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{{Short description|Medieval Christian military campaigns}}
{{other uses}}
{{italic title}}
]'']]
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{{Campaignbox Reconquista}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2022}}
The '''''Reconquista''''' ("reconquest"){{efn|While spelled largely the same, the pronunciation differs among the different Iberian languages, mostly in accordance with the sound structures of the respective languages. The pronunciations are as follows:
] (13th century), which deals with a late 10th-century battle in San Esteban de Gormaz involving the troops of ] and ].<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://produccioncientifica.ucm.es/documentos/5d399a13299952068445dc80|title=Composición, estilo y texto en la miniatura del Códice Rico de las CSM|journal=Alcanate: Revista de Estudios Alfonsíes|issn=1579-0576|year=2012|first=M.ª Victoria|last=Chico Picaza|volume=8 |page=170−171}}</ref>]]
*{{IPA-es|rekoŋˈkista|lang}}
The '''''Reconquista''''' (] and ] for {{gloss|reconquest}}){{efn|While it is largely spelled in the same way, the pronunciation of it varies among the different languages which are spoken on the ] as well as in neighboring territories. The pronunciations of it are as follows:
*{{IPA-pt|ʁɛkõˈkiʃtɐ|lang}}
*{{IPA-gl|rekoŋˈkista|lang}} * ], ] and {{IPA|es|rekoŋˈkista|lang|small=no}};
*{{IPA-ast|rekoŋˈkista|lang}} * {{IPA|pt|ʁɨkõˈkiʃtɐ|lang|small=no}};
*{{IPA-ca|rəkuŋˈkestə|lang}} <small>or</small> {{IPA-ca|rekoŋˈkesta|}}, spelled ''Reconquesta''. Colloquially also known and spelled as ''Reconquista'' (<small>pron.</small> {{IPA-ca|rəkuŋˈkistə|}} <small>or</small> {{IPA-ca|rekoŋˈkista|}}). * {{IPA|ca|rəkuŋˈkestə|lang|link=yes|small=no}} or {{IPA|ca|rekoŋˈkesta|}}, spelled ''Reconquesta''; colloquially also known as and spelled ''Reconquista'' (pron. {{IPA|ca|rəkuŋˈkistə|}} or {{IPA|ca|rekoŋˈkista|}});
* {{IPA|eu|erekoŋkis̺ta|lang|link=yes|small=no}}, spelled ''Errekonkista'';
*{{IPA-eu|erekoŋkis̺ta|lang}}, spelled ''Errekonkista''}} is a period of approximately 781 years in the history of the ], after the ] in 711 to the ], the last Islamic state on the peninsula, in 1492. It ended right before the discovery of the ], and the period of the ] and ] colonial empires which followed.
* {{IPA|an|ɾekoŋˈkjesta|lang|link=yes|small=no}}, spelled ''Reconquiesta'';
* {{IPA|oc|rekuŋˈkɛsta|lang|label=]/]:|small=no}}, spelled ''Reconquèsta'', or {{IPA|oc|rekuŋˈkistɔ|}}, spelled ''Reconquista'';
* {{IPA|fr|ʁəkɔ̃kɛːt|lang|link=yes|small=no}}, spelled ''Reconquête''; ''Reconquista'' commonly used as well.}} or the '''reconquest of ]'''{{efn|The ] term for 'Reconquista' is ''al-Istirdād'' ({{lang|ar|الاسترداد}}), literally 'the Recovery', although it is more commonly known as ''suqūṭ al-Andalus'' ({{lang|ar|سقوط الأندلس}}), 'the fall of ]'.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Kabha |first=M. |date=2023 |title=The Fall of Al-Andalus and the Evolution of its Memory in Modern Arab-Muslim Historiography |journal=The Maghreb Review |volume=48 |issue=3 |pages=289–303 |doi=10.1353/tmr.2023.a901468 |s2cid=259503095 |url=https://muse.jhu.edu/pub/457/article/901468/summary}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Al-Mallah |first=M. |date=2019 |title=The Afterlife of Al-Andalus: Muslim Iberia in Contemporary Arab and Hispanic Narratives |volume=56 |issue=1 |url=https://doi.org/10.5325/complitstudies.56.1.e-22 |journal=Comparative Literature Studies |pages=e–22 |doi=10.5325/complitstudies.56.1.e-22|s2cid=239092774 }}</ref>}} was a series of military and cultural campaigns that European Christian ] waged against the ] following the ] by the ], culminating in the reign of the ].<ref>{{Citation |last=Caraccioli |first=Mauro José |title=Narratives of Conquest and the Conquest of Narrative |date=2021 |work=Writing the New World |pages=14–38 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv1gt9419.6 |access-date=2024-09-11 |series=The Politics of Natural History in the Early Spanish Empire |publisher=University Press of Florida |jstor=j.ctv1gt9419.6 |isbn=978-1-68340-170-4|quote=La Reconquista: a 700-year military and cultural campaign against the Moorish Caliphates of Southern Iberia that culminated in the joint reign of Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile as Reyes Católicos.}}</ref><ref name="Britannica">{{cite encyclopedia |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Reconquista |title=Reconquista |date=23 November 2022 |encyclopedia=Britannica}}</ref> The beginning of the ''Reconquista'' is traditionally dated to the ] ({{circa|718}} or 722), in which an ] army achieved the first Christian victory over the forces of the Umayyad Caliphate since the beginning of the military invasion.<ref>{{harvnb|Collins|1989|p=147}}; {{harvnb|Reilly|1993|pp=75–76}}; {{harvnb|Deyermond|1985|p=346}}; {{harvnb|Hillgarth|2009|p=66 n. 28}}</ref> The ''Reconquista'' ended in 1492 with the ] to the ].<ref name=Britannica/>


In the late 10th century, the Umayyad&nbsp;] ] waged a series of military campaigns for 30 years in order to subjugate the northern Christian kingdoms. When the ] disintegrated in the early 11th century, a series of petty successor states known as '']s''&nbsp;emerged. The northern kingdoms took advantage of this situation and struck deep into ]; they fostered civil war, intimidated the weakened&nbsp;''taifas'',&nbsp;and made them pay large tributes ('']'') for "protection".<ref> '']'', 22nd ed. (online).</ref><ref>According to Catlos, 83, Arabic authors referred to the ''parias'' as a '']'', the equivalent of the Islamic head tax on non-believers.</ref><ref name=fletcher>Fletcher, 7–8.</ref><ref>Reilly, 9.</ref>
Traditionally, historians mark the beginning of the Reconquista with the ] (718 or 722), in which a small army, led by the nobleman ], defeated an Umayyad army in the mountains of northern Iberia and established a small Christian principality in ].

In the 12th century, the ''Reconquista'' was above all a political action to develop the kingdoms of ], ] and ]. The king's action took precedence over that of the local lords, with the help of the ] and also supported by ].<ref>Porto Editora – Reconquista Cristã na Infopédia . Porto: Porto Editora. . Disponível em https://www.infopedia.pt/$reconquista-crista</ref> Following a Muslim resurgence under the ] in the 12th century, the great Moorish strongholds fell to Christian forces in the 13th century, after the decisive ] (1212), the ] (1236) and the ] (1248)—leaving only the Muslim enclave of Granada as a ] in the south. After the ] in January 1492, the entire Iberian peninsula was controlled by Christian rulers. On 30 July 1492, as a result of the ], the ] in Castile and Aragon—some 200,000 people—were ]. The conquest was followed by a series of edicts (1499–1526) which ], who were later ] from the Iberian realms of the ] by a series of decrees starting in 1609.<ref name="Perry2012">{{cite book|author=Mary Elizabeth Perry|editor=Kevin Ingram|title=The Conversos and Moriscos in Late Medieval Spain and Beyond: Volume Two: The Morisco Issue|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nQ0yAQAAQBAJ&pg=PA167|date= 2012|publisher=Brill|isbn=978-90-04-22860-3|page=167|chapter=8: Morisco Stories and the Complexities of Resistance and Assimilation}}</ref><ref name="Dadson2014">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RtDCAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA101|title=Tolerance and Coexistence in Early Modern Spain: Old Christians and Moriscos in the Campo de Calatrava|first=Trevor J.|last=Dadson|date=2014|publisher=Boydell & Brewer Ltd|page=101|isbn=978-1855662735}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|last=Boase|first=Roger|date=4 April 2002|title=The Muslim Expulsion from Spain|journal=]|volume=52|issue=4|quote=The majority of those permanently expelled settling in the ] or ], especially in Oran, Tunis, Tlemcen, Tetuán, Rabat and Salé. Many travelled overland to France, but after the assassination of Henry of Navarre by Ravaillac in May 1610, they were forced to emigrate to Italy, Sicily or Constantinople.}}</ref> Approximately three million Muslims emigrated or were driven out of Spain between 1492 and 1610.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Islamic Encounters |url=https://www.brown.edu/Facilities/John_Carter_Brown_Library/exhibitions/islamic/pages/spain.html |access-date=2023-05-25 |website=www.brown.edu |publisher=] |quote=Between 1492 and 1610, some 3,000,000 Muslims voluntarily left or were expelled from Spain, resettling in North Africa.}}</ref>

Beginning in the 19th century,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.diariodeburgos.es/noticia/ZD86B418D-DD64-5400-8FBA1220E9A23524/20131102/reconquista/es/mito |title=La reconquista es un mito|date=2 November 2013 |website= Diario de Burgos|language=es|access-date=13 September 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190925134813/https://www.diariodeburgos.es/noticia/ZD86B418D-DD64-5400-8FBA1220E9A23524/20131102/reconquista/es/mito |archive-date=25 September 2019|url-status=live}}</ref> traditional historiography has used the term ''Reconquista'' for what was earlier thought of as a restoration of the ] over conquered territories.<ref>{{Cite report|last=Ríos Saloma|first=Martín|title=La Reconquista: génesis de un mito historiográfico |url= https://www.redalyc.org/pdf/589/58922939009.pdf|publisher=Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas/UNAM Departamento de Historia México|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304053429/http://www.redalyc.org/pdf/589/58922939009.pdf |archive-date=4 March 2016|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>Sanjuán, Alejandro García. ''A 1300 Años de la conquista de Al-Andalus (711–2011)'' (2012): 65.</ref> The concept of ''Reconquista'', consolidated in Spanish historiography in the second half of the 19th century, was associated with the development of a Spanish national identity, emphasizing ] and romantic aspects.<ref name =Fitz2009>{{harvnb|García Fitz|2009|pp=144–145}} "Hay que reconocer que la irrupción de este concepto en la historiografía hispánica del siglo XIX, con su fuerte carga nacionalista, romántica y, en ocasiones, colonialista, tuvo un éxito notable y se transmitió, manteniendo algunos de sus rasgos identitarios más llamativos, a la del siglo XX. "</ref> It is rememorated in the '']'' festival, very popular in parts of Southeastern Spain, and which can also be found in a few places in former Spanish colonies. Pursuant to an ] worldview, the concept is a symbol of significance for the 21st century European ]. {{Sfn|Silva|2020|pp=57–65}}<ref>{{Cite news |last1=Paone |first1=Antony |last2=Thomas |first2=Leigh |date=6 December 2021 |title=Far-right French presidential hopeful promises 'reconquest' at rally |language=en |work=Reuters |url=https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/far-right-french-presidential-hopeful-promises-reconquest-rally-2021-12-05/ |access-date=22 June 2022}}</ref>


==Concept and duration== ==Concept and duration==
{{Campaignbox Reconquista}}
Catholic Spanish and Portuguese historiography, from the beginnings of historical scholarship until the twentieth century, stressed the existence of a continuous phenomenon by which the Christian Iberian kingdoms opposed and conquered the Muslim kingdoms, understood as a common enemy who had militarily seized Christian territory.<ref>{{cite book |title= Reconquest and Crusade in Medieval Spain|last=O'Callaghan |first=Joseph F. |authorlink= Rosamond McKitterick |year= 2003 |publisher= University of Pennsylvania Press |location=Philadelphia|isbn= 0812236963|page= 19|pages= |accessdate=February 15, 2012|url=http://books.google.com/?id=4gVIt5u0U5wC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false}}</ref> The concept of a Christian reconquest of the peninsula first emerged, in tenuous form, at the end of the 9th century.<ref name=CambridgeMedieval>{{cite book |title= The New Cambridge Medieval. History 1|last=McKitterick |first=Rosamond |authorlink= Rosamond McKitterick |author2=Collins, R. |year= 1990 |publisher= Cambridge University Press |location=|isbn= 9780521362924|page= 289|pages= |accessdate=July 26, 2012|url=http://books.google.com/?id=ZEaSdNBL0sgC&pg=PA272&lpg=PA272&dq=the+basques+roger+collins#v=onepage&q=the%20basques%20roger%20collins&f=false}}</ref> A landmark was set by the Christian '']'' (883-884), a document stressing the Christian and Muslim cultural and religious divide in Iberia and the necessity to drive the Muslims out.
The term ''Reconquista'', used to describe the struggle between Christians and Muslims in the Iberian peninsula during the ], was not used by writers of the period. Since its development as a term in medieval historiography occurred centuries after the events it references, it has acquired various meanings. Its meaning as an actual reconquest has been subject to the particular concerns or prejudices of scholars, who have sometimes wielded it as a weapon in ideological disputes.{{sfn|García Fitz|2009|pp=144–145}}


A discernible ] ideology that would later become part of the concept of "Reconquista", a Christian reconquest of the peninsula, appeared in writings by the end of the 9th century.<ref name="CambridgeMedieval">{{cite book |last=McKitterick |first=Rosamond |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZEaSdNBL0sgC&pg=PA289 |title=The New Cambridge Medieval. History 1 |author2=Collins, R. |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1990 |isbn=978-0521362924 |page=289 |quote=By the later ninth century some of the distinctive ideology of the later 'Reconquista' had come into being. Christian writers, such as the anonymous author of the so-called 'Prophetic Chronicle' of 883/4, could look forward to the expulsion of the Arabs from Spain, and a sense of both an ethnic and a religious-cultural divide between the inhabitants of the small northern kingdoms and the dominant elite in the south was marked in the writings of both sides. On the other hand, it is unwise to be too linear in the approach to the origins of the 'Reconquista', as tended to be the way with Spanish historiography in the earlier part of the twentieth century. Periods of peaceful co-existence or of limited and localised frontier disturbances were more frequent than ones of all-out military conflict between al-Andalus and the Christian kingdoms. As has been mentioned, the former never made any serious effort to eliminate the latter. Moreover, as in the case of relations between the Arista dynasty in Pamplona and the Banü Qasi, the mutual interest could be a stronger bond than ideological divisions based on antagonistic creeds. These tendencies were, if anything, to be reinforced in the tenth century. |author-link=Rosamond McKitterick |access-date=26 July 2012}}</ref> For example, the anonymous Christian chronicle '']'' (883–884) claimed a historical connection between the ] conquered by the Muslims in 711 and the ] in which the document was produced, and stressed a Christian and Muslim cultural and religious divide in Hispania, and a necessity to drive out the Muslims and restore conquered territories. In fact, in the writings of both sides, there was a sense of divide based on ethnicity and culture between the inhabitants of the small Christian kingdoms in the north and the dominant elite in the Muslim-ruled south.<ref name="CambridgeMedieval" />
Nevertheless, the difference between Christian and Muslim kingdoms in early medieval Spain was not seen at the time as anything like the clear-cut opposition which later emerged. Both Christian and Muslim rulers fought amongst themselves. Alliances between Muslims and Christians were not at all uncommon.<ref name=CambridgeMedieval/> Blurring distinctions even further were the mercenaries from both sides who simply fought for whoever paid the most. The period is looked back upon today one of religious tolerance.<ref>María Rosa Menocal, ''The Ornament of the World: How Muslims, Jews and Christians Created a Culture of Tolerance in Medieval Spain'', Back Bay Books, 2003, ISBN 0316168718, and see ].</ref>


|url=https://rbdigital.realbiblioteca.es/s/rbme/item/13125 |website=rbdigital.realbiblioteca.es |publisher=Real Biblioteca del Monasterio de San Lorenzo de El Escorial |access-date=24 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211123235323/https://rbdigital.realbiblioteca.es/s/rbme/item/13125 |archive-date=23 November 2021 |date=1283}}</ref>]]
The Crusades, which started late in the eleventh century, bred the religious ideology of a Christian reconquest, confronted at that time with a similarly staunch Muslim ] ideology in ]: the ] and even to a greater degree, in the ]. In fact previous documents (10-11th century) are mute on any idea of "reconquest".<ref>{{cite book |title= Reconquest and Crusade in Medieval Spain|last=O'Callaghan |first=Joseph F. |authorlink= Rosamond McKitterick |year= 2003 |publisher= University of Pennsylvania Press |location=Philadelphia|isbn= 0812236963|page= 18|pages= |accessdate=August 26, 2012|url=http://books.google.com/?id=4gVIt5u0U5wC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false}}</ref> Propaganda accounts of Muslim-Christian hostility came into being to support that idea, most notably the ], a fictitious 12th-century French version of the ] dealing with the Iberian '']s'' (''Moors''), and taught as historical in the French educational system since 1880.<ref>{{cite web|title="Pagans are wrong and Christians are right": Alterity, Gender, and Nation in the ''Chanson de Roland''|last1=Kinoshita |first1=Sharon |last2= |first2= |date=2001-01-31|work= |publisher=Duke University Press|accessdate=12 February 2013}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=DiVanna |first1=Isabel N. |last2= |first2= |year=2010 |title=Politicizing national literature: the scholarly debate around La Chanson de Roland in the nineteenth century |journal=Historical research |volume=84 |issue=223 |pages=26 |publisher=Institute of Historical Research |doi=10.1111/j.1468-2281.2009.00540.x |url= }}</ref>


The linear approach to the origins of a ''Reconquista'' taken in early twentieth-century historiography is complicated by a number of issues.<ref name="CambridgeMedieval" /> For example, periods of peaceful coexistence, or at least of limited and localised skirmishes on the frontiers, were more prevalent over the 781 years of Muslim rule in Iberia than periods of military conflict between the Christian kingdoms and al-Andalus.<ref name="CambridgeMedieval" /> Additionally, both Christian and Muslim rulers ], and cooperation and alliances between Muslims and Christians were not uncommon, such as between the ] and ] as early as the 9th century.<ref name="CambridgeMedieval" /><ref name="Keefe" /> Blurring distinctions even further were the mercenaries from both sides who simply fought for whoever paid the most.<ref name="Keefe" /> The period is seen today to have had long episodes of relative religious coexistence and tolerance.<ref name="Menocal2009">{{cite book |last1=Menocal |first1=Maria Rosa |title=The Ornament of the World: How Muslims, Jews, and Christians Created a Culture of Tolerance in Medieval Spain |date=2009 |publisher=Little, Brown |isbn=978-0-316-09279-1 |pages=214, 223 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4dxbqEmU-OkC&pg=PT214 }} (see ]).</ref> The idea of a continuous ''Reconquista'' has been challenged by modern scholars.<ref name="Fernández-Morera2016">{{cite book |last1=Fernández-Morera |first1=Darío |title=The Myth of the Andalusian Paradise |date=2016 |publisher=Open Road Media |isbn=978-1-5040-3469-2 |page=50 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PJNgCwAAQBAJ&pg=PT50 |language=en}}</ref><ref name="O'Callaghan2013">{{cite book |last1=O'Callaghan |first1=Joseph F. |title=Reconquest and Crusade in Medieval Spain |date=2013 |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press |isbn=978-0-8122-0306-6 |pages=18–19 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6fPSBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA18}}</ref>
Many recent historians dispute the whole concept of ''Reconquista'' (as well as that of a prior ''conquista'' by the Moors) as a concept created ''a posteriori'' in the service of later political goals. It has been called a "myth".<ref>"''La reconquista es un mito''", </ref><ref>"''Los inicios de la Reconquista, Derribando el Mito''", </ref><ref>"''La santina burgalesa y el mito de la reconquista''", </ref><ref>"''La Reconquista: un estado de la cuestión''", </ref><ref>Eugènia de Pagès, "''La 'Reconquista', allò que mai no va existir''", ''La Lamentable'', July 11, 2014, </ref><ref>Martín M. Ríos Saloma, "''La Reconquista. Génesis de un mito historiográfico''", ''Historia y Grafía'', 30, 2008, pp. 191-216, , retrieved 10-12-2014.</ref> One of the first Spanish intellectuals to question the idea of a "reconquest" that lasts for eight centuries was ], writing in the first half of the twentieth century.<ref>"''Yo no entiendo cómo se puede llamar reconquista a una cosa que dura ocho siglos''" ("I don't understand how something that lasted eight centuries can be called a reconquest"), in ''España invertebrada''. Quoted by De Pagès, E. July 11, 2014.</ref> However, the term is still in wide use.


