History of Moorish Spain From 711 to 997 ...
The word Moors derives from the Latin mauri, a
name for the Berber tribes living in Roman Mauretania (modern day Algeria
and Morocco). It has no ethnographic meaning but can be used to refer to
all Muslims, Berber or Arab, who conquered the Iberian Peninsula.
These Moors, who were religious fanatics, arrived in Spain in the
year 711
and thus began a period of history which would shape Iberia differently than the
rest of Europe as the land adapted to a new religion, language and
culture. Hispania became a part of the caliph of Damascus which was the
capital of the Muslim world.
This Moorish land was known as Al-Andalus and
included all of the Iberian Peninsula except for the extreme north-west from
where the Christian Reconquest would originate.
Internal divisions within Moorish rule largely
explain why the Moors didn't conquer the whole peninsula in those early
days. Had they done so Spain may well have remained a Muslim state until
today. Instead an Asturian mountaineer called Pelayo led a band of
Christians to the first victory over the Moors at Covadonga in 718. The reconquest had begun.
Strangely Moorish Spain wasn't really ruled by
Arabs. It is true that many high positions were taken by Arabs but most of
the Moors were Berbers. Later Muwallads (converted Christians) together
with the offspring of the first invaders became dominant in Moorish Spain.
The invaders brought no women so the second generation of Moors were already
half Hispanic!
The first 40 years of Moorish rule was volatile
and Al-Andaluz needed order and unity which came in the form of Abd-er-Rahman
who arrived in Almuñecar on the coast of Granada in 755. Within a year he
became Emir of Al-Andalus and during his 32 year reign he would transform this
land into an independent state which was the cultural light of Europe.
In Cordoba Abd-er-Rahman I founded the Mezquita
in 785 when he purchased the Christian section of the San Vicente Church, a place
the two faiths had shared for 50 years. The Mosque was expanded to its
final glory over the next two centuries. This became the second most
important place of worship in the Muslim world after Mecca.
The Moors expanded and improved Roman irrigation
systems to help develop a strong agricultural sector. They introduced many
new crops including the orange, lemon, peach, apricot, fig and pomegranate as
well as saffron, sugar cane, cotton, silk and rice which remain some of Spain's
main products today.
The frontier in the north between the Moors and
the Christians was constantly on a war footing and in St James (Santiago de
Compostela), the Christians found their own inspiration to match the
Koran-inspired fanaticism of the Moors. Santiago became known as "Matamoros"
(the Moor slayer) and to this day is Spain's patron saint.
However, there was still a long way to go before
the Reconquest would succeed. In the mid-10th century Al-Mansur appeared
on the scene. He led many expeditions into Christian territory over a
period of 20 years and in 997 his army captured Santiago de Compostela.
They destroyed the shrine and prisoners took the basilica doors and bells to Cordoba where
they would be placed in the Mezquita.
Centuries of painstaking Christian advance had
been destroyed by Al-Mansur's daring raid. History of Moorish Spain - Part 2From 1010 to 1195 ...
Al Mansur died in 1010 which led to the crisis in
which Medina Azahara, the city palace of Abd ar-Rahman III, was destroyed by
rampaging Berbers. Moorish Spain deteriorated rapidly into violent turmoil. The caliphate ceased to exist and Al Andaluz broke up
into 20 taifas and unified rule came to an end. Seville and Granada were
the most powerful of these small kingdoms followed by Cordoba, Almeria, Zaragoza,
Badajoz and Toledo. The Moorish warriors were no more as life degenerated
into drunken orgies and mercenaries, including Christians, were employed to do
the fighting.
Along the Moorish/Christian frontier, castles had
been built to protect against Arab attack leading to the area being named Castile. The kingdom of
Leon had lead the reconquest until Al-Mansur's
raid on Santiago then Navarra under Sancho III became the key force.
Sancho gained control of Castile through marriage and placed his son Fernando on
the throne. Fernando then occupied Leon and became emperor of the Spains'.
Castile would now dominate the reconquest.
When Fernando I died after taking lands from
Valencia to Portugal, power was split between his sons, Alfonso in Leon and
Sancho in Castile. Sancho was served by a young knight who would become
known as El Cid Campeador. Sancho was murdered and his brother was
suspected so El Cid made Alfonso swear under oath that he had no part in the
murder. Alfonso became ruler of a united Castile and Leon and a few years
later sent El Cid into exile after a dispute. In 1085 Alfonso's army
recaptured Toledo in the first crucial victory of the Reconquest.
