A fire affects a wall and the roof of the Mosque of Córdoba.
The fire damage was "very small" and focused on the wooden vaults of a chapel, which collapsed.

The fire that broke out Friday night inside the Mosque-Cathedral of Córdoba has been extinguished, according to the cathedral chapter. This Friday morning, the dean of the cathedral, Joaquín Alberto Nieva, assessed the damage to the building, one of the jewels of world Islamic art and considered a World Heritage Site. The damage to the building, he said, is "very small": of the 23,000 square meters of the Mosque-Cathedral, the effects of the fire are limited to about 25 square meters. However, the flames caused the wooden vaults of the Chapel of the Annunciation to collapse and affected two others. However, this did not prevent the Mosque-Cathedral from reopening its doors this Saturday.
The fire started around 9:00 a.m. in one of the chapels and spread to the roof. The fire was declared under control an hour later, after burning several areas. Flames and plumes of smoke could be seen from different parts of the city, where temperatures rose to 39 degrees Celsius today. Mayor José María Bellido announced that "it will not be a catastrophe," but that "the monument is safe." This Saturday, the mosque reopened as normal.
The chapel where the fire started was used as a warehouse for machinery for temple maintenance, and municipal sources indicate that a sweeping machine caught fire due to a short circuit. The fire spread from the interior to the roof. Three firefighter crews were quickly dispatched to the scene, and the building's self-protection plan was implemented. The area was cordoned off, and the fire was extinguished by nightfall.
Miguel Santiago, spokesperson for the Mosque-Cathedral Platform, explained that the affected area is the eastern part, where the 16th and 17th century chapels are located, not the original part of the mosque, from the 8th century. In fact, the roof of one of these chapels would have collapsed due to the consequences of the fire.
The San José Gate dates from the 10th century and was restored in 2017. Construction of the Mosque of Córdoba began in 784, after the Muslim conquest, and was expanded and modified over more than two centuries. After the Christian reconquest in 1236, a cathedral was integrated inside, giving rise to the current structure, the result of a blend of Islamic and Christian architecture, with the cathedral at its center.
This is the third fire that the building has suffered in its more than thousand years of history: the first occurred in 1910, after an electrical discharge in the temple cross, and the second in 2001, which destroyed part of the archive when two of them caught fire.
The mosque, built in the 8th century, is a world reference of Islamic art. It was converted into a Catholic cathedral in the 13th century and was declared a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1984.