]c ] and surrounding states, including the Christian Kingdoms of ], ], ], ], and the ], c. 1200.]]
The final campaign to conquer Granada, near the end of the 15th century, is never designated "reconquista" in Spanish; it is rather "la conquista de Granada", the conquest of Granada. Nevertheless, references to the ''reconquista'' as a whole are understood to include this campaign.


The ], which started late in the 11th century, bred the religious ideology of a Christian reconquest.<ref name="Black2003">{{Cite book |last1=Black |first1=Jeremy |title=World History |last2=Brewer |first2=Paul |last3=Shaw |first3=Anthony |last4=Chandler |first4=Malcolm |last5=Cheshire |first5=Gerard |last6=Cranfield |first6=Ingrid |last7=Ralph Lewis |first7=Brenda |last8=Sutherland |first8=Joe |last9=Vint |first9=Robert |publisher=Parragon Books |year=2003 |isbn=0-75258-227-5 |location=] |page=55 |author-link=Jeremy Black (historian)}}</ref> In the years just before the ] took place, Spanish kings used religious differences as a reason to fight against Muslims, although this argument was not extensively used beforehand.<ref name="Black2003" /> In ] at that time, the Christian states were confronted by the ], and to an even greater degree, they were confronted by the ], who espoused a similarly staunch Muslim ] ideology. In fact, previous documents which date from the 10th and 11th centuries are mute on any idea of "reconquest".<ref name="O'Callaghan2013" /> Propaganda accounts of Muslim-Christian hostility came into being to support that idea, most notably the '']'', an 11th-century French '']'' that offers a fictionalised retelling of the ] dealing with the Iberian '']s'' (''Moors''), and centuries later introduced in the French school system with a view to instilling moral and national values in the population following the 1870 defeat of the French in the ], regardless of the actual events.<ref>{{cite journal|title='Pagans are wrong and Christians are right': Alterity, Gender, and Nation in the ''Chanson de Roland''|last=Kinoshita|first=Sharon|journal=Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies|volume=31|issue=1|date=Winter 2001|pages=79–111|doi=10.1215/10829636-31-1-79|s2cid=143132248}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=DiVanna |first1=Isabel N. |year=2010 |title=Politicizing national literature: the scholarly debate around La Chanson de Roland in the nineteenth century |journal=Historical Research |volume=84 |issue=223 |pages=109–134 |doi=10.1111/j.1468-2281.2009.00540.x |url= }}</ref><ref>{{Citation |last=Lucken |first=Christopher |title=Actualité de la Chanson de Roland: Une épopée populaire au programme d'agrégation |date=2019-04-16 |url=http://books.openedition.org/pur/52857 |work=Le savant dans les Lettres |pages=93–106 |editor-last=Bähler |editor-first=Ursula |series=Interférences |place=Rennes |publisher=Presses universitaires de Rennes |isbn=978-2-7535-5783-3 |access-date=2022-11-18 |editor2-last=Cangemi |editor2-first=Valérie |editor3-last=Corbellari |editor3-first=Alain}}</ref>
==Background ==


The consolidation of the modern idea of a "''Reconquista''" is inextricably linked to the foundational myths of ] in the 19th century, associated with the development of a Centralist, Castilian, and staunchly Catholic brand of nationalism,{{sfn|García Fitz|2009|p=152}} evoking nationalistic, romantic and sometimes colonialist themes.<ref name="Fitz2009" /> The concept gained further track in the 20th century during the ].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.eldiario.es/andalucia/enabierto/elecciones_en_Andalucia_2018-reconquista-Vox_6_843125717.html |title=Vox, la Reconquista y la salvación de España |last= Alejandro García Sanjuán|website=eldiario.es|date=5 December 2018|language=es|access-date=15 February 2019 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20190216094117/https://www.eldiario.es/andalucia/enabierto/elecciones_en_Andalucia_2018-reconquista-Vox_6_843125717.html |archive-date=16 February 2019|url-status=live}}</ref> It thus became one of the key tenets of the historiographical discourse of ], the mythological and ideological identity of the regime. The discourse was underpinned in its most traditional version by an avowed historical illegitimacy of al-Andalus and the subsequent glorification of the Christian conquest.<ref>{{Cite journal |page=133|last=García Sanjuán|first=Alejandro|year=2016|title=La persistencia del discurso nacionalcatólico sobre el Medievo peninsular en la historiografía española actual|journal= Historiografías|volume=12|issn=2174-4289|issue= 12 |doi=10.26754/ojs_historiografias/hrht.2016122367|url=https://papiro.unizar.es/ojs/index.php/historiografias/article/view/2367|publisher=]|location=Zaragoza|doi-access=free}}</ref>
===Islamic conquest of Christian Iberia===
{{Further|Umayyad conquest of Hispania|Battle of Guadalete}}
In 711, Muslim Moors, mainly North African ] soldiers with some ]s, crossed the ] and began their conquest of the ]. After their conquest of the Visigothic kingdom's Iberian territories, the Muslims crossed the ] and took control of ] in 719, the last province of the Visigothic kingdom to be occupied. From their stronghold of ], they launched raids into the ].


The idea of a "liberation war" of ''reconquest'' against the Muslims, who were viewed as foreigners, suited the anti-Republican rebels during the ], the rebels agitated for the banner of a Spanish fatherland, a fatherland which, according to them, was being threatened by regional nationalisms and ].{{Sfn|García Fitz|2009|pp=146–147}} Their rebellious pursuit was thus a crusade for the restoration of the Church's unity, where Franco stood for both ] and ].{{Sfn |García Fitz|2009|pp=146–147}} The ''Reconquista'' has become a rallying call for right and far-right parties in Spain to expel from office incumbent progressive or peripheral nationalist options, as well as their values, in different political contexts as of 2018.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.publico.es/politica/ultraderecha-vox-rescata-viejo-concepto-reconquista.html|title=¿Por qué Vox rescata ahora el viejo concepto de 'Reconquista'?|website= www.publico.es |date=15 January 2019 |access-date=15 February 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190216035443/https://www.publico.es/politica/ultraderecha-vox-rescata-viejo-concepto-reconquista.html |archive-date=16 February 2019 |url-status= live}}</ref><ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.europapress.es/nacional/noticia-casado-apelar-vox-reconquista-pp-empezado-reconquista-andalucia-acabara-asturias-20190111154752.html |title=Casado, tras apelar Vox a la Reconquista: El PP ha empezado la reconquista por Andalucía y la acabará en Asturias|publisher= Europa Press |date= 11 January 2019|access-date=15 February 2019|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20190216035637/https://www.europapress.es/nacional/noticia-casado-apelar-vox-reconquista-pp-empezado-reconquista-andalucia-acabara-asturias-20190111154752.html |archive-date=16 February 2019|url-status= live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.eldiario.es/clm/vox-santiago-abascal-reconquista-toledo_0_863014649.html |title= Vox designa a Toledo como el punto donde comenzar la 'reconquista' del centro de España|last=Bravo|first= Francisca |website=eldiario.es|date=31 January 2019|language=es|access-date=15 February 2019|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20190216035503/https://www.eldiario.es/clm/vox-santiago-abascal-reconquista-toledo_0_863014649.html|archive-date=16 February 2019|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url= https://www.elnacional.cat/es/politica/casado-reconquista-engano-independentismo_290181_102.html|title=Casado promete una 'reconquista' para que 'caiga el engaño independentista'|website=ElNacional.cat|date=21 July 2018|access-date=15 February 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190216040924/https://www.elnacional.cat/es/politica/casado-reconquista-engano-independentismo_290181_102.html|archive-date=16 February 2019|url-status=live}}</ref>
At no point did the invading Islamic armies exceed 60,000 men.<ref>{{cite book|last=Fletcher|first=Richard|title=Moorish Spain|year=2006|publisher=Los Angeles: University of California Press|isbn=0-520-24840-6|page=43}}</ref> These armies established an Islamic rule that would last 300 years in much of the Iberian Peninsula and 781 years in ].


The same kind of propaganda was circulated during the ] by the ], who wanted to portray their enemies as foreign invaders, especially given the prominence of the ] among Franco's troops, an army which was made up of native North African soldiers.<ref>Bolorinos Allard, Elisabeth. "The Crescent and the Dagger: Representations of the Moorish Other during the Spanish Civil War." ''Bulletin of Spanish Studies'' 93, no. 6 (2016): 965–988.</ref>
===Islamic rule===
{{Cleanup|reason=original research or plagiarism: numerous factual statements lacking citation|date=November 2013}}
{{Main|Berbers and Islam|Berber Revolt|}}
After the establishment of a local ], ] ], ruler of the ], removed many of the successful Muslim commanders. Tariq ibn Ziyad, the first governor of the newly conquered province of ''Al-Andalus'', was recalled to ] and replaced with Musa bin Nusair, who had been his former superior. Musa's son, Abd al-Aziz ibn Musa, apparently married ], ]'s widow, and established his regional government in ]. He was suspected of being under the influence of his wife, accused of wanting to convert to Christianity, and of planning a secessionist rebellion. Apparently a concerned Al-Walid I ordered Abd al-Aziz's assassination. Caliph Al-Walid I died in 715 and was succeeded by his brother ]. Sulayman seems to have punished the surviving Musa bin Nusair, who very soon died during a pilgrimage in 716. In the end Abd al-Aziz ibn Musa's cousin, ] became the emir of ''Al-Andalus''.


Some contemporary authors{{who|date=June 2019}} consider the "''Reconquista''" proof that the process of Christian state-building in Iberia was frequently defined by the reclamation of lands that had been lost to the ] in generations past. In this way, state-building might be characterised—at least in ideological, if not practical, terms—as a process by which Iberian states were being "rebuilt".<ref name="Purkis">{{cite book |title= Eleventh- and Twelfth-Century Perspectives on State Building in the Iberian Peninsula |last= Purkis |first= William J. |year= 2010 |publisher= University of Birmingham |pages= 57–58 |access-date= 15 October 2017 |url= https://www.reading.ac.uk/web/files/GCMS/RMS-2010-05_W._J._Purkis,_Eleventh-_and_Twelfth-Century_Perspectives_on_State_Building_in_the_Iberian_Peninsula.pdf |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20171016070114/https://www.reading.ac.uk/web/files/GCMS/RMS-2010-05_W._J._Purkis,_Eleventh-_and_Twelfth-Century_Perspectives_on_State_Building_in_the_Iberian_Peninsula.pdf |archive-date= 16 October 2017 |url-status= live }}</ref> In turn, other recent historians dispute the whole concept of "''Reconquista''" as a concept created ''a posteriori'' in the service of later political goals. A few historians point out that Spain and Portugal did not previously exist as nations, and therefore the heirs of the Christian ] were not technically ''re''conquering them, as the name suggests.<ref>Eugènia de Pagès, "''La 'Reconquista', allò que mai no va existir''", ''La Lamentable'', 11 July 2014, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170828161547/http://lamentable.org/la-reconquista-allo-que-mai-no-va-existir/ |date=28 August 2017 }}</ref><ref>Martín M. Ríos Saloma, "''La Reconquista. Génesis de un mito historiográfico''", ''Historia y Grafía'', 30, 2008, pp. 191–216, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304053429/http://www.redalyc.org/pdf/589/58922939009.pdf |date=4 March 2016 }}, Retrieved 12 October 2014.</ref> One of the first Spanish intellectuals to question the idea of a "reconquest" that lasted for eight centuries was ], writing in the first half of the 20th century.<ref>"''Yo no entiendo cómo se puede llamar reconquista a una cosa que dura ocho siglos''" ("I don't understand how something that lasted eight centuries can be called a reconquest"), in ''España invertebrada''. Quoted by De Pagès, E. 11 July 2014.</ref> However, the term ''Reconquista'' is still widely in use.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Horswell |first1=Mike |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KI6lDwAAQBAJ&dq=reconquista+nowadays&pg=PT64 |title=The Crusades in the Modern World: Engaging the Crusades, Volume Two |last2=Awan |first2=Akil N. |date=2019 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-351-25046-7 |language=en}}</ref>
The conquering generals were necessarily acting very independently, due to the methods of communication available. Successful generals in the field and in a very distant province would also gain the personal loyalty of their officers and warriors and their ambitions were probably always watched by certain circles of the distant government with a certain degree of concern and suspicion. Old rivalries and perhaps even full-fledged conspiracies between rival generals may have had influence over this development. In the end, the old successful generals were replaced by a younger generation considered more loyal by the government in ].


== History and military campaigns==
A serious weakness amongst the Muslim conquerors was the ethnic tension between ] and ]s.<ref>], ''A Vanished World: Muslims, Christians, and Jews in Medieval Spain'', (Oxford University Press, 2005), 40.</ref> The Berbers were indigenous inhabitants of North Africa who had only recently been converted to Islam; they had provided most of the soldiery of the invading Islamic armies but sensed Arab discrimination against them.<ref>Roger Collins, ''Early Medieval Spain'', (St.Martin's Press, 1995), 164.</ref> This latent internal conflict jeopardized Muslim unity.


=== Background ===
After the Islamic Moorish conquest of nearly all of the Iberian Peninsula in 711-718 and the establishment of the emirate of ''Al-Andalus'', an Umayyad expedition suffered a major defeat at the ] and was halted for a while on its way north. ] had married his daughter to ], a rebel Berber and lord of ] (maybe of all current Catalonia too), in an attempt to secure his southern borders in order to fend off ]´s attacks on the north. However, a major ] led by ], the latest emir of ''Al-Andalus'', defeated and killed Uthman, and the Muslim governor mustered an expedition north across the western Pyrenees, looted areas up to Bordeaux, and defeated Odo in the ] in 732.
{{Further|Islam in Spain}}


====Landing in Visigothic Hispania and initial expansion====
A desperate Odo turned to his archrival ] for help, who led the Frankish and leftover Aquitanian armies against and defeated the Umayyad armies at the ] in 732, killing Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi. Moorish rule began to recede, but it would remain in parts of the Iberian peninsula for another 760 years.
{{Further|Umayyad conquest of Hispania|Battle of Guadalete}}


In 711, North African ] soldiers with some ]s commanded by ] crossed the ], engaging a Visigothic force led by King ] at the ] (July 19–26) in a moment of severe in-fighting and division across the ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Nick |date=2022-11-10 |title=Battle of Guadalete: 2 Reasons It Changed History |url=https://thehistoryace.com/battle-of-guadalete-2-reasons-it-changed-history/ |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=The History Ace |language=en-us}}</ref> Many of Roderic's troops deserted, leading to his defeat. He drowned while crossing the ].
===Beginning of the ''Reconquista'' ===
{{Main|Kingdom of Asturias}}
{{unreferenced section|date=January 2014}}
{{disputed section|date=January 2014}}
The year 722 saw the first ] victory against the Muslims. A drastic increase of taxes by the new emir ] had provoked several rebellions in Al-Andalus, which a series of succeeding weak emirs was unable to suppress. Around 722, a military expedition was sent into the north to suppress Pelayo's rebellion, but his forces prevailed in the ]. In late summer, a Muslim army overran much of ]'s territory, forcing him to retreat deep into the mountains. Pelayo and a few hundred men retired into a narrow valley at ]. There, they could defend against a broad frontal attack. From here, Pelayo's forces routed the Muslim army, inspiring local villagers to take up arms. Despite further attempts, the Muslims were unable to conquer Pelayo's mountain stronghold. Pelayo's ] is hailed as the beginning of the Reconquista.


