Granata is an Italian equivalent of 'Granada'. As is the case with the Spanish language word, the Italian word may mean 'grenade, pomegranate' or refer to the city in southern Spain. Whatever the meaning or use, it's pronounced 'grah-NAH-tah' in Italian, and 'grah-NAH-tha' in Spanish.
Granada is spanish
granada. (weapon) Pomegranate (Granada in spanish)
Spanish reconquest of New Granada happened in 1816.
La granada or una granada
When I visited there, we called it granada.
"Granada"
Granada Spain is in the southern Spanish Region called Andalucia.
Granada means pomegranate in Spanish but... Pomegranates were named after Granada, NOT the other way around! Granada is an Arabic name from a LONG time ago, and when the French came to Granada (in Spain) they called the fruit Apple of Granada... pomme de grenade ( I think that is how they say Granada)= pomegranate! They grow everywhere around Granada. So there ya go, the fruit was named after the city!
Yes, in 1492 the Spanish armies led by King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella conquered Granada, marking the end of Muslim rule in the Iberian Peninsula and completing the Reconquista.
The Italian origins begin in Salerno.The Spanish origins begin in Granada, southern Spain.See the related link listed below for more information:
It is 550 miles. Distance from Granada to Spanish mountains Sierra Nevada is about 15km.
Particularly in the south, in Andalucia, e.g. Granada