This news didn't go down well in Muslim north
Africa and an army of Almoravids (fanatical Muslim nomads from the Sahara) was
invited by the taifa of Seville to reassert the balance of power. They
arrived in 1086 and annihilated Alfonso's army. Fernando again turned to
El Cid for assistance. In 1099 El Cid died and for a few years the
Almoravids controlled southern Iberia from Marrakesh.
The tolerant society of the caliphate and the
taifas disappeared as the Almoravids persecuted Christians and Jews.
Another fanatical group, the
Almohades, came from the Atlas mountains of Morocco and were natural enemies of
the Almoravid desert tribes. They conquered Marrakesh then invaded Al-Andalus
to again unite the region under one Muslim regime. These Almohades ordered
the destruction of all churches and synagogues forcing Christians and Jews to
swarm to the north.
In spite of this fanaticism, a period of great
cultural achievement occurred under the Almohades which was the brightest period
between the caliphate and the glories of Granada centuries later. The
minaret of the Seville mosque, La Giralda, was built during this period with
wide ramps all the way up the tower which allowed the sultan to ride his horse to
the top.
During the early reconquest the Christians spent
too much time fighting amongst themselves. In 1195 the Christians were
heavily defeated at Alarcos and from then on decided to cooperate against the
Almohades, even more so when the pope called for a crusade against these
invaders. History of Moorish Spain - Part 3From 1212 to 1492 ...
In 1212 a united army of Spanish and European
soldiers utterly destroyed the Almohad army at Navas de Tolosa, an event
which marked the beginning of the end for Moorish Spain.
Fernando III ('the saint') captured Cordoba in
1236 and reconsecrated the mosque as the cathedral of Cordoba. He then
made captured Muslims carry the bells, stolen by Al-Mansur two centuries
earlier, back to the cathedral in Santiago.
The ruler of Granada, Mohammed ibn-Alhamar,
saw what was happening and approached Fernando to propose that in return for
cooperating in the conquest of Muslim Seville, Granada would be granted
independence as a subject of Castile. Fernando agreed and took Seville.
On returning to Granada, the embarrassed ibn-Alhamar announced "there is no
victor but Allah" which can be seen inscribed all over the Alhambra palace.
Many writers refer to Moorish rule over Spain
spanning the 800 years from 711 to 1492 yet this is a misconception.
The reality is that the Berber-Hispanic Muslims inhabited two-thirds of the
peninsula for 375 years, about half of it for another 160 years and finally the
kingdom of Granada for the remaining 244 years.
When Fernando III died the reconquest seemed to
die with him and the deal struck over Granada would last for another two
centuries. In 1479 The merger of the kingdoms of Castile and Aragon under Los
Reyes Católicos (Fernando and Isabel) would soon lead to the fall of the
kingdom of Granada and the end of Moorish rule in Spain.
The town of Santa Fe lies just outside Granada on
the road to Malaga. It was set up in 1491 as a base camp from where to
conduct the final conquest of Moorish Spain. The town represents the birthplace
of modern Spain and it was here that Columbus received permission to begin
his great voyage.
The kingdom of Granada included modern day
Granada, Almeria and Malaga. Its rulers, the Nasrid dynasty, had
retired to a pleasure seeking existence within the confines of the Alhambra
palace. Jealousies stemming from the harem were the source of
instability of Moorish Spain and would ultimately be influential in the fall of
Granada.
Within the harem various sons could be born to
different mothers each with equal rights to the throne. Granada was split
between the supporters of Mulay's wife, Aixa, and her son Boabdil
on one side and a beautiful Christian prisoner called Soraya on the other.
Civil war ensued when the sultan chose Soraya over Aixa and her
son. Los Reyes Católicos couldn't believe their luck as Granada slowly
self-destructed. Aixa's followers gained the upper hand and Mulay
fled to the protection of his brother who was governor of Malaga.
Boabdil was captured and made a deal with
Fernando whereby he promised to surrender Granada once his father and uncle were
vanquished. Malaga fell in 1487 and shortly after Almeria was captured but
Boabdil refused to surrender Granada setting the stage for a final invasion.
Rather than attack, Fernando chose to blockade
Granada. After months of stalemate and negotiations Boabdil surrendered
in return for 30,000 gold coins, part of the Alpujarras mountains to the south
of Granada and political and religious freedom for his subjects. On
January 2nd 1492 Los Reyes Católicos marched into Granada and the last
stronghold of Moorish Spain came to an end.
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