After Roderic's defeat, the Umayyad governor of ] ] joined Tariq, directing a campaign against different towns and strongholds in Hispania. Some, like ], ], or ] in 712, probably ], were taken, but many agreed to a treaty in exchange for maintaining autonomy, in ]'s dominion (region of Tudmir), or ], for example.{{sfn|Collins|1989|pp=38–45}} The invading Islamic armies did not exceed 60,000 men.<ref>{{cite book|last=Fletcher|first=Richard|title=Moorish Spain|year=2006|publisher=Los Angeles: University of California Press|isbn=978-0-520-24840-3|page=|url=https://archive.org/details/moorishspain00rich/page/43}}</ref>
This battle was considered by the Muslims as little more than a skirmish, since no Muslim source mentions it, while the ], with a death toll of maybe tens of thousands, was mourned for centuries as a large scale tragedy by the Iberian Muslims. However, for Pelayo, the Christian victory secured his independent rule. The precise date and circumstances of this battle are unclear. Among the possibilities is that Pelayo's rebellion was successful because the greater part of the Muslim forces were gathering for an invasion of the Frankish empire.
]. ], Spain. Depicting ]]]


====Islamic rule====
During the first decades, Asturian control over the different areas of the kingdom was still weak, and for this reason it had to be continually strengthened through matrimonial alliances with other powerful families from the north of the Iberian Peninsula. Thus, "Ermesinda, Pelayo's daughter, was married to Alfonso, Peter of Cantabria's son. Alphonse's children, Froila and Adosinda, married Munia, a Basque from Alava, and Silo, a local chief from the area of Pravia, respectively." <ref>(quote from 'The making of medieval Spain'),</ref>
{{Main|Berbers and Islam|Berber Revolt|}}
] in the early 10th century]]
After the establishment of a local ], ] ], ruler of the ], removed many of the successful Muslim commanders. Tariq ibn Ziyad was recalled to ] and replaced with Musa ibn-Nusayr, who had been his former superior. Musa's son, Abd al-Aziz ibn Musa, apparently married ], ]'s widow, and established his regional government in ]. He was suspected of being under the influence of his wife and was accused of wanting to convert to Christianity and of planning a secessionist rebellion. Apparently a concerned Al-Walid I ordered Abd al-Aziz's assassination. Caliph Al-Walid I died in 715 and was succeeded by his brother ]. Sulayman seems to have punished the surviving Musa ibn-Nusayr, who very soon died during a pilgrimage in 716. In the end, Abd al-Aziz ibn Musa's cousin, ] became the ''wali'' (governor) of al-Andalus.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}}


A serious weakness amongst the Muslim conquerors was the ethnic tension between Berbers and Arabs.<ref>], ''A Vanished World: Muslims, Christians, and Jews in Medieval Spain'', (Oxford University Press, 2005), 40.</ref> The Berbers were indigenous inhabitants of North Africa who had only recently converted to Islam; they provided most of the soldiery of the invading Islamic armies but sensed Arab discrimination against them.<ref>Roger Collins, ''Early Medieval Spain'', (St. Martin's Press, 1995), 164.</ref> This latent internal conflict jeopardised Umayyad unity. The Umayyad forces arrived and crossed the Pyrenees by 719. The last Visigothic king ] resisted them in Septimania, where he fended off the Berber-Arab armies until 720.<ref>{{cite book | author = Collins, Roger| year = 1989 | title = The Arab Conquest of Spain 710–797 | publisher = Blackwell |location = Oxford, UK / Cambridge, US|isbn= 978-0-631-19405-7|page=45}}</ref>
After Pelayo's death in 737, his son ] was elected king. Favila, according to the chronicles, was killed by a bear during a trial of courage.


After the Islamic Moorish conquest of most of the Iberian Peninsula in 711–718 and the establishment of the emirate of al-Andalus, an Umayyad expedition suffered a major defeat at the ] and was halted for a while on its way north. ] had married his daughter to ], a rebel Berber and lord of ], in an attempt to secure his southern borders in order to fend off ]'s attacks on the north. However, a major ] led by ], the latest emir of al-Andalus, defeated and killed Uthman, and the Muslim governor mustered an expedition north across the western Pyrenees, looted areas up to Bordeaux, and defeated Odo in the ] in 732.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Reconquista {{!}} Map and Timeline |url=https://history-maps.com/story/Reconquista |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=HistoryMaps |language=en}}</ref>
Pelayo's dynasty in Asturias survived and gradually expanded the kingdom's boundaries until all of northwest Iberia was included by roughly 775. However, credit is due not to him but to his successors. Alfonso I (king from 739-757) rallied Galician support when driving the Moorish army out of Galicia and an area of what was to become Leon. The reign of Alfonso II (from 791-842) saw further expansion of the northwest kingdom towards the south and, for a short time, it almost reached Lisbon.


A desperate Odo turned to his archrival Charles Martel for help, who led the Frankish and remaining Aquitanian armies against the Umayyad armies and defeated them at the ] in 732, killing Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi. While Moorish rule began to recede in what is today France, it would remain in parts of the Iberian peninsula for another 760 years.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Trawinski |first1=Allan |title=The Clash of Civilizations |year= 2017 |publisher=Page Publishing Inc. |isbn=978-1635687125}}{{page needed|date=May 2023}}</ref>
It was not until Alfonso II that the kingdom was firmly established with Alfonso's recognition as king of Asturias by Charlemagne and the Pope. During his reign, the bones of ] were declared (falsely<ref>T. D. Kendrick, ''Saint James in Spain'', London, Methuen, 1960, no ISBN (predates system).</ref>) to have been found in Galicia, at ]. Pilgrims from all over Europe opened a channel of communication between the isolated Asturias and the Carolingian lands and beyond.


===Early Reconquista===
The two resistances, Navarre and Asturias, despite their small size, demonstrated an ability to maintain their independence. Because the Umayyad rulers based in ] were unable to extend their power over the Pyrenees, they decided to consolidate their power within the Iberian peninsula. Arab-Berber forces made periodic incursions deep into Asturias but failed to make any lasting gains against the strengthened Christian kingdoms.
==== Beginning of the ''Reconquista'' ====
{{Main|Kingdom of Asturias}}
A drastic increase of taxes on Christians by the emir ] provoked several rebellions in al-Andalus, which a series of succeeding weak emirs were unable to suppress. Around 722, a Muslim military expedition was sent into the north in late summer to suppress a rebellion led by ] (Pelayo in Spanish, Pelayu in Asturian). Traditional historiography has hailed Pelagius's ] as the beginning of the ''Reconquista''.<ref>{{Citation |title=Covadonga, la batalla que cambió la historia de España |date=2022-05-27 |url=https://www.rtve.es/play/videos/panorama-regional/covadonga-la-batalla-que-cambio-la-historia-de-espana/6549431/ |language=es |access-date=2022-08-11}}</ref>


Two northern realms, Navarre<ref>{{cite book | author = Collins, Roger| year = 1989 | title = The Arab Conquest of Spain 710–797 | publisher = Blackwell |location = Oxford, UK / Cambridge, US|isbn= 978-0-631-19405-7|page=181}}</ref> and Asturias, despite their small size, demonstrated an ability to maintain their independence. Because the Umayyad rulers based in ] were unable to extend their power over the Pyrenees, they decided to consolidate their power within the Iberian peninsula. Arab-Berber forces made periodic incursions deep into Asturias, but this area was a ''cul-de-sac'' on the fringes of the Islamic world fraught with inconveniences during campaigns and of little interest.<ref>{{cite book | author = Collins, Roger| year = 1989 | title = The Arab Conquest of Spain 710–797 | publisher = Blackwell |location = Oxford, UK / Cambridge, US|isbn= 978-0-631-19405-7|page=156}}</ref>
===Franks and ''Al-Andalus''===
{{Main|Islamic invasion of Gaul|Marca Hispanica}}
After the Umayyad conquest of the Iberian heartland of the Visigothic kingdom, the Muslims crossed the Pyrenees and gradually took control of ] starting in 719 (Narbonne conquered) up to 725 (Carcassone, Nîmes). From its stronghold of Narbonne, they tried to conquer ] but suffered a major defeat at the ].


It comes then as no surprise that, besides focusing on raiding the Arab-Berber strongholds of the Meseta, ] centred on expanding his domains at the expense of the neighbouring Galicians and Basques at either side of his realm just as much.<ref>{{cite book | author = Collins, Roger| year = 1989 | title = The Arab Conquest of Spain 710–797 | publisher = Blackwell |location = Oxford, UK / Cambridge, US|isbn= 978-0-631-19405-7|pages=156, 159}}</ref> During the first decades, Asturian control over part of the kingdom was weak, and for this reason it had to be continually strengthened through matrimonial alliances and war with other peoples from the north of the Iberian Peninsula. After Pelayo's death in 737, his son ] was elected king. Favila, according to the chronicles, was killed by a bear during a trial of courage. Pelayo's dynasty in Asturias survived and gradually expanded the kingdom's boundaries until all of northwest Hispania was included by roughly 775. However, credit is due to him and to his successors, the ''Banu Alfons'' from the Arab chronicles. Further expansion of the northwestern kingdom towards the south occurred during the reign of ] (from 791 to 842). A king's expedition arrived in and pillaged Lisbon in 798, probably concerted with the Carolingians.<ref>{{cite book | author = Collins, Roger| year = 1989 | title = The Arab Conquest of Spain 710–797 | publisher = Blackwell |location = Oxford, UK / Cambridge, US|isbn= 978-0-631-19405-7|page=212}}</ref>
]
After halting their advance north, ten years later, ] married his daughter to ], a rebel Berber and lord of ] (maybe of all current Catalonia too), in an attempt to secure his southern borders in order to fend off ]'s attacks on the north. However, a major ] led by ], the latest emir of Al-Andalus, defeated and killed Uthman.


The Asturian kingdom became firmly established with the recognition of Alfonso II as king of Asturias by ] and the Pope. During his reign, the bones of ] were declared to have been found in Galicia, at ]. Pilgrims from all over Europe opened a channel of communication between the isolated Asturias and the Carolingian lands and beyond, centuries later.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-07-31 |title=The Way of St. James – Bodega Tandem |url=https://tandem.es/en/camino/ |access-date=2022-08-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210731161327/https://tandem.es/en/camino/ |archive-date=31 July 2021 }}</ref>
==== Charles Martel ====
The Umayyad governor mustered an expedition north across the western Pyrenees, looted its way up to Bordeaux and defeated Odo in the ] in 732. A desperate Odo turned to his archrival ] for help, who led the Frankish and remaining Aquitanian armies against the Muslims and beat them at the ] in 732, killing Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi.


====Frankish invasions====
In 737 Charles Martel led an expedition south down the Rhone Valley to assert his authority up to the lands held by the Al-Andalus Umayyads. These had been called in by the regional nobility of Provence in a military capacity, probably fearing Charles' expansionist ambitions. Charles went on to attack the Umayyads in Septimania up to Narbonne, but he had to lift the siege of the city and make his way back to Lyon and ] (at the time north of the lower Loire) after subduing various Umayyad strongholds, such as Arles, Avignon and Nîmes, not without leaving behind a trail of ruined towns and strongholds.
{{Main|Umayyad invasion of Gaul|Marca Hispanica}}


After the Umayyad conquest of the Iberian heartland of the Visigothic kingdom, the Muslims crossed the Pyrenees and gradually took control of ], starting in 719 with the conquest of ] through 725 when ] and ] were secured. From the stronghold of Narbonne, they tried to conquer ] but suffered a major defeat at the ].<ref name="Lewis AR 20-33">{{cite book|title=The Development of Southern French and Catalan Society, 718–1050|last=Lewis|first=Archibald R.|author-link=Archibald Ross Lewis|year=1965|publisher=The University of Texas Press|pages=20–33|access-date=28 October 2017|url=http://libro.uca.edu/lewis/sfcatsoc.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171211183903/http://libro.uca.edu/lewis/sfcatsoc.htm|archive-date=11 December 2017|url-status=live}}</ref>
==== Pepin the Younger and Charlemagne ====
After expelling the Muslims ] and driving their forces back over the Pyrenees, the Carolingian king ] in a ruthless eight-year war. Charlemagne followed his father by subduing Aquitaine by creating counties, taking the Church as his ally and appointing counts of Frankish or Burgundian stock, like his loyal ], making ] his base for expeditions against Al-Andalus.


Ten years after halting their advance north, ] married his daughter to ], a rebel Berber and lord of ] (perhaps all of contemporary Catalonia as well), in an attempt to secure his southern borders to fend off ]'s attacks on the north. However, a major ] led by ], the latest emir of al-Andalus, defeated and killed Uthman.<ref name="Lewis AR 20-33"/>
Charlemagne decided to organize a regional subkingdom in order to keep the Aquitanians in check and to secure the southern border of the ] against Muslim incursions. In 781, his three-year-old son ] was crowned king of ], under the supervision of Charlemagne's trustee William of Gellone, and was nominally in charge of the incipient ].


After expelling the Muslims ] and driving their forces back over the Pyrenees, the Carolingian king ] in a ruthless eight-year war. Charlemagne followed his father by subduing Aquitaine by creating counties, taking the Church as his ally and appointing counts of Frankish or Burgundian stock, like his loyal ], making ] his base for expeditions against al-Andalus.<ref name="Lewis AR 20-33"/> Charlemagne decided to organize a regional subkingdom, the ], which included part of contemporary ], in order to keep the Aquitanians in check and to secure the southern border of the ] against Muslim incursions. In 781, his three-year-old son ] was crowned king of ], under the supervision of Charlemagne's trustee William of Gellone, and was nominally in charge of the incipient Spanish March.<ref name="Lewis AR 20-33"/>
Meanwhile, the takeover of the southern fringes of Al-Andalus by Abd ar-Rahman I in 756 was opposed by ], autonomous governor ('']'') or king (''malik'') of al-Andalus. Abd ar-Rahman I expelled Yusuf from Cordova, but it took still decades for him to expand to the north-western Andalusian districts. He was also opposed externally by the ] of Damascus who failed in their attempts to overthrow him.


In 778, Abd al-Rahman closed in on the Ebro valley. Regional lords saw the Umayyad emir on the gates and decided to enlist the nearby Christian Franks. According to ], a Kurdish historian of the 12th century, ] received the envoys of ], Husayn, and ] at the Diet of Paderborn in 777. These rulers of ], ], ], and ] were enemies of Abd ar-Rahman I, and in return for Frankish military aid against him offered their homage and allegiance. Meanwhile, the takeover of the southern fringes of al-Andalus by Abd ar-Rahman I in 756 was opposed by ], autonomous governor ('']'') or king (''malik'') of al-Andalus. Abd ar-Rahman I expelled Yusuf from Cordova,<ref>{{cite book | author = Collins, Roger| year = 1989 | title = The Arab Conquest of Spain 710–797 | publisher = Blackwell |location = Oxford, UK / Cambridge, US|isbn= 978-0-631-19405-7|pages=118–126}}</ref> but it took still decades for him to expand to the north-western Andalusian districts. He was also opposed externally by the ] of Baghdad who failed in their attempts to overthrow him. In 778, Abd al-Rahman closed in on the Ebro valley. Regional lords saw the Umayyad emir at the gates and decided to enlist the nearby Christian Franks. According to ], a Kurdish historian of the 12th century, Charlemagne received the envoys of ], Husayn, and ] at the Diet of Paderborn in 777. These rulers of ], ], ], and ] were enemies of Abd ar-Rahman I, and in return for Frankish military aid against him offered their homage and allegiance.<ref name="Collins, Roger 1989 177–181">{{cite book | author = Collins, Roger| year = 1989 | title = The Arab Conquest of Spain 710–797 | publisher = Blackwell |location = Oxford, UK / Cambridge, US|isbn= 978-0-631-19405-7|pages=177–181}}</ref>


]
Charlemagne, seeing an opportunity, agreed upon an expedition and crossed the Pyrenees in 778. Near the city of ] Charlemagne received the homage of ]. However the city, under the leadership of ], closed its gates and refused to submit. Unable to conquer the city by force, Charlemagne decided to retreat. On the way home the rearguard of the army was ambushed and destroyed by local forces at the ]. ], a highly romanticized account of this battle, would later become one of the most famous ] of the Middle Ages.
Charlemagne, seeing an opportunity, agreed upon an expedition and crossed the Pyrenees in 778. Near the city of ] Charlemagne received the homage of ]. However the city, under the leadership of ], closed its gates and refused to submit.<ref name="Collins, Roger 1989 177–181"/> Unable to conquer the city by force, Charlemagne decided to retreat. On the way home the rearguard of the army was ambushed and destroyed by Basque forces at the ]. '']'', a highly romanticised account of this battle, would later become one of the most famous {{lang|fro|]}} of the Middle Ages. Around 788 Abd ar-Rahman I died and was succeeded by ]. In 792 Hisham proclaimed a ], advancing in 793 against the ] and Carolingian ]. They defeated William of Gellone, Count of Toulouse, in battle, but ] led an expedition the following year across the eastern Pyrenees. ], a major city, became a potential target for the Franks in 797, as its governor Zeid rebelled against the Umayyad emir of Córdoba. An army of the emir managed to recapture it in 799, but Louis, at the head of an army, crossed the Pyrenees and ] until it finally capitulated in 801.<ref name="Lewis AR 37-49">{{cite book|title=The Development of Southern French and Catalan Society, 718–1050|last=Lewis|first=Archibald R.|author-link=Archibald Ross Lewis|year=1965|publisher=The University of Texas Press|pages=37–49|access-date=28 October 2017|url=http://libro.uca.edu/lewis/sfcatsoc.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171211183903/http://libro.uca.edu/lewis/sfcatsoc.htm|archive-date=11 December 2017|url-status=live}} It took place on 28 December 801.</ref>


The main passes in the Pyrenees were ], ] and ]. Charlemagne established across them the vassal regions of ], ], and ] respectively. Catalonia was itself formed from a number of ], including ], ], and ]; it was called the ''Marca Hispanica'' by the late 8th century. They protected the eastern Pyrenees passes and shores and were under the direct control of the Frankish kings. Pamplona's first king was ], who allied with his Muslim kinsmen the ] and rebelled against Frankish overlordship and overcame a ] that led to the setup of the ]. Aragon, founded in 809 by ], grew around ] and the high valleys of the ], protecting the old Roman road. By the end of the 10th century, Aragon, which then was just a county, was annexed by Navarre. Sobrarbe and Ribagorza were small counties and had little significance to the progress of the ''Reconquista''.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Archaeology |url=https://perennialpyrenees.com/category/archaeology/ |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=Perennial Pyrenees |language=en}}</ref>
Around 788 Abd ar-Rahman I died, and was succeeded by ]. In 792 Hisham proclaimed a ], advancing in 793 against the ] and the Franks. In the end his efforts were turned back by ], Count of Toulouse.


