift (secondary)
• Rainwater collection (emergency)
Plus hidden reservoirs that could sustain the palace for months.
The engineering was so precise that:
• Water pressure remained constant despite elevation changes
• Fountains maintained exact heights
• Temperature stayed regulated year-round
• Waste water was recycled for gardens
All without a single powered pump.
The social impact was revolutionary:
• Gardens fed thousands during sieges
• Politicians met in cooling fountain courts
• Water access created a thriving economy
• Thermal baths became diplomatic centers
Engineering shaped civilization itself.
NASA's interest isn't surprising:
The Alhambra solved problems we still face:
• Passive climate control
• Resource optimization
• Sustainable water recycling
• Gravity-based power systems
Perfect for Mars colonies.
• Used natural forces instead of fighting them
• Built redundancy into every system
• Designed for centuries, not years
• Let nature guide engineering
Principles we're only now rediscovering.
Today, after 900 years:
• 70% of original systems still function
• Original fountains still flow
• Climate control still works
• Gardens still bloom
When they said "built to last," they meant it.
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But for me, there's one woman who stands head and shoulder above all.
Sadly, her legacy was a heartbreaking tragedy. Here's her story... (thread) 🧵
In 1927, Marie Salomea Skłodowska (Marie Curie) was the ONLY woman among 29 top physicists at the prestigious Solvay Conference.
She was the:
• first woman to win a Nobel Prize
• first person to win Nobel Prizes in 2 fields
• pioneer of radioactivity, which saved millions of lives in WW1
But the tragic devil was following her...
Marie Skłodowska was born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1867.
Her parents were teachers, but financial hardships struck the family due to her father's patriotism.
Tragedy hit early as her sister Zofia died of typhus, and her mother died of tuberculosis when Marie was 10.