In the late 9th century under ], Barcelona became the ''de facto'' capital of the region. It controlled the other counties' policies in a union, which led in 948 to the independence of Barcelona under ], who declared that the new dynasty in France (the ]s) were not the legitimate rulers of France nor, as a result, of his county. These states were small and, with the exception of Navarre, did not have the capacity for attacking the Muslims in the way that Asturias did, but their mountainous geography rendered them relatively safe from being conquered, and their borders remained stable for two centuries.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Counts – The Origins of Catalonia |url=https://www.autentic.com/65/pid/880/Counts-The-Origins-of-Catalonia.htm |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.autentic.com}}</ref>
], a major city, became a potential target for the Franks in 797, as its governor Zeid rebelled against the Umayyad emir of Córdoba. An army of the emir managed to recapture it in 799 but Louis, at the head of an army, crossed the Pyrenees and besieged the city for two years until the city finally capitulated on December 28, 801.


===Northern Christian realms===
The main passes were ], ] and ]. Charlemagne established across them the vassal regions of ], ] and ] (which was itself formed from a number of small counties, ], ], and ] being the most prominent) respectively.
{{see also|Spain in the Middle Ages#Medieval Christian Spain|Portugal in the Middle Ages#Reconquista in Portugal}}
The northern principalities and kingdoms survived in their mountainous strongholds (see above). However, they started a definite territorial expansion south at the turn of the 10th century (Leon, Najera). The fall of the Caliphate of Cordova (1031) heralded a period of military expansion for the northern kingdoms, now divided into several mighty regional powers after the division of the Kingdom of Navarre (1035). Myriad autonomous Christian kingdoms emerged thereafter.<ref>{{cite web |title=Kingdom of Navarre |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Kingdom-of-Navarre |website=Encyclopedia Britannica |access-date=27 October 2022}}</ref>


====Kingdom of Asturias (718–924)====
Four small realms pledged allegiance to Charlemagne at the start of the 9th century (not for long): ] (to become ]) and the counties of ], ] and ]. Pamplona's first king was ], who allying with his Muslim kinsmen the ] rebelled against Frankish overlordship, and overcame a Frankish expedition in 824 that led to the setup of the Kingdom of Pamplona. It was not until ] in the 9th century that Pamplona was officially recognised as an independent kingdom by the ]. Aragon, founded in 809 by ], grew around Jaca and the high valleys of the ], protecting the old Roman road. By the end of the 10th century, Aragon was annexed by Navarre. Sobrarbe and Ribagorza were small counties and had little significance to the progress of the ''Reconquista''.
{{Main|Kingdom of Asturias}}
{{See also|Kingdom of Galicia|Duchy of Cantabria}}
The Kingdom of Asturias was located in the ], a wet and mountainous region in the north of the Iberian Peninsula. It was the first Christian power to emerge. The kingdom was established by a Visigothic nobleman, named Pelagius (''Pelayo''), who had possibly returned after the Battle of Guadalete in 711 and was elected leader of the Asturians,<ref name="Peña p. 27">Ruiz De La Peña. La monarquia asturiana 718–910, p. 27. Cangas de Onís, 2000. {{ISBN|9788460630364}} / Fernández Conde. Estudios Sobre La Monarquía Asturiana, pp. 35–76. Estudios Históricos La Olmeda, 2015. {{ISBN|978-8497048057}}</ref> and the remnants of the ''gens Gothorum'' (the Hispano-Gothic aristocracy and the Hispano-Visigothic population who took refuge in the North). Historian Joseph F. O'Callaghan says an unknown number of them fled and took refuge in Asturias or Septimania. In Asturias they supported Pelagius's uprising, and joining with the indigenous leaders, formed a new ].


The population of the mountain region consisted of native Astures, Galicians, Cantabri, Basques and other groups unassimilated into Hispano-Gothic society,<ref name="O'Callaghan2013176">{{cite book|author=Joseph F. O'Callaghan|title=A History of Medieval Spain|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cq2dDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA176|year=2013|publisher=Cornell University Press|isbn=978-0-8014-6872-8|page=176}}</ref> laying the foundations for the Kingdom of Asturias and starting the ] that spanned from 718 to 1037 and led the initial efforts in the Iberian peninsula to take back the territories then ruled by the Moors.<ref name="Peña p. 27"/> Although the new dynasty first ruled in the mountains of Asturias, with the capital of the kingdom established initially in ], and was in its dawn mostly concerned with securing the territory and settling the monarchy, the latest kings (particularly ]) emphasised the nature of the new kingdom as heir of that in ] and the restoration of the Visigothic nation in order to vindicate the expansion to the south.<ref>Casariego, J.E.: ''Crónicas de los reinos de Asturias y León''. Biblioteca Universitaria Everest, León 1985, p. 68. {{ASIN|B00I78R3S4}}{{ISBN missing}}</ref> However, such claims have been overall dismissed by modern historiography, emphasizing the distinct, autochthonous nature of the Cantabro-Asturian and Vasconic domains with no continuation to the Gothic Kingdom of Toledo.<ref>García Fitz, Francisco. 2009, pp. 149–150</ref>
The ] protected the eastern Pyrenees passes and shores. They were under the direct control of the Frankish kings and were the last remains of the Spanish Marches. ] included not only the southern Pyrenees counties of Girona, Pallars, Urgell, ] and ] but also some which were on the northern side of the mountains, such as ] and ].


Pelagius's kingdom initially was little more than a gathering point for the existing guerrilla forces. During the first decades, the Asturian dominion over the different areas of the kingdom was still lax, and for this reason it had to be continually strengthened through matrimonial alliances with other powerful families from the north of the Iberian Peninsula. Thus, Ermesinda, Pelagius's daughter, was married to ], ]'s son. Alfonso's son ] married Munia, a Basque from ], after crushing a Basque uprising (probably resistance). Their son is reported to be ], while Alfonso I's daughter Adosinda married Silo, a local chief from the area of Flavionavia, Pravia.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-01-02 |title=What was the Reconquista? – Boot Camp & Military Fitness Institute |url=https://bootcampmilitaryfitnessinstitute.com/2021/01/02/what-was-the-reconquista/ |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=bootcampmilitaryfitnessinstitute.com |language=en-GB}}</ref>
In the late 9th century under ], Barcelona became the ''de facto'' capital of the region. It controlled the other counties' policies in a union, which led in 948 to the independence of Barcelona under ], who declared that the new dynasty in France (the ]s) were not the legitimate rulers of France nor, as a result, of his county.


Alfonso's military strategy was typical of Iberian warfare at the time. Lacking the means needed for wholesale conquest of large territories, his tactics consisted of raids in the border regions of ]. With the plunder he gained further military forces could be paid, enabling him to raid the Muslim cities of ], ], and ]. Alfonso I also expanded his realm westwards conquering ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=O'Callaghan |first=Joseph F. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cq2dDgAAQBAJ&pg=PA176 |title=A History of Medieval Spain |year=2013 |publisher=Cornell University Press |isbn=978-0-8014-6872-8 |language=en}}</ref>
These states were small and, with the exception of Navarre, did not have the capacity for attacking the Muslims in the way that Asturias did, but their mountainous geography rendered them relatively safe from being conquered. Their borders remained stable for two centuries.


] depicted as ]. Legend of the ''Reconquista''|alt=]]
==Military culture in medieval Iberia==
{{unreferenced section|date=December 2012}}
], ] Sultan of ], at the ], 1431]]
In a situation of constant conflict, warfare and daily life were strongly interlinked during this period. Small, lightly equipped armies reflected how the society had to be on the alert at all times. These forces were capable of moving long distances in short times, allowing a quick return home after sacking a target. Battles which took place were mainly between clans, expelling intruder armies or sacking expeditions.


During the reign of ] (791–842), the kingdom was firmly established, and a series of Muslim raids caused the transfer of the Asturian capital to ]. The king is believed to have initiated diplomatic contacts with the kings of ] and the ]s, thereby gaining official recognition for his kingdom and his crown from the ] and ].<ref>{{Cite web |date=2022-03-24 |title=Alfonso II, Charlemagne and the Jacobean Cult (full text in Spanish) |url=http://oppidum.es/oppidum-17/opp17.12_larranaga_alfonso.ii,.carlomagno.y.el.culto.jacobeo.pdf |access-date=2022-08-11 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220324174530/http://oppidum.es/oppidum-17/opp17.12_larranaga_alfonso.ii,.carlomagno.y.el.culto.jacobeo.pdf |archive-date=24 March 2022 }}</ref>
In the context of the relative isolation of the Iberian Peninsula from the rest of Europe, and the contact with Moorish culture, geographical and cultural differences implied the use of military strategies, tactics and equipment that were markedly different from those found in the rest of western Europe during this period.


The ] of St. ] were proclaimed to have been found in Iria Flavia (present day ]) in 813 or probably two or three decades later. The cult of the saint was transferred later to ] (from Latin ''campus stellae'', literally "the star field"), possibly in the early 10th century when the focus of Asturian power moved from the mountains over to Leon, to become the ] or Galicia-Leon. Santiago's were among many saint relics proclaimed to have been found across north-western Hispania. Pilgrims started to flow in from other Iberian Christian realms, sowing the seeds of the later ] (11–12th century) that sparked the enthusiasm and religious zeal of continental ] for centuries.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
Medieval Iberian armies mainly comprised two types of forces: the cavalry (mostly nobles, but including commoner knights from 10th century on) and the infantry, or ''peones'' (peasants). Infantry only went to war if needed, which was not common.


Despite numerous battles, neither the Umayyads nor the Asturians had sufficient forces to secure control over these northern territories. Under the reign of ], famed for the highly legendary ], the border began to slowly move southward and Asturian holdings in ], Galicia, and ] were fortified, and an intensive program of re-population of the countryside began in those territories. In 924 the Kingdom of Asturias became the ], when Leon became the seat of the royal court (it didn't bear any official name).<ref>{{cite book | author = Collins, Roger| year = 1983 | title = Early Medieval Spain | publisher = St. Martin's Press |location = New York|isbn= 0-312-22464-8|page = 238}}</ref>
=== Cavalry and infantry ===
Iberian ] involved knights approaching the enemy and throwing ]s, before withdrawing to a safe distance before commencing another assault. Once the enemy formation was sufficiently weakened, the knights charged with thrusting ]s (]s did not arrive in Hispania until the 11th century). There were three types of knights: royal knights, noble knights ('']'') and commoner knights ('']''). Royal knights were mainly nobles with a close relationship with the king, and thus claimed a direct Gothic inheritance.


====Kingdom of León (910–1230)====
Royal knights were equipped in the same manner as their ] predecessors—braceplate, kite shield, a long ] (designed to fight from the horse) and as well as the javelins and spears, a ]. Noble knights came from the ranks of the ''infanzones'' or lower nobles, whereas the commoner knights were not noble, but were wealthy enough to afford a horse. Uniquely in Europe, these horsemen comprised a militia cavalry force with no feudal links, being under the sole control of the king or the count of ] because of the "]s" (or '']''). Both noble and common knights wore leather armour and carried javelins, spears and round-tasselled shields (influenced by Moorish shields), as well as a sword.
{{Main|Kingdom of León|Kingdom of Galicia|County of Portugal|Portugal in the Reconquista}}
] repopulated the strategically important city ] and established it as his capital. King Alfonso began a series of campaigns to establish control over all the lands north of the ] river. He reorganised his territories into the major duchies (] and Portugal) and major counties (] and Castile), and fortified the borders with many castles. At his death in 910 the shift in regional power was completed as the kingdom became the ]. From this power base, his heir ] was able to organize attacks against ] and even ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Chapter Four |url=http://somosprimos.com/michaelperez/ribera4/ribera4.htm |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=somosprimos.com}}</ref>


The ] was gaining power, and began to attack Leon. King Ordoño allied with Navarre against Abd-al-Rahman, but they were ] in 920. For the next 80 years, the Kingdom of León suffered civil wars, Moorish attack, internal intrigues and assassinations, and the partial independence of Galicia and Castile, thus delaying the reconquest and weakening the Christian forces. It was not until the following century that the Christians started to see their conquests as part of a long-term effort to restore the unity of the Visigothic kingdom.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
The ''peones'' were ] who went to battle in service of their ] lord. Poorly equipped, with bows and arrows, spears and short swords, they were mainly used as auxiliary troops. Their function in battle was to contain the enemy troops until the cavalry arrived and to block the enemy infantry from charging the knights.


The only point during this period when the situation became hopeful for Leon was the reign of ]. King Ramiro, in alliance with ] and his retinue of ''caballeros villanos'', ] in 939. After this battle, when the Caliph barely escaped with his guard and the rest of the army was destroyed, King Ramiro obtained 12 years of peace, but he had to give González the independence of Castile as payment for his help in the battle. After this defeat, Moorish attacks abated until ] began his campaigns. ] finally regained control over his domains in 1002. Navarre, though attacked by Almanzor, remained intact.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Fernán González {{!}} count of Castile {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Fernan-Gonzalez |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>
The ], the ] and the ] are the basic types of bows and especially popular in infantry.


The conquest of Leon did not include Galicia which was left to temporary independence after the withdrawal of the Leonese king. Galicia was conquered soon after (by Ferdinand, son of Sancho the Great, around 1038). Subsequent kings titled themselves kings of Galicia and Leon, instead of merely king of Leon as the two were in a ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sancho III (king of Navarre) {{!}} Encyclopedia.com |url=https://www.encyclopedia.com/reference/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/sancho-iii-king-navarre |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.encyclopedia.com}}</ref>
Typically armour was made of leather, with iron scales; full coats of ] were extremely rare and horse ] completely unknown. Head protections consisted of a round helmet with nose protector (influenced by the designs used by ]s who attacked during the 8th and 9th centuries) and a chain mail headpiece. Shields were often round or kidney-shaped, except for the kite-shaped designs used by the royal knights. Usually adorned with geometric designs, crosses or tassels, shields were made out of wood and had a leather cover.


At the end of the 11th century, King ] reached the Tagus (1085), repeating the same policy of alliances and developing collaboration with ] knights. The original '']'' was then complete. His aim was to create a Hispanic empire like the ] (418–720) to reclaim his hegemony over the entire ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=El yermo estratégico del Desierto del Duero – Observatorio de Seguridad y Defensa |url=https://observatorio.cisde.es/archivo/el-yermo-estrategico-del-desierto-del-duero/ |access-date=2024-03-19 |language=es-ES}}</ref> Within this context, the territory between the ] and the ] was repopulated and a western nucleus was formed in ].<ref name=":02">Porto Editora – Reconquista Cristã na Infopédia . Porto: Porto Editora. . Disponível em https://www.infopedia.pt/$reconquista-crista</ref> This marks the beginning of the ] occurred during the reigns of the ] up to the middle of the thirteenth century when the ] was also brought to an end with the ultimate conquering of ] when in March 1249 the city of ] was conquered by ].<ref name=":12">{{Cite web |title=Reconquista Cristã |url=https://historiaonline.com/glossario/reconquista-crista/ |access-date=2024-03-19 |website=História Online |language=pt-PT}}</ref><ref name=":02" /><ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last=Higounet |first=Charles |date=1953 |title=La Reconquista española y la repoblación del país. Escuela de estudios medievales, Inst. de Estudios pirenaicos |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/hispa_0007-4640_1953_num_55_2_3359_t1_0206_0000_2 |journal=Bulletin Hispanique |volume=55 |issue=2 |pages=206–208}}</ref><ref name=":32">{{Cite web |title=Reconquista española: qué fue y sus características |url=https://humanidades.com/reconquista-espanola/ |access-date=2024-03-19 |website=humanidades.com/ |language=es-ES}}</ref><ref name=":42">{{Cite web |title=Reconquista da Península Ibérica – Conheça a História |url=https://www.brasilparalelo.com.br/artigos/reconquista-da-peninsula-iberica |access-date=2024-03-19 |website=www.brasilparalelo.com.br |language=pt}}</ref>
Steel swords were the most common weapon. The cavalry used long double-edged swords and the infantry short, single-edged ones. Guards were either semicircular or straight, but always highly ornamented with geometrical patterns. The spears and javelins were up to 1.5 metres long and had an iron tip. The double-axe, made of iron and 30&nbsp;cm long and possessing an extremely sharp edge, was designed to be equally useful as a thrown weapon or in close combat. Maces and hammers were not common, but some specimens have remained, and are thought to have been used by members of the cavalry.


====Kingdom of Castile (1037–1230)====
Finally, mercenaries were an important factor, as many kings did not have enough soldiers available. The ], the ] spearmen, the Frankish knights, the Moorish mounted archers and Berber light cavalry were the main types of mercenary available and used in the conflict.
{{Main|Kingdom of Castile}}
] by ], at the ]]]
] was the leading king of the mid-11th century. He conquered ] and attacked the ] kingdoms, often demanding the tributes known as ]. Ferdinand's strategy was to continue to demand parias until the taifa was greatly weakened both militarily and financially. He also repopulated the Borders with numerous ''fueros''. Following the Navarrese tradition, on his death in 1064 he divided his kingdom between his sons. His son ] wanted to reunite the kingdom of his father and attacked his brothers, with a young noble at his side: Rodrigo Díaz, later known as ]. Sancho was killed in the siege of ] by the traitor Bellido Dolfos (also known as Vellido Adolfo) in 1072. His brother ] took over Leon, Castile and Galicia.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ferdinand I {{!}} king of Castile and Leon {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Ferdinand-I-king-of-Castile-and-Leon |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>


Alfonso VI the Brave gave more power to the ''fueros'' and repopulated ], ] and ]. Once he had secured the Borders, King Alfonso conquered the powerful ] in 1085. ], which was the former capital of the Visigoths, was a very important landmark, and the conquest made Alfonso renowned throughout the ]. However, this "conquest" was conducted rather gradually, and mostly peacefully, during the course of several decades.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Alfonso VI {{!}} Biography, Facts, & Children {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Alfonso-VI |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> However, Toledo was not fully secured and integrated into Alfonso's kingdom until after a period of gradual resettlement and consolidation, during which Christian settlers were encouraged to move into the area.
=== Technological changes ===
This style of warfare remained dominant in the Iberian Peninsula until the late 11th century, when couched lance tactics entered from France, although the traditional horse javelin-shot techniques continued to be used. In the 12th and 13th centuries, soldiers typically carried a sword, a lance, a javelin, and either bow and arrows or crossbow and darts/bolts. Armor consisted of a coat of mail over a quilted jacket, extending at least to the knees, a helmet or iron cap, and bracers protecting the arms and thighs, either metal or leather.


Alfonso VI was first and foremost a tactful monarch who chose to understand the kings of taifa and employed unprecedented diplomatic measures to attain political feats before considering the use of force. He adopted the title '']'' ("Emperor of all ]", referring to all the Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula, and not just the modern country of Spain). Alfonso's more aggressive policy towards the taifas worried the rulers of those kingdoms, who called on the African ]s for help.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Ampuero |first=Marcelo E. Fuentes |date=May 2018 |title=An Empire of Two Religions: Muslims as Allies, Enemies, and Subjects in the Literature of the Iberian Christian Kingdoms |url=https://conservancy.umn.edu/bitstream/handle/11299/215162/Fuentes_umn_0130E_19269.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230616173625/https://conservancy.umn.edu/bitstream/handle/11299/215162/Fuentes_umn_0130E_19269.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y |archive-date=June 16, 2023 |access-date=June 16, 2023}}</ref>
Shields were round or triangular, made of wood, covered with leather, and protected by an iron band; the shields of knights and nobles would bear the family's coat of arms. Knights rode in both the Muslim style, ''a la jineta'' (i.e. the equivalent of a modern jockey's seat), a short stirrup strap and bended knees allowed for better control and speed, or in the French style, ''a la brida'', a long stirrup strap allowed for more security in the saddle (i.e. the equivalent of the modern cavalry seat, which is more secure) when acting as heavy cavalry. Horses were occasionally fitted with a coat of mail as well.


==== Kingdom of Navarre (824–1620) ====
==Expansion into the Crusades and military orders==
{{Main|Kingdom of Navarre}}
In the ], the fight against the Moors in the Iberian Peninsula became linked to the fight of the whole of ]. The Reconquista was originally a mere war of conquest. It only later underwent a significant shift in meaning toward a religiously justified war of liberation (see the Augustinian concept of a ]). The ] and the influential ] in Burgundy not only justified the acts of war but actively encouraged Christian knights to seek armed confrontation with Moorish "infidels" instead of with each other.
The ] primarily extended along either side of the Pyrenees on the Atlantic Ocean. The kingdom was formed when local leader Íñigo Arista led a revolt against the regional Frankish authority and was elected or declared King in Pamplona (traditionally in 824), establishing a kingdom inextricably linked at this stage to their kinsmen, the ] ] of Tudela.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Iñigo Arista {{!}} Basque ruler {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Inigo-Arista |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>


Although relatively weak until the early 11th century, Pamplona took a more active role after the accession of ] (1004–1035). The kingdom expanded greatly under his reign, as it absorbed Castile, Leon, and what was to be Aragon, in addition to other small counties that would unite and become the ]. This expansion also led to the independence of Galicia, as well as gaining overlordship over ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sancho III Garcés {{!}} king of Pamplona {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Sancho-III-Garces |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>
From the 11th century onwards ] were granted: In 1064 ] allegedly promised the participants of ] (''Tagr al-Andalus'', Aragon) a collective indulgence 30 years before ] called the ]. The legitimacy of such a letter establishing a grant of indulgence has been disputed at length by historians, notably by Ferreiro. Papal interest in Christian-Muslim relations in the peninsula are not without precedent&nbsp;— Popes Leo IV (847-855), John VIII (872-882) and John XIX (1024–33) are all known to have displayed substantial interest in the region.


In the 12th century, however, the kingdom contracted to its core, and in 1162 King ] declared himself ]. Throughout its early history, the Navarrese kingdom engaged in frequent skirmishes with the Carolingian Empire, from which it maintained its independence, a key feature of its history until 1513.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sancho VI {{!}} king of Navarre {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Sancho-VI |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>
Neither is there evidence to support the contention that the Cluniacs publicised the letter throughout Europe. It was addressed to the ''clero Vulturnensi''. The name has been associated with the castle of Volturno in Campania but even this is not concrete. Baldwin, for example, stipulates that the name is simply "garbled" and that it was intended for a French bishopric. Not until 1095 and the ] did the Reconquista amalgamate the conflicting concepts of a peaceful pilgrimage and armed knight-errantry.


====Kingdom and Crown of Aragon (1035–1706)====
But the papacy left no doubt about the heavenly reward for knights fighting for Christ (''militia Christi''): in a letter, Urban II tried to persuade the ''reconquistadores'' fighting at ] to stay in the Peninsula rather than joining the armed pilgrimage to conquer Jerusalem, saying that their contribution for Christianity was equally important. The pope promised them the same indulgences that he had promised to those who chose to join the First Crusade.
{{Main|Kingdom of Aragon|County of Barcelona|Principality of Catalonia|Kingdom of Valencia|Kingdom of Mallorca|Crown of Aragon}}
]]]


The Kingdom of Aragon started off as an offshoot of the Kingdom of Navarre. It was formed when ] decided to divide his large realm among all his sons. Aragon was the portion of the realm which passed to ], an illegitimate son of Sancho III. The kingdoms of Aragon and Navarre were several times united in personal union until the death of ] in 1135.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Kingdom of Aragon {{!}} medieval kingdom, Spain {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Kingdom-of-Aragon |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>
Later ]s like the ], ], ] and the ] were founded or called to fight in Iberia. The Popes called the knights of Europe to the ] in the peninsula. After the so-called ], French, Navarrese, Castilian, Portuguese and Aragonese armies united against the Muslim forces in the massive '']'' (1212).
The big territories awarded to military orders and nobles were the origin of the ] in today's ] and ], in Spain, and ], in Portugal.


In 1137, the heiress of the kingdom married the ], and their son ] ruled from 1162 the combined possessions of his parents, resulting in the composite monarchy that modern historians call the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bisson |first1=Thomas N. |title=Medieval crown of Aragon : a short history |date=1986 |publisher=Clarendon Press |location=Oxford |isbn=978-0191675294 |pages=31–57}}</ref> Alfonso successfully reincorporated the ] into their realm, expelling the Norman ] family.<ref name="McCrank1974">{{cite book |last1=McCrank |first1=Lawrence |url=https://www.proquest.com/openview/3c409e6f922c24bc1682a27b3b39d061/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=18750&diss=y |title=Restoration and reconquest in medieval Catalonia: the church and principality of Tarragona |date=1974 |publisher=University of Virginia |pages= |access-date=24 February 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220224124015/https://www.proquest.com/openview/3c409e6f922c24bc1682a27b3b39d061/1?pq-origsite=gscholar&cbl=18750&diss=y |archive-date=24 February 2022 |url-status=live}}</ref>
==Northern Christian realms==
]c ] and surrounding states, including the Christian Kingdoms of ], ], ], ], and ] c. 1200.]]


In the following centuries, the Crown of Aragon conquered a number of territories in the Iberian peninsula and the Mediterranean, including the ] and the ]. ], also known as James the Conqueror, expanded his territories to the north, south and east. James also signed the ], in which the French king renounced to any feudal claim over Catalonia.<ref>{{Cite web |title=James I {{!}} King of Sicily & Valencia {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/James-I-king-of-Aragon |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>
===Kingdom of Asturias (718–924)===
{{Main|Kingdom of Asturias}}
{{See also|Duchy of Cantabria}}
The Kingdom of Asturias was located in the ], a wet and mountainous region in the north of the Iberian Peninsula.


Early in his reign, James attempted to reunite the Aragonese and Navarrese crowns through a treaty with the childless ]. But the Navarrese nobles rejected him, and chose ] in his stead.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
By the end of the 15th century there was a myriad of autonomous Christian kingdoms and principalities. The first Christian power was Asturias. The kingdom was established by a nobleman, ] (''Pelayo''), who had possibly returned to his country after the Battle of Guadalete in 711, where he was elected leader of the Asturians and laid the foundations for the ]. However, Pelagius' kingdom initially was little more than a gathering point for the existing guerrilla forces.


Later on, ], married ], leading to a dynastic union which eventually gave birth to modern Spain, after the conquest of Upper ] (Navarre south of the Pyrenees) and the ].<ref name="auto">{{Cite web |date=2023-05-05 |title=Reconquista {{!}} Definition, History, Significance, & Facts {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Reconquista |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>
During the first decades, the Asturian dominion over the different areas of the kingdom was still lax, and for this reason it had to be continually strengthened through matrimonial alliances with other powerful families from the north of the Iberian Peninsula. Thus, Ermesinda, Pelagius' daughter, was married to ], ]'s son. Alfonso's son ] married Munia, a Basque from ], after crushing a Basque uprising (probably resistance). Their son is reported to be ], while Alfonso I's daughter Adosinda married Silo, a local chief from the area of Flavionavia, Pravia.


====Kingdom of Portugal (1139–1249)====
Alfonso's military strategy was typical of Iberian warfare at the time. Lacking the means needed for wholesale conquest of large territories, his tactics consisted of raids in the border regions of ]. With the plunder he gained further military forces could be paid, enabling him to raid the Muslim cities of ], ], and ]. Alfonso I also expanded his realm westwards conquering ].
{{Main|Portugal in the Reconquista}}
]. A Portuguese folk hero with the head of a Moor]]


In 1139, after an overwhelming victory in the ] against the ], ] was proclaimed the first ] by his troops. According to the legend, Christ announced from heaven{{Citation needed|date=May 2017}} Afonso's great deeds, whereby he would establish the first ] at ] and be crowned by the ] ]. In 1142 a group of Anglo-Norman crusaders on their way to the Holy Land helped King Afonso Henriques in a failed ].<ref>{{Cite journal|url=https://doi.org/10.5699/portstudies.29.1.0007|doi = 10.5699/portstudies.29.1.0007|title = Revisiting the Anglo-Norman Crusaders' Failed Attempt to Conquer Lisbon ''c.'' 1142|year = 2013|last1 = Lucas Villegas-Aristizábal|journal = Portuguese Studies|volume = 29|page = 7}}</ref> In the ] in 1143, ] recognized Portuguese independence from the Kingdom of León.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sutori |url=https://www.sutori.com/en/story/the-siege-of-lisbon--KAPho8TyiMUT3bxY4w4YJisU |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.sutori.com |language=en}}</ref>
During the reign of ] (791–842), the kingdom was firmly established, and a series of Muslim raids caused the transfer of Asturian capital to ]. The king is believed to have initiated diplomatic contacts with the kings of ] and the ]s, thereby gaining official recognition for his kingdom and his crown from the ] and ].


In 1147, Portugal ], and seven months later the city of Lisbon was also brought under Portuguese control after the ]. By the papal bull ], ] recognized Afonso Henriques as King of Portugal in 1179.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Battle of Lisbon {{!}} Summary {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Siege-of-Lisbon |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>
There, ] of St. ] were proclaimed to have been found in Iria Flavia (present day ]) in 813 or probably two or three decades later. The cult to the saint was transferred later to ] (from Latin ''campus stellae'', literally "the star field"), possibly in the early 10th century when the focus of Asturian power moved from the mountains over to León, to become the ] or Galicia-León.


With ] finally recognized as an independent kingdom by its neighbors, ] and his successors, aided by ] and the military monastic orders the ], the ] or the ], pushed the ] to the ] on the southern coast of Portugal. After several campaigns, the Portuguese part in the ''Reconquista'' came to an end with the definitive ] in 1249. With all of Portugal now under the control of ], religious, cultural and ethnic groups became gradually homogenized.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
Santiago's were just one of the many saint relics proclaimed to have been found across north-western Iberia. Pilgrims started to flow in from other Iberian Christian realms, sowing the seeds of the later ] (11-12th century) that sparked the enthusiasm and religious zeal of continental Christian Europe for centuries.


]]]
] the Moor-slayer]]


After the completion of the ''Reconquista'', the Portuguese territory was a Roman Catholic realm. Nonetheless, ] carried out a short war with ] for possession of the towns of ] and ]. After this, Denis avoided war. In 1297, he signed the ] with ], establishing a permanent border between the two kingdoms.<ref>Juan-Manuel Trillo-Santamaría & Valerià Paül, 'The Oldest Boundary in Europe? A Critical Approach to the Spanish-Portuguese Border: The ''Raia'' Between Galicia and Portugal', ''Geopolitics'', 19:1, 161–181 </ref>
Despite numerous battles, neither the Umayyads nor the Asturians had sufficient forces to secure control over these northern territories. Under the reign of ], famed for the highly legendary ], the border began to slowly move southward and Asturian holdings in ], Galicia, and ] were fortified and an intensive program of re-population of the countryside began in those territories. In 924 the Kingdom of Asturias became the ], when León became the seat of the royal court (it didn't bear any official name).


During the suppression of the Knights Templar all over Europe, under the influence of ] and ] requesting its annihilation by 1312, King Denis reinstituted the Templars of ] as the ] in 1319. Denis believed that the Order's assets should by their nature stay in any given Order instead of being taken by the King, largely for the Templars' contribution to the ''Reconquista'' and the reconstruction of Portugal after the wars.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Archives |first=The National |date=2014-11-29 |title=The National Archives – The Templars' 'curse' on the King of France |url=https://blog.nationalarchives.gov.uk/templars-curse-king-france/ |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=The National Archives blog |language=en-GB}}</ref>
=== Kingdom of Navarre (824–1620)===
{{Main|Kingdom of Navarre}}
]]]
The Kingdom of Pamplona was one of the important Christian powers of Iberia during the Reconquista. The kingdom was formed when local leader Íñigo Arista led a revolt against the regional Frankish authority and was elected or declared King in Pamplona (traditionally in 824), establishing a kingdom inextricably linked at this stage to their kinsmen the ] ] of Tudela.


The experience gained during the battles of the ''Reconquista'' was fundamental to ],<ref name="auto"/> the first step to the establishment of the ]. Likewise, the contact with ] enabled the creation of ] such as the ] – the principal Portuguese ship during their voyages of exploration in the ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Hobson|first1=John M.|title=The Eastern Origins of Western Civilisation|date=2004|publisher=]|isbn=978-0521547246|page=141|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KQN85hrJyT4C&pg=PA141|language=en}}</ref>
Although relatively weak up until the early 11th century under the Sancho III (1004–1035), Navarre took up a more active Christian role after the accession to the throne of the Jimenez lineage (905). The Kingdom of Pamplona (after 12th century, Navarre), was a Christian kingdom extending ] (and briefly in the early 11th century) at either side of the Pyrenees alongside the Atlantic Ocean.


==== Minor Christian realms ====
Throughout the early history of the Navarrese kingdom, there were frequent skirmishes with the Carolingian Empire, from which it maintained its independence, a key feature of its history until 1513. The reign of Sancho the Great not only expanded the Navarese territories when they absorbed Castile, Leon, and what was to be Aragon in addition to other small counties which would also unite and become the Principality of Catalonia, but it also helped form the Galician independence as well as getting overlordship on ].
Minor Christian realms were the ] (970–1005), the ] (1167–1300), the ] (1129–1173), and the ] (1094–1102).<ref>{{Cite web |title=Battle of Valencia {{!}} Summary {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/event/Battle-of-Valencia |access-date=2023-06-16 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref>


=== Southern Islamic realms ===
The conquest of Leon did not consume Galicia, as the Leonese king retreated and was left to temporary independence. Galicia was conquered soon after (it was conquered by Sancho's son Ferdinand around 1038). However, this small period of independence meant that it was fashioned as its own kingdom and the subsequent kings named their titles as king of Galicia and León, instead of merely king of León, even though Galicia was never to be independent again.
{{Further|al-Andalus}}


==== Umayyads ====
===Kingdom of León (910–1230)===
{{Main|Kingdom of León|Kingdom of Galicia|County of Portugal}} {{Main|Emirate of Córdoba|Caliphate of Córdoba}}
] at ] in 1237]]
] repopulated the strategically important city León and established it as his capital. From his new capital, King Alfonso began a series of campaigns to establish control over all the lands north of the Douro. He reorganized his territories into the major duchies (] and Portugal) and major counties (] and Castile), and fortified the borders with many castles. At his death in 910 the shift in regional power was completed as the kingdom became the ]. From this power base, his heir Ordoño II was able to organize attacks against ] and even ].


During the 9th century the Berbers returned to North Africa in the aftermath of revolts. Many governors of large cities distant from the capital, Córdoba, had planned to establish their independence. Then, in 929, the ] (]), the leader of the Umayyad dynasty, declared himself ], independent from the ]s in ]. He took all the military, religious, and political power and reorganised the army and the bureaucracy.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
The ] was gaining power, and began to attack León. Navarre and king Ordoño allied against Abd-al-Rahman but were ], in 920. For the next 80 years, the Kingdom of León suffered civil wars, Moorish attack, internal intrigues and assassinations, and the partial independence of Galicia and Castile, thus delaying the reconquest, and weakening the Christian forces.
It was not until the following century that the Christians started to see their conquests as part of a long-term effort to restore the unity of the Visigothic kingdom.


After regaining control over the dissident governors, Abd-ar-Rahman III tried to conquer the remaining Christian kingdoms of the Iberian peninsula, attacking them several times and forcing them back beyond the ]. Abd-ar-Rahman's grandson later became a puppet in the hands of the great ] ] (''al-Mansur'', "the victorious"). Almanzor waged several campaigns attacking and sacking ], Leon, ], ], and ] before his death in 1002.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
The only point during this period when the situation became hopeful for Leon was the reign of ]. King Ramiro, in alliance with ] and his retinue of ''caballeros villanos'', ] in 939. After this battle, when the Caliph barely escaped with his guard and the rest of the army was destroyed, King Ramiro obtained 12 years of peace, but had to give González the independence of Castile as a payment for his help in the battle. After this defeat, Moorish attacks abated until Almanzor began his campaigns.


==== ''Taifas'' ====
It was ] in 1002 who finally regained the control over his domains. Navarre, though attacked by Almanzor, remained.
{{Main|Taifa}}
Between Almanzor's death and 1031, al-Andalus suffered many civil wars, which ended in the division into the ]. The taifas were small kingdoms, established by the city governors. The result was many (up to 34) small kingdoms, each centered upon its capital. Their governors had no larger-scale vision of the Moorish presence in the Iberian peninsula and had no qualms about attacking their neighbouring kingdoms whenever they could gain advantage by doing so.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}


The split into the taifa states weakened the Islamic presence, and the Christian kingdoms further advanced as ] conquered ] in 1085. Surrounded by enemies, taifa rulers sent a desperate appeal to the Berber chieftain ], leader of the Almoravids.{{citation needed|date=April 2016}} ''Taifas'' reemerged when the Almoravid dynasty collapsed in the 1140s, and again when the Almohad Caliphate declined in the 1220s.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
===Kingdom of Aragon (1035–1706)===
{{Main|Kingdom of Aragon}}
The Kingdom of Aragon was an offshoot of the Kingdom of Navarre. It was formed when ] decided to divide his large realm among all his sons. Aragon was the portion of the realm which passed to ], an illegitimate son of Sancho III. The kingdoms of Aragon and Navarre were several times united in personal union until the death of ] in 1135.


====Almoravids====
The Kingdom of Aragon eventually passed, by marriage, to the ], who were vassals of the King of France. The ] eventually collected a number of territories in the Mediterranean, known as the ]. ], also known as James the Conqueror, expanded Aragon to the north, south and east. James also signed the ], which released him from the nominal suzerainty of the King of France.
{{Main|Almoravid dynasty}}
]
] (painted by ])]]
The ]s were a Muslim militia composed of Berbers, and unlike previous Muslim rulers, they were not so tolerant towards Christians and Jews. Their armies entered the Iberian peninsula on several occasions (1086, 1088, 1093) and defeated King Alfonso at the ] in 1086, but initially their purpose was to unite all the taifas into a single Almoravid Caliphate. Their actions halted the southward expansion of the Christian kingdoms. Their only defeat came at ] in 1094, due to the actions of ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}


Meanwhile, Navarre lost all importance under King ], for he lost Rioja to ], and nearly became the vassal of Aragon. At his death, the Navarrese chose as their king ], King of Aragon, who thus became Sancho V of Navarre and I of Aragon. Sancho Ramírez gained international recognition for Aragon, uniting it with Navarre and expanding the borders south, conquering ''Wasqa<sup>t</sup>'' ] deep in the valleys in 1096 and building a fort, El Castellar, 25&nbsp;km from ''Saraqusta<sup>t</sup>'' ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
Early in his reign, James the Conqueror attempted to reunite the Aragonese and Navarrese crowns through a treaty with the childless ]. But the Navarrese nobles rejected him, and chose the ] in his stead. It was his distant descendant, ], who brought Aragon to the height of its power through the conquest of Upper Navarre (Navarre south of the Pyrenees) and Granada.


Catalonia came under intense pressure from the taifas of Zaragoza and ], as well as from internal disputes, as Barcelona suffered a dynastic crisis that led to open war among the smaller counties. But by the 1080s, the situation had calmed down, and the dominion of Barcelona over the smaller counties was restored.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
===Kingdom of Castile (1037–1230)===
{{Main|Kingdom of Castile}}
] was the leading king of the mid-11th century. He conquered ] and attacked the ] kingdoms, often demanding the tributes known as ]. Ferdinand's strategy was to continue to demand parias until the taifa was greatly weakened both militarily and financially. He also repopulated the Borders with numerous ''fueros''. Following the Navarrese tradition, on his death in 1064 he divided his kingdom between his sons. His son ] wanted to reunite the kingdom of his father and attacked his brothers, with a young noble at his side: Rodrigo Díaz (later known as ]). Sancho was killed in the siege of ] by the traitor ] (also known as Vellido Adolfo) in 1072. His brother ] took over León, Castile and Galicia.


====Almohads====
Alfonso VI the Brave gave more power to the ''fueros'' and repopulated ], ] and ]. Then, once he had secured the Borders, King Alfonso conquered the powerful ] in 1085. ], which was the former capital of the Visigoths, was a very important landmark, and the conquest made Alfonso renowned throughout the Christian world. However, this "conquest" was conducted rather gradually, and mostly peacefully, during the course of several decades. It was not until after sporadic and consistent population resettlements had taken place that Toledo was decisively conquered.
{{Main|Almohad Caliphate}}
]]]
After a brief period of disintegration (the second ] period), the Almohads, the rising power in North Africa, took over most of ''al-Andalus''. However they were decisively defeated at the ] (1212) by a Christian coalition, losing almost all the remaining lands of ''al-Andalus'' in the following decades. By 1252 only the ] remained intact but as a vassal state of Castile.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}


==== Granada War and the end of Muslim rule ====
Alfonso VI was first and foremost a tactful monarch who chose to understand the kings of taifa and employed unprecedented diplomatic measures to attain political feats before considering the use of force. He adopted the title '']'' ("Emperor of all ]", referring to all the Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula, and not just the modern country of Spain). Alfonso's more aggressive policy towards the Taifas worried the rulers of those kingdoms, who called on the African ]s for help.
{{Main|Granada War|Treaty of Granada (1491)}}
] completed the ''Reconquista'' with a war against the ] that started in 1482 and ended with Granada's surrender on 2 January 1492. The Moors in Castile previously numbered "half a million within the realm". By 1492 some 100,000 had died or been enslaved, 200,000 had emigrated, and 200,000 remained in Castile. Many of the Muslim elite, including Granada's former Emir ], who had been given the area of the ] mountains as a principality, found life under Christian rule intolerable and emigrated to ] in North Africa.{{sfn |Kamen |2005 |pages=37–38}}<ref name=maqri>"نفح الطيب من غصن الاندلس الرطيب" p. 1317. احمد المقري المغربي المالكي الاشعري</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Harvey|first=Leonard Patrick|title=Islamic Spain, 1250 to 1500|url={{Google books|td3tcLWvSNkC|page=327|plainurl=yes}}|page=327|publisher=University of Chicago Press|place=Chicago|year=1992|isbn=0-226-31962-8}}</ref>


In 1497, Spanish forces took ], west of Oran, and the island of ], south of Tunis, and went on to more important gains, with the bloody ], and the capture of ] and ]. The Spanish capture of ] cost them some 300 men, while the inhabitants suffered between 3,000 and 5,000 killed and another 5,000–6,000 carried off as slaves.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Last Great Muslim Empires|page=138}}</ref> Soon thereafter, however, they faced competition from the rapidly expanding ] in the east and were pushed back.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Davison |first=Derek |title=Today in European history: the 'Reconquista' ends (1492) |url=https://fx.substack.com/p/today-in-european-history-the-reconquista |access-date=2022-09-13 |website=fx.substack.com |language=en}}</ref>
===Kingdom of Portugal (1139–1910)===
{{Main|Kingdom of Portugal}}
{{Expand section|date=July 2012}}
]. A Portuguese folk hero with the head of a Moor]]
In 1139, after an overwhelming victory in the ] against the ], ] was proclaimed the first ] by his troops. According to the legend, Christ announced from heaven Afonso's great deeds, whereby he would establish the first ] at ] and be crowned by the ]. In the ] in 1143, ] recognized Portuguese independence from the Kingdom of León.


== Infighting ==
In 1147, Portugal ], and seven months later the city of ] was also brought under Portuguese control after the ]. By the papal bull ], ] recognized Afonso Henriques as King of Portugal in 1179.
=== Christian infighting ===
Clashes and raids on bordering Andalusian lands did not keep the Christian kingdoms from battling among themselves or allying with Muslim kings.<ref name="Keefe"/> Some Muslim kings had Christian-born wives or mothers.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}} Some Christian mercenaries, like ], were contracted by ] kings to fight against their neighbours.<ref name="Keefe"/> Indeed, El Cid's first battle experience was gained fighting for a Muslim state against a Christian state.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022|reason=Which battle is this? If it's Graus, was he in service of Castile or Zaragoza? What about the 1057 Castilian siege of Zaragoza?}} At the ] in 1063, he and other Castilians fought on the side of ], Muslim ] of ], against the forces of ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2022 |reason=Was he in service of Castile or Zaragoza?}} There is even an instance of a crusade being declared against another Christian king in Hispania.<ref name="O'Callaghan201362">Joseph O'Callaghan (2003). ''Reconquest and Crusade in Medieval Spain'', Philadelphia: University of Philadelphia Press. p.&nbsp;62.</ref> Although Christian rulers ] and ] had cooperated to defeat the Muslims at the ] (939), Fernán attacked Ramiro soon after and the Leonese–Castilian war that followed lasted until Ramiro's victory in 944.<ref name="Whitney">{{Cite book |last1=Whitney |first1=James Pounder |editor-last1=Gwatkin |editor-first1=Henry Melvill |date=1922 |title=The Cambridge Medieval History: Maps III. Germany and the Western Empire. 3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=exuwlXT-ys0C&pg=PT338 |location= |publisher=Plantagenet Publishing |page=338 |isbn=978-0521045346 |access-date=7 April 2022}}</ref> Ramiro II's death caused the war of the Leonese succession (951–956) between his sons, and the winner ] concluded peace with caliph ] of Córdoba.<ref name="Whitney"/>
] and clan feuds.]]
After the defeat of ], King of Castile, at ], Kings ] of Leon and ] of Navarre entered an alliance with the ] and invaded Castile in 1196.{{Citation needed|date=June 2021}} By the end of the year Sancho VII had dropped out of the war under Papal pressure. Early in 1197, at the request of ], King of Portugal, Pope ] declared a crusade against Alfonso IX and released his subjects from their responsibilities to the king, declaring that "the men of his realm shall be absolved from their fidelity and his dominion by authority of the apostolic see."<ref name="O'Callaghan2013" /> Together the Kings of Portugal, Castile, and ] invaded Leon. In the face of this onslaught combined with pressure from the Pope, Alfonso IX was finally forced to sue for peace in October 1197.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}


In the late years of ''al-Andalus'', Castile had the might to conquer the remnants of the kingdom of ], but the kings preferred to wait and claim the tribute of the Muslim '']''. The trade of Granadan goods and the parias were a major means by which African gold entered ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
With ] finally recognized as an independent kingdom by its neighbours, ] and his successors, aided by ] and the military monastic orders the ], the ] or the ], pushed the ] to the ] on the southern coast of Portugal. After several campaigns, the Portuguese part in the Reconquista came to an end with the definitive capture of the Algarve in 1249.


=== Muslim infighting ===
With all of Portugal now under the control of ], religious, cultural and ethnic groups became gradually homogenized.
Similarly, there was frequent Muslim infighting throughout the existence of al-Andalus. The ] (747–750) divided Muslim rulers in Iberia into the pro-] faction (based in ]) and the pro-] (reconstituted as the ]).<ref>{{cite book |last=Ullidtz |first=Per |date=2014 |title=1016: The Danish Conquest of England |location=Copenhagen |publisher=Books on Demand |isbn=978-87-7145-720-9 |url={{GBurl|kXGaAwAAQBAJ|page=132}} |page=132}}</ref> ]'s failed ] was prompted by the invitation of the pro-Abbasid governor of Barcelona, ], which led to a brief ] against the Umayyads.{{sfn|Ullidtz|2014|p=132}} During the ] (1009–1031), the Umayyad-run ] fell apart into rival ]s headed by Islamic emirs warring each other.<ref>{{cite book|title=Europe and the Islamic World: A History|year=2013|publisher=Princeton University press|last=Tolan|first=John|place=Princeton|pages= 39–40}}</ref> After the Christian king of Castile and León ] in 1085, the emirs requested ], leader of the strict Islamic ] sect, to come to their defence, which he did at the ] (1086). However, Yusuf soon turned on the Muslim emirs of Spain, defeating them all and conquering their lands by 1091.<ref>''Encarta Winkler Prins Encyclopaedia'' (1993–2002) s.v. "Almoraviden §2. Verbreiding". Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum.</ref> A similar scenario occurred in 1147–1157, when the Almoravid dynasty fell, a ] happened, and the Muslim-controlled cities of al-Andalus were conquered by the new ].<ref>''Encarta Winkler Prins Encyclopaedia'' (1993–2002) s.v. "Almohaden §2. Machtsuitbreiding". Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum.</ref> The ] (1482–1492) took place after the deposition of emir ] by his son ]; the deposed emir's brother ] also joined the fight. This succession conflict took place simultaneously with the ], and was ended only by the Castilian conquest in 1492.<ref>''Encarta Winkler Prins Encyclopaedia'' (1993–2002) s.v. "Boabdil". Microsoft Corporation/Het Spectrum.</ref>


==Christian repopulation==
]]]
{{Further|Medieval demography|Repoblación}}
After the completion of the Reconquista, the Portuguese territory was a Roman Catholic realm. Nonetheless, ] carried out a short war with ] for possession of the towns of ] and ]. After this, Denis avoided war; he signed the Treaty of Alcanizes with ] in 1297, establishing the present-day borders.
The ''Reconquista'' was a process not only of war and conquest, but also of ]. Christian kings moved their own people to locations abandoned by Muslims in order to have a population capable of defending the borders. The main repopulation areas were the ] Basin (the northern plateau), the high ] valley (]) and central ]. The repopulation of the ] Basin took place in two distinct phases. North of the river, between the 9th and 10th centuries, the "pressure" (or ''presura'') system was employed. South of the ], in the 10th and 11th centuries, the ''presura'' led to the "charters" ('']'' or '']''). ''Fueros'' were used even south of the Central Range.<ref>{{Citation | title=Beyond the Reconquista: New Directions in the History of Medieval Iberia | chapter= The Life and Death of an Historiographical Folly: The Early Medieval Depopulation and Repopulation of the Duero Basin| date= 3 April 2020| pages= 21–51| publisher= Brill| doi= 10.1163/9789004423879_003| hdl= 10261/238570| isbn= 9789004423879| s2cid= 218803277| url= https://brill.com/display/book/edcoll/9789004423879/BP000003.xml| hdl-access= free| last1= Viso| first1= Julio Escalona| last2= Martín| first2= Iñaki}}</ref>{{Better source needed|reason=This source says repopulation is a myth.|date=June 2023}}


The ''presura'' referred to a group of peasants who crossed the mountains and settled in the abandoned lands of the Douro Basin. Asturian laws promoted this system, for instance granting a peasant all the land he was able to work and defend as his own property. Of course, Asturian and Galician minor nobles and clergymen sent their own expeditions with the peasants they maintained. This led to very feudalised areas, such as ] and Portugal, whereas Castile, an arid land with vast plains and harsh climate, only attracted peasants with no hope in Biscay. As a consequence, Castile was governed by a single count, but had a largely non-feudal territory with many ] peasants. ''Presuras'' also appear in Catalonia, when the count of Barcelona ordered the Bishop of Urgell and the count of Gerona to repopulate the plains of ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
During the suppression of the Knights Templar all over ], under the influence of ] and ] requesting its annihilation by 1312, King Denis reinstituted the Templars of ] as the ] in 1319. Denis believed that the Order's assets should by their nature stay in any given Order instead of being taken by the King, largely for the Templars' contribution to the Reconquista and the reconstruction of Portugal after the wars.


During the 10th century and onwards, cities and towns gained more importance and power, as commerce reappeared and the population kept growing. '']s'' were ]s documenting the privileges and usages given to all the people repopulating a town. The ''fueros'' provided a means of escape from the ], as ''fueros'' were only granted by the monarch. As a result, the town council was dependent on the monarch alone and, in turn, was required to provide ''auxilium''—aid or troops—for their monarch. The military force of the towns became the ''caballeros villanos''. The first ''fuero'' was given by count ] to the inhabitants of ] in the 940's. The most important towns of medieval Hispania had ''fueros'', or ''forais''. In Navarre, ''fueros'' were the main repopulating system. Later on, in the 12th century, Aragon also employed the system; for example, the ''fuero'' of ], which was one of the last fueros, in the early 13th century.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
==Christian In-fighting==
Clashes and raids on bordering Andalusian lands did not keep the Christian kingdoms from battling among themselves or allying with Muslim kings. Some Muslim kings had Christian-born wives or mothers.


From the mid-13th century on, no more charters were granted, as the demographic pressure had disappeared and other means of re-population were created. ''Fueros'' remained as city charters until the 18th century in Aragon, Valencia and Catalonia and until the 19th century in Castile and Navarre. ''Fueros'' had an immense importance for those living under them, who were prepared to go to war to defend their rights under the charter. In the 19th century, the abolition of the ''fueros'' in Navarre would be one of the causes of the ]. In Castile, disputes over the system contributed to the war against Charles I (]).{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
Also some Christian champions like ] were contracted by ] kings to fight against their neighbours. Indeed, ]'s first battle experience was gained fighting for a Muslim state against a Christian state, at the ] in 1063, where he and other Castilians fought on the side of ], Muslim ] of ], against the forces of ]. There is even an instance of a Crusade being declared against another Christian king in Iberia.<ref name="JosephCallaghan">Joseph O'Callaghan, Reconquest and Crusade in Medieval Spain, (Philadelphia: University of Philadelphia Press 2003), 62.</ref>


== Christian military culture ==
Following the disastrous defeat of ], King of ], at ], Kings ], of ], and ], of ], entered an alliance with the ] and invaded Castile in 1196. By the end of the year Sancho VII had dropped out of the war under Papal pressure. Early in 1197, at the request of ], King of Portugal, Pope ] declared a Crusade against Alfonso IX, and released his subjects from their responsibilities to the king, declaring "the men of his realm shall be absolved from their fidelity and his dominion by authority of the apostolic see."<ref name="JosephCallaghan" />
===Reconquista as Crusade===
At the ], ] declared the Reconquista as
part of Crusades and its participants as Crusaders having an equal spiritual standing with those in the east.<ref>Marin-Guzmán, Roberto (1992). "Crusade in Al-Andalus: The Eleventh Century formation of the Reconquista as an Ideology". Islamic Studies. 31 (3 (Autumn)): 295.</ref>


In the 13th century, ] declared a crusade and persuaded warriors from many parts of Europe in and outside the Iberian peninsula to assist the Iberians against the ] army.<ref>The Circle of War in the Middle Ages: Essays on Medieval Military and Naval History. United Kingdom: Boydell Press, 1999, pp.29-30</ref> The Almohads then advanced into Europe with the intent of undoing the previous achievements of the Reconquista and marching on Rome itself.<ref>Mann, Horace Kinder. The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages. United Kingdom: K. Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1915, pp.177-179</ref> The crusading campaign culminated in a resounding Crusader victory at the ], effectively turning the tide of war in favour of the Christians.<ref>Mann, Horace Kinder. The Lives of the Popes in the Early Middle Ages. United Kingdom: K. Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1915, pp.177-179</ref><ref>The Circle of War in the Middle Ages: Essays on Medieval Military and Naval History. United Kingdom: Boydell Press, 1999, pp.29-30</ref>
Together the Kings of Portugal, Castile, and ] invaded León. In the face of this onslaught combined with pressure from the Pope, Alfonso IX was finally forced to sue for peace in October 1197.
=== Other Motivations ===
] towards the end of 15th century]]
] (2004) noted that the Christian belligerents in the ''Reconquista'' were not all equally motivated by religion, and that a distinction should be made between 'secular rulers' on the one hand, and on the other hand Christian military orders which came from elsewhere (including the three main orders of ], ] and ]), or were ] (such as those of ], ] and ]).{{sfn|Bradbury|2004|p=314}} ' were more committed to ] than some of their secular counterparts, were opposed to treating with Muslims and carried out raids and even atrocities, such as decapitating Muslim prisoners.'{{sfn|Bradbury|2004|p=314}}


On the other hand, Christian armies sometimes forged temporary alliances with Islamic emirs, and Christian mercenaries were quite willing to fight for Arab and Berber rulers if the price was right.<ref name="Keefe">{{Cite book |last1=Keefe |first1=Eugene K. |date=1976 |title=Area Handbook for Spain |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6uSWE3EYvBkC&pg=PA105 |location=Washington, D.C. |publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office |pages=105 |isbn=978-0160015670 |access-date=7 April 2022}}</ref> ] is a well-known example of a Christian mercenary leader who was in ].<ref name="Keefe"/> Mercenaries were an important factor, as many kings did not have enough soldiers available. ], ] spearmen, Frankish knights, Moorish mounted archers (archers who travelled on horseback), and Berber light cavalry were the main types of mercenaries available and used in the conflict.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
In the late years of ''Al-Andalus'', Castile had the might to conquer the remains of the kingdom of ], but the kings preferred to claim the tribute of the Muslim '']''. The trade of Granadan goods and the parias were a major means by which African gold entered ].


=== Christian cavalry and infantry ===
==Christian repopulation of the Iberian Peninsula==
{{unreferenced section|date=June 2021}}
{{Further|Medieval demography|Repoblación}}
Medieval Christian armies mainly comprised two types of forces: the cavalry (mostly nobles, but including commoner knights from the 10th century on) and the infantry, or ''peones'' (peasants). Infantry only went to war if needed, which was not frequent. In an atmosphere of constant conflict, warfare and daily life were strongly intertwined during this period. These armies reflected the need for society to be on constant alert during the first chapters of the Reconquista. These forces were capable of moving long distances in short times.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
The ''Reconquista'' was a process not only of war and conquest, but also ]. Christian kings took their own people to locations abandoned by Muslims, in order to have a population capable of defending the borders. The main repopulation areas were the ] Basin (the northern plateau), the high ] valley (]) and central ].
]. ], Spain, depicting heads of slain Moors]]
] in Hispania involved knights approaching the enemy, throwing ]s, then withdrawing to a safe distance before commencing another assault. Once the enemy formation was sufficiently weakened, the knights charged with thrusting ]s (]s did not arrive in Hispania until the 11th century). There were three types of knights (''caballeros''): royal knights, noble knights (''caballeros ]''), and commoner knights (], or "mounted soldier from a ]"). Royal knights were mainly nobles with a close relationship with the king, and thus claimed a direct Gothic inheritance.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}


Royal knights in the early stages of the Reconquista were equipped with mail ], kite shield, a long ] (designed to fight from the horse), javelins, spears and an ]. Noble knights came from the ranks of the ''infanzones'' or lower nobles, whereas the commoner knights were not noble but were wealthy enough to afford a horse. Uniquely in Europe, these horsemen comprised a militia cavalry force with no feudal links, being under the sole control of the king or the count of ] because of '']'' (charters) with the crown. Both noble and common knights wore padded armour and carried javelins, spears and round-tasselled shield (influenced by Moorish shields), as well as a sword.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
The repopulation of the ] Basin took place in two distinct phases. North of the river, between the 9th and 10th centuries, the "pressure" (or ''presura'') system was employed. South of the ], in the 10th and 11th centuries, the ''presura'' led to the "charters" ('']'' or '']''). ''Fueros'' were used even south of the Central Range.


The ''peones'' were ] who went to battle in service of their ] lord. Poorly equipped, with bows and arrows, spears and short swords, they were mainly used as auxiliary troops. Their function in battle was to contain the enemy troops until the cavalry arrived and to block the enemy infantry from charging the knights. The ], the ], and the ] were the basic types of bows and were especially popular in the infantry.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
The ''presura'' referred to a group of peasants who crossed the mountains and settled in the abandoned lands of the Douro Basin. Asturian laws promoted this system with laws, for instance granting a peasant all the land he was able to work and defend as his own property. Of course, Asturian and Galician minor nobles and clergymen sent their own expeditions with the peasants they maintained. This led to very feudalised areas, such as ] and Portugal, whereas Castile, an arid land with vast plains and harsh climate only attracted peasants with no hope in Biscay. As a consequence, Castile was governed by a single count, but had a largely mostly non-feudal territory with many ] peasants. ''Presuras'' also appear in Catalonia, when the count of Barcelona ordered the Bishop of Urgell and the count of Gerona to repopulate the plains of ].


=== Equipment ===
During the 10th century and onwards, cities and towns gained more importance and power, as commerce reappeared and the population kept growing. '']s'' were ]s documenting the privileges and usages given to all the people repopulating a town. The ''fueros'' provided a means of escape from the ], as ''fueros'' were only granted by the monarch. As a result, the town council was dependent on the monarch alone and had to help their lord ('']''). The military force of the towns became the ''caballeros villanos''. The first ''fuero'' was given by count ] to the inhabitants of ] in the 940 s. The most important towns of medieval Iberia had ''fueros'' or ''forais''. In Navarre, ''fueros'' were the main repopulating system. Later on, in the 12th century, Aragon also employed the system; for example, the ''fuero'' of ], which was one of the last fueros, in the early 13th century.
In the early Middle Ages in Hispania, armour was typically made of leather, with iron scales. Head protections consisted of a round helmet with nose protector (influenced by the designs used by ]s, who attacked during the 8th and 9th centuries) and a chain mail headpiece. Shields were often round or kidney-shaped, except for the kite-shaped designs used by the royal knights. Usually adorned with geometric designs, crosses or tassels, shields were made out of wood and had a leather cover.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}


Steel swords were the most common weapon. The cavalry used long double-edged swords and the infantry short, single-edged ones. Guards were either semicircular or straight, but always highly ornamented with geometrical patterns. Spears and javelins were up to 1.5 metres long and had an iron tip. The double-axe—made of iron, 30&nbsp;cm long, and possessing an extremely sharp edge—was designed to be equally useful as a thrown weapon or in close combat. Maces and hammers were not common, but some specimens have remained and are thought to have been used by members of the cavalry.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
From the mid-13th century on no more charters were granted, as the demographic pressure had disappeared and other means of re-population were created. '']s'' remained as city charters until the 18th century in Aragon, Valencia and Catalonia and until the 19th century in Castile and Navarre. ''Fueros'' had an immense importance for those living under them, who were prepared to go to war to defend their rights under the charter. In the 1800s the abolition of the ''fueros'' in Navarre would be one of the causes of the ]. In Castile disputes over the system contributed to the war against Charles I (]).


=== Technological changes ===
==Muslim decline and defeat==


This style of warfare remained dominant in the Iberian Peninsula until the late 11th century, when lance tactics entered from France, although the traditional horse javelin-shot techniques continued to be used. In the 12th and 13th centuries, soldiers typically carried a sword, a lance, a javelin, and either bow and arrows or crossbow and darts/bolts. Armor consisted of a coat of mail over a quilted jacket, extending at least to the knees, a helmet or iron cap, and bracers protecting the arms and thighs, either metal or leather.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
===Fall of the Caliphate===
The 9th century saw the Berbers return to Africa in the aftermath of their revolts. During this period, many governors of large cities distant from the capital (Córdoba) planned to establish their independence. Then, in 929 the ] (]), the leader of the Umayyad dynasty, declared himself ], independent from the ]s in ]. He took all the military, religious and political power and reorganised the army and the bureaucracy.


] (1212), an important turning point of the Reconquista]]
After regaining control over the dissident governors, Abd-ar-Rahman III tried to conquer the remaining Christian kingdoms of the Iberian peninsula, attacking them several times and forcing them back beyond the Cantabric range.


Shields were round or triangular, made of wood, covered with leather, and protected by an iron band; the shields of knights and nobles would bear the family's coat of arms. Knights rode in both the Muslim style, ''a la jineta'' (i.e. the equivalent of a modern jockey's seat), a short stirrup strap and bended knees allowed for better control and speed, or in the French style, ''a la brida'', a long stirrup strap allowed for more security in the saddle (i.e. the equivalent of the modern cavalry seat, which is more secure) when acting as heavy cavalry. Horses were occasionally fitted with a coat of mail as well.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
] at ] in 1237]]
Later Abd-ar-Rahman's grandson became a puppet in the hands of the great ] ] (''al-Mansur'', "the victorious"). Almanzor waged several campaigns attacking and sacking Burgos, Leon, Pamplona, Barcelona and ] before his death in 1002.


Around the 14th and 15th centuries heavy cavalry gained a predominant role, including knights wearing full plate armor.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
Between Almanzor's death and 1031, ''Al-Andalus'' suffered many civil wars which ended in the appearance of the ]. The taifas were small kingdoms, established by the city governors establishing their long wished-for independence. The result was many (up to 34) small kingdoms each centered upon their capital, and the governors, not subscribing to any larger-scale vision of the Moorish presence, had no qualms about attacking their neighbouring kingdoms whenever they could gain advantage by doing so.


==Conversions and expulsions==
This split into the ] states caused Islamic presence to be greatly weakened in the face of the strengthening Christian kingdoms to the north when Alfonso VI brought Toledo under his authority in 1085. Mortified by the concept of being surrounded by the enemy, taifa rulers sent a desperate appeal to the Berber chieftain ], leader of the Almoravids.
{{Main|Treaty of Granada (1491)|Alhambra decree|Expulsion of the Moriscos|Forced conversions of Muslims in Spain|Persecution of Jews and Muslims by Manuel I of Portugal}}
], ] Sultan of ], at the ], 1431]]


The new Christian hierarchy demanded heavy taxes from non-Christians and gave them rights, such as in the ] only for Moors in recently Islamic Granada. On 30 July 1492, all the Jewish community—some 200,000 people—were forcibly expelled.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151115135151/http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Judaism/expulsion.html |date=15 November 2015 }}, ''The Jewish Virtual Library''.</ref> The next year, the ] ordered the expulsion of practicing Jews, leading many of them to convert to Catholicism. In 1502, Queen Isabella I declared that conversion to Catholicism was compulsory within the Kingdom of Castile. ] imposed the same religious requirement on Moors in the Kingdom of Aragon in 1526, forcing its Muslim population to convert during the ].<ref name = "Tofiño"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061118072214/http://www.lehman.cuny.edu/ciberletras/v06/tofino.html |date=18 November 2006 }}, Ignacio Tofiño-Quesada. Graduate Center, CUNY.</ref>
===Almoravids===
{{Main|Almoravid dynasty}}
The ]s were a Muslim militia, their ranks mainly composed of Berber and ] Moors, and unlike the previous Muslim rulers, they were not so tolerant towards Christians and Jews. Their armies entered the Iberian peninsula on several occasions (1086, 1088, 1093) and defeated King Alfonso at the ] in 1086, but initially their purpose was to unite all the Taifas into a single Almoravid Caliphate. Their actions halted the southward expansion of the Christian kingdoms. Their only defeat came at ] in 1094, due to the actions of ].


=== Spanish Inquisition ===
Meanwhile, Navarre lost all importance under King ], for he lost Rioja to ], and nearly became the vassal of Aragon. At his death, the Navarrese chose as their king ], King of Aragon, who thus became Sancho V of Navarre and I of Aragon. Sancho Ramírez gained international recognition for Aragon, uniting it with Navarre, expanding the borders south, conquering ''Wasqa<sup>t</sup>'' ] deep in the valleys in 1096 and building a fort, El Castellar, 25&nbsp;km away from ''Saraqusta<sup>t</sup>'' ].
{{Main|Spanish Inquisition}}


Making things more complex were the many former Muslims and Jews known as '']s'', '']s'', and '']s'', who shared ancestors in common with many Christians, especially among the aristocracy, causing much concern over loyalty and attempts by the aristocracy to hide their non-Christian ancestry. Some—the numbers are debated—continued to secretly practice their religions and use their languages well into the sixteenth century.<ref>{{cite book
Catalonia came under intense pressure from the taifas of Zaragoza and ], and also from internal disputes, as Barcelona suffered a dynastic crisis which led to open war among the smaller counties; but by the 1080s, the situation calmed, and the dominion of Barcelona over the smaller counties was restored.
|title=Los estatutos de limpieza de sangre : controversias entre los siglos XV y XVII
|first=Albert A.
|last=Sicroff
|publisher=]
|year=2010
|isbn=978-1588711779
|quote=First published in French in 1960}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal
|first=William
|last=Childers
|title= 'Según es cristiana la gente': The Quintanar of ''Persiles y Sigismunda'' and the Archival Record
|journal=]
|volume=24
|number=2
|year=2004
|pages=5–41
|doi=10.3138/Cervantes.24.2.005
|s2cid=160282260
|url=https://users.ipfw.edu/jehle/cervante/csa/articf04/childers.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100705071410/https://users.ipfw.edu/jehle/cervante/csa/articf04/childers.pdf
|archive-date=5 July 2010
}}</ref> Those that the ] found to be secretly practicing Islam or Judaism were executed, imprisoned, or exiled.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}


Nevertheless, all those deemed to be "New Christians" were repeatedly suspected of illegally continuing in secret to practice their religions. Various ] including continued practice of Islam or Judaism. New Christians were subject to many discriminatory practices starting in the sixteenth century.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bethencourt |first1=Francisco |title=Racisms: From the Crusades to the Twentieth Century |date=2015 |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=978-0-691-16975-0 |page=153 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=S26YDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA153 |language=en}}</ref>
===Almohads===
]
{{Main|Almohad dynasty}}
After a brief period of disintegration (second ] period), the rising power in North Africa, the Almohads, took over most of ''Al-Andalus''. But they would be decisively defeated at the ] (1212) by a Christian coalition, losing almost all the remaining lands of ''Al-Andalus'' in the following decades. By 1252 only the ] remained as sovereign Muslim state in the Iberian peninsula.


==Classifications and later consequences==
===Granada War and the end of Muslim rule in Iberia===
] presiding over an '']'', by ] (around 1495)<ref name="Prado"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151202185058/https://www.museodelprado.es/en/the-collection/online-gallery/on-line-gallery/obra/saint-dominic-presides-over-an-auto-da-fe/|date=2 December 2015}} at ]</ref>]]
]]]
The many advances and retreats created several social types:{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
{{Main|Granada War|Treaty of Granada (1491)}}
* The '']'': native Iberians under Islamic rule who converted to Islam after the arrival of the Muslim Arabs and Berbers.
] completed the Reconquista with a war against the ] that started in 1482 and ended with Granada's surrender on January 2, 1492. The Moors in Castile previously numbered "half a million within the realm." By 1492 some 100,000 had died or been enslaved, 200,000 had emigrated, and 200,000 remained in Castile. Many of the Muslim elite, including Granada's former Emir Muhammad XII, who had been given the area of the ] mountains as a principality, found life under Christian rule intolerable and emigrated to ] in North Africa.<ref>Kamen, Henry. "Spain 1469 - 1714 A Society of Conflict." Third edition. pp. 37-38</ref>
* The '']s'': Christians in Muslim-held lands. Some of them migrated to the north of the peninsula in times of persecution bringing elements of the styles, food and agricultural practices learned from the Andalusians, while they continued practicing their Christianity with older forms of Catholic worship and their own versions of the ] language.
* "]": Jews converting to Christianity called '']'', or pejoratively '']s''. Jews converted to Christianity voluntarily or through force. Some were ] who continued practicing ] secretly. All remaining Jews were expelled from Spain as a consequence of the 1492 ], and from Portugal in 1497. Former Jews were subject to the ] and ]s, established to enforce Christian faith and practice, which often resulted in secret investigations and public punishments of ''conversos'' in ] ("acts of faith"), often public executions by burning the victim alive.
* The '']'': Muslims in Christian-held lands.
* '']s'': Muslim ''conversos''. Muslims who converted to Catholicism. A significant number were Crypto-Muslims who continued practicing Islam secretly. They ranged from successful skilled artisans, valued and protected in Aragon, to impoverished peasants in Castile. After the Alhambra Decree the entire Islamic population was forced to convert or leave, and at the beginning of the seventeenth century a significant number were expelled in the ].


==Legacy==
==Conversions and expulsions==
{{See also|History of Spain|History of Portugal|Portugal in the period of discoveries}}
{{Main|Treaty of Granada (1491)|Alhambra decree|Expulsion of the Moriscos}}
During the Islamic administration, Christians and Jews were allowed to retain their religions by paying a ] ''(jizya)''. Penalty for not paying it was imprisonment.
] celebrated in many towns and cities of Spain, to commemorate the battles of Reconquista.]]


Since the 19th century, traditional Western and especially Iberian ] has stressed the existence of the ''Reconquista'',<ref name=":3">{{harvnb|García Fitz|2009|p=146}} "Queda claro, pues, que el concepto de Reconquista, tal como surgió en el siglo XIX y se consolidó en la historiografía de la primera mitad del XX, se convirtió en uno de los principales mitos originarios alumbrados por el nacionalismo español. "</ref> a continual phenomenon by which the Christian Iberian kingdoms opposed and conquered the Muslim kingdoms, understood as a common enemy who had militarily seized territory from native Iberian Christians.<ref name="O'Callaghan2013" /> However, modern scholarship has challenged this concept of a "reconquista" as a ] tied to Spanish nationalism.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Federico. |first=Ríos Saloma, Martín |title=La reconquista: una construcción historiográfica: siglos XVI–XIX |year=2011 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EVpor72daAEC&pg=PA26 |isbn=978-84-92820-47-4 |oclc=800884696 |page=26|publisher=Marcial Pons Historia }}</ref><ref name=":13">{{Cite book |last1=Escalona |first1=Julio |last2= Viso |first2=Iñaki Martín |editor1-last= Barton |editor1-first=Simon |editor2-last=Portass |editor2-first=Robert |year=2020 |title=Beyond the Reconquista: New Directions in the History of Medieval Iberia (711–1085)|chapter=The Life and Death of an Historiographical Folly: The Early Medieval Depopulation and Repopulation of the Duero Basin |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=uPDcDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA21 |publisher=Brill |page=21|isbn=978-9004423879 }}</ref> The concept has served the idea "that Spain is a nation shaped against Islam", contributing to "a largely biased and distorted vision of the Iberian medieval past, aimed at delegitimizing the Islamic presence (al-Andalus) and therefore at legitimizing the Christian conquest of the Muslim territory."<ref name=":4">{{Cite journal |last=García Sanjuán |first=Alejandro |date=2020 |title=Weaponizing Historical Knowledge: the Notion of Reconquista in Spanish Nationalism |url=https://repositori.udl.cat/handle/10459.1/69327 |doi=10.21001/itma.2020.14.04 |s2cid=226491379 |issn=1888-3931|doi-access=free |hdl=10272/19498 |hdl-access=free }}</ref> Among other arguments, one of those advanced by scholars is that "no military campaign lasts eight centuries."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Querol |first=Ricardo de |date=28 February 2020 |title=There was no Reconquest. No military campaign lasts eight centuries' |url=https://english.elpais.com/arts/2020-02-28/henry-kamen-there-was-no-reconquest-no-military-campaign-lasts-eight-centuries.html |access-date=19 May 2022 |website=El País English Edition |language=en-us}}</ref> The term "reconquista" in this sense first appeared in the 19th century, and only entered the dictionary of the ] in 1936, with the rise of ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Vox reinvents history to claim 'Reconquista' of Spain {{!}} Francis Ghiles |url=https://thearabweekly.com/vox-reinvents-history-claim-reconquista-spain |access-date=21 May 2022 |website=AW |language=en}}</ref> The concept of the reconquista continues to have significance and has even experienced a resurgence in modern politics—especially for the extreme right Spanish party ], but also more broadly among ] and especially ] conservatives in the West, with the influence of the doctrine of a "'']''".<ref name=":4" />
The new Christian hierarchy demanded heavy taxes from non-Christians and gave them rights, such as in the ] only for Moors in recently Islamic Granada. In July 30, 1492, all the Jewish community — some 200,000 people — were forcibly expelled.<ref>, ''The Jewish Virtual Library''.</ref> The very next year the ] under ] Hernando de Talavera (1492) dismissed the Treaty of Granada and now the Muslim population of Granada was forced to convert or be expelled. In 1502, Queen Isabella I declared conversion to Catholicism compulsory within the Kingdom of Castile. King ] did the same to Moors in the Kingdom of Aragon in 1526, forcing conversions of its Muslim population during the ].<ref name = "Tofiño">, Ignacio Tofiño-Quesada. Graduate Center, CUNY.</ref> Many local officials took advantage of the situation to seize property.


Real, legendary, and fictional episodes from the ''Reconquista'' are the subject of much of medieval ], ], and ] such as the '']''.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
=== Spanish Inquisition ===
], Portugal, converted into a ]]]
{{Main|Spanish Inquisition}}
Some noble ] show the close, though not numerous, relations between Muslims and Christians. For example, ], whose rule is considered to have marked the peak of power for Moorish ''al-Andalus'' Hispania, married Abda, daughter of ] of ], who bore him a son, named Abd al-Rahman and commonly known in a pejorative sense as ] (''Little Sancho''; in Arabic: ''Shanjoul'').{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}


After his father's death, Sanchuelo/Abd al-Rahman, as a son of a Christian princess, was a strong contender to take over the ultimate power in Muslim al-Andalus. A hundred years later, King ], regarded as one of the greatest medieval Spanish kings, designated his son (also named Sancho) by the Muslim princess refugee ], as his heir.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
Most of the descendants of those Muslims who submitted to conversion to Christianity rather than exile during the early periods of the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisition, the Moriscos, were later ] after serious social upheaval, when the Inquisition was at its height. The expulsions were carried out more severely in eastern Spain (Valencia and Aragon) due to local animosity towards Muslims and Moriscos where they were seen as economic rivals by local workers who saw them as cheap labor undermining their bargaining position with the landlords. Exactions imposed on the Moriscos paved the way to a major ] happening in 1568, with the final ] from ] taking place in 1609; they were driven from ] at about the same time.


The ''Reconquista'' was a war with long periods of respite between the adversaries, partly for pragmatic reasons and also due to infighting among the Christian kingdoms of the North spanning over seven centuries. Some populations practiced Islam or Christianity as their own religion during these centuries, so the identity of contenders changed over time.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
Making things more complex were the many former Muslims and Jews known as '']s'', '']s'' '']s'' who shared ancestors in common with many Christians, especially among the aristocracy, causing much concern over loyalty and attempts by the aristocracy to hide their non-Christian ancestry. Those that the ] found to be secretly practicing Islam or Judaism were executed, imprisoned or expelled. Those descended from Muslims or Jews practicing at the time of the Reconquista's close were perpetually suspected of various ] including continued practice of Islam or Judaism, and any survivors were finally all expelled.


It is noteworthy that the popular hero ], whose name is very much associated with the Reconquista, had at one part of his career actually fought for the Muslim rulers of ], whom he defended from its traditional enemy, the Christian ]. The most important achievement of El Cid's career, the conquest of the ], was actually achieved in close alliance with the ] and other Muslim dynasties opposed to the ].<ref name="Quest">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W-MIChVmZwQC|title=The Quest for El Cid|author=Fletcher, Richard A.|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1989|isbn=978-0195069556|location=Oxford, UK|pages=166–168, 198}}</ref>
==Classifications and later consequences==
The many advances and retreats created several social types:
*The '']'': Christians under Islamic rule who converted to Islam after the arrival of the Moors.


===French emulation===
*The '']s'': Christians in Muslim-held lands. Some of them migrated to the north of the peninsula in times of persecution bringing elements of the styles, food and agricultural practices learned from the Moors, while they continued practicing their Christianity with older forms of Catholic worship and their own versions of the ] language.


In 1558, the armies of King ] managed to conquer the city of ], which had been under English rule for centuries. Queen ] considered the loss of Calais as the greatest disaster of her reign <ref>Holinshed, Raphael (1808) ''Holinshed's chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland'', Vol. 4 (England), Ellis, Sir H. (ed.), London : J. Johnson ''et al.'', 952 p.</ref> The region around Calais, then-known as the '']'', was renamed the ''Pays Reconquis'' ("Reconquered Country") in commemoration of its recovery by the French.<ref name="TurpynBritain)1846">{{Cite book |last=Turpyn |first=Richard |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1v0UAAAAQAAJ&pg=PR24 |title=The chronicle of Calais: in the reigns of Henry VII. and Henry VIII. to the year 1540 |publisher=British Library, Printed for the Camden Society by J.B. Nichols |year=1846 |page=24 |access-date=5 February 2012}}</ref> The French were certainly aware of the Spanish Reconquista, and since at the time ] was Queen Mary's consort, use of this term might have been intended as a deliberate snub to him.<ref name="Larousse(Firm)1960">{{Cite book |last=Larousse |first=Pierre |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ft9MAQAAIAAJ |title=Grand Larousse encyclopédique |publisher=Librarire Larousse |year=1960 |page=59}}</ref>
*The '']s'': ]ish '']s''. Jews who either voluntarily or compulsorily converted to Catholicism. Some were ] who continued practicing ] secretly. All remaining Jews were expelled from Spain in Treaty of Granada of 1492, and from Portugal in 1497. ''Converso'' Jews often became victims of the Spanish and ]s.


===Festivals in modern Spain and Portugal===
*The '']'' : Muslims in Christian-held lands.
], 2016]]
* '']s'': Muslim '']s''. Muslims who were compulsorily converted to Catholicism. Most were Crypto-Muslims who continued practicing Islam secretly. They ranged from successful skilled artisans, valued and protected in Aragon, to impoverished peasants in Castile. After the ] the entire Islamic population was forced to convert or leave, and within a century most were expelled.
Currently, festivals called '']'' (Spanish), ''moros i cristians'' (]), ''mouros e cristãos'' (Portuguese) and ''mouros e cristiáns'' (Galician), which all mean "Moors and Christians", recreate the fights as colorful parades with elaborate garments and many fireworks, especially on the central and southern towns of the ], like ], ] or ].{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}


=== Persistent effects ===
==Legacy==
A 2016 study found that the "rate of Reconquest"—how rapidly the Christian frontier was expanded—has persistent effects on the Spanish economy to this day. After an initial phase of military conquest, Christians states incorporated the conquered land. When large frontier regions were incorporated at once, the land was mostly given to the nobility and the military orders, with negative effects on long-term development. The incorporation of small regions, on the other hand, generally allowed for the participation of individual settlers and was more likely to fall under the auspices of the crown. This led to a more equitable distribution of land and greater social equality, with positive effects on long-term development.<ref name="Oto-Peralías2016">{{Cite journal|last1=Oto-Peralías|first1=Daniel|last2=Romero-Ávila|first2=Diego|s2cid=156897045|date=13 May 2016|title=The economic consequences of the Spanish Reconquest: the long-term effects of Medieval conquest and colonization|journal=Journal of Economic Growth|language=en|volume=21|issue=4|pages=409–464|doi=10.1007/s10887-016-9132-9|issn=1381-4338|hdl=10023/10769|url=https://riuma.uma.es/xmlui/bitstream/10630/11092/1/OtoPeralias-Malaga.pdf|hdl-access=free}}</ref>
{{History of Spain}}
{{History of Portugal}}
{{History of Gibraltar}}
{{See also|History of Spain|History of Portugal|Portugal in the period of discoveries}}
Real, legendary, and fictional episodes from the ''Reconquista'' are the subject of much of medieval ], ], and ] such as the '']''.


===Reverberations===
Some noble ] show the close relations (although not very numerous) between Muslims and Christians. For example, ], whose rule is considered to have marked the peak of power for Moorish ''Al-Andalus'' Iberia, married Abda, daughter of ] of ], who bore him a son, named Abd al-Rahman and commonly known in pejorative sense as ] (''Little Sancho''; in Arabic: ''Shanjoul'').
], in the ], Morocco, 1471, from the '']''.]]
As the Christian kingdoms completed their conquest of territory on the Iberian Peninsula, they shifted their impetus elsewhere, even to the ], which is located across the Strait of Gibraltar. A Castilian Crown-sanctioned punitive expedition against Tetouan, a corsair stronghold, was launched as early as 1399–1400.{{Sfn|Bunes Ibarra|1995|p=18}} The ] in 1415 marked the beginning of Portuguese expansion in Africa. Thereby, it allowed Portugal to exert control over Castilian and Aragonese trade through the Strait, and it also allowed Portugal to establish a powerbase for the launching of raid expeditions in Muslim-ruled lands.{{Sfn|Bunes Ibarra|1995|pp=19–20}} Some 15th-century political writers promoted the idea of a "Gothic Monarchy", an heir to ], that included territory across the Strait.{{Sfn|Bunes Ibarra|1995|pp=16–17}}


The African enterprise which was undertaken during the rule of the ] was nominally endorsed by papal bulls and it was also financed with donations which were used to pay the crusade tax, even if it was viewed with some suspicion by the Papacy.{{Sfn|Bunes Ibarra|1995|p=17}} Conquest efforts in Africa on the part of the Catholic Monarchy by and large stalled following the death of Ferdinand II of Aragon.{{Sfn|Bunes Ibarra|1995|p=14}} The model of conquest and repopulation by Christian powers in the Peninsula was however never reproduced in Northern Africa, and with the conquered territory—a fortified mark with very few fortresses scattered along an extensive coastline—merely adopting a defensive role, it allowed for Ottoman expansion in the region.<ref>{{Cite journal|title=La presencia española en el Norte de África: las diversas justificaciones de las conquistas en el Magreb|first=Miguel Ángel de|last=Bunes Ibarra|journal=Aldaba|url=http://e-spacio.uned.es/fez/eserv/bibliuned:Aldaba-1995-25-2020/Documento.pdf|pages=15, 23–25|issn=0213-7925|issue=25|year=1995}}</ref>
After his father's death, Sanchuelo/Abd al-Rahman, as a son of a Christian princess, was a strong contender to take over the ultimate power in Muslim al-Andalus. A hundred years later, King ], considered among the greatest of the Medieval Spanish kings, designated as his heir his son (also a Sancho) by the refugee ] princess ].


The Portuguese ] in the ],<ref>proficiscitur Hydruntum classis quam ex Portugallia accersivimus. … Speramus illam magno usui Hydruntine expugnationi futuram. …</ref> ]<ref name="soucek">{{Citation | first = Svat | last = Soucek | editor-last = Vagnon | editor-first = Emmanuelle | editor2-last = Hofmann | editor2-first = Catherine | contribution = Piri Reis. His uniqueness among cartographers and hydrographers of the Renaissance | contribution-url = http://www.lecfc.fr/new/articles/216-article-11.pdf | date = June 2013 | pages = 135–144 | publisher = CFC | title = Cartes marines : d'une technique à une culture. Actes du colloque du 3 décembre 2012. | url = http://production-scientifique.bnf.fr/Biblio/cartes-marines-dune-technique-une-culture-actes-du-colloque-du-3-decembre-2012 | access-date = 12 December 2019 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180627202943/http://production-scientifique.bnf.fr/Biblio/cartes-marines-dune-technique-une-culture-actes-du-colloque-du-3-decembre-2012 | archive-date = 27 June 2018 | url-status = dead }}</ref> and ] as the Portuguese conquered the Ottomans' allies: the ] in East Africa, the ] in South Asia and the ] in Southeast Asia.<ref>João Paulo de Oliveira e Costa, Vítor Luís Gaspar Rodrigues (2012) {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180618230212/https://books.google.pt/books?id=n2ziSAAACAAJ |date=18 June 2018 }}</ref>
The Reconquista was a war with long periods of respite between the adversaries, partly for pragmatic reasons and also due to infighting among the Christian kingdoms of the North spanning over seven centuries. Some populations practiced Islam or Christianity as their own religion during these centuries, so the identity of contenders changed over time.


]'s initial 1492 ] was predicated on the completion of the Granada War, with the Spanish monarchy only able to assent to his overseas journeys once it had completed the process of defeating the Moors.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Years In Spain: Columbus Finds a Sponsor {{!}} Religious Studies Center |url=https://rsc.byu.edu/christopher-columbus-latter-day-saint-perspective/years-spain-columbus-finds-sponsor |access-date=2024-06-10 |website=rsc.byu.edu}}</ref> Columbus's views of the New World and the Christian convictions that shaped his actions there were influenced by historical European anti-Muslim ideas that had underpinned the Reconquista itself;<ref>{{Cite web |last=Mikhail |first=Alan |date=2020-12-17 |title=How the Specter of Islam Fueled European Colonization in the Americas |url=https://lithub.com/how-the-specter-of-islam-fueled-european-colonization-in-the-americas/ |access-date=2024-06-10 |website=Literary Hub |language=en-US}}</ref> he believed that by his voyaging, he would be able to reach the ] of Asia and create a coalition that could attack the Middle East from both sides and thus bring Jerusalem back under Christian rule.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hamdani |first=Abbas |date=1979 |title=Columbus and the Recovery of Jerusalem |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/598947 |journal=Journal of the American Oriental Society |volume=99 |issue=1 |pages=39–48 |doi=10.2307/598947 |jstor=598947 |issn=0003-0279}}</ref>
===Recreations in modern Spain===
Currently, the festivals of '']'' (Castilian), ''moros i cristians'' (]), ''mouros e cristãos'' (Portuguese) and ''mouros e cristiáns'' (Galician), these meaning "Moors and Christians", recreate the fights as colorful parades with elaborate garments and lots of fireworks, especially on the central and southern towns of the ], like ], ] or ].


==Timeline of major dates== === Far-right motif ===
] sympathizers who are waving the ] (2 January 2016)]]
{{main|Timeline of the Muslim presence in the Iberian peninsula}}
Along with the rhetoric of the ], the rhetoric of the 'Reconquista' serves as a rallying point in the political discourse of the contemporary ] in Spain, Portugal and, more broadly, it also serves as a rallying point in the political discourse of the ] in Europe.<ref>{{Cite book|chapter=The Reconquista revisited: mobilising medieval Iberian history in Spain, Portugal and beyond|first=Tiago João Queimada e |last=Silva|title=The Crusades in the Modern World|editor-first=Mike|editor-last=Horswell|editor-first2=Akil N.|editor-last2=Awan|year=2020|publisher=]|isbn=978-1-138-06607-6|pages=57–65}}</ref> Frequently, references to the Reconquista and the crusades are allegorically played as ] by 21st-century online far-right groups which seek to convey ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bogerts |first1=Lisa |last2=Fielitz |first2=Maik |chapter='Do You Want Meme War?': Understanding the Visual Memes of the German Far Right |title=Post-Digital Cultures of the Far Right: Online Actions and Offline Consequences in Europe and the US |editor1-last=Fielitz |editor1-first=Maik |editor2-last=Thurston |editor2-first=Nick |publisher=transcript Verlag |date=2019 |page=145 |chapter-url=https://mediarep.org/bitstream/handle/doc/13289/Post_Digital_Cultures_137-153_Bogerts_Fielitz_Understanding_Visual_Memes_German_Far_Right_.pdf?sequence=5 |doi=10.14361/9783839446706-010 |isbn=978-3-8394-4670-6 |s2cid=158818388 }}</ref> The theme has also been used as a major rallying point by ] groups in France and Italy.<ref>{{Cite book|chapter=From Identity Politics to the Identitarian Movement. The Europeanisation of Cultural Stereotypes?|title=National Stereotyping, Identity Politics, European Crises|first=Karel|last=Šima|pages=75–94|doi=10.1163/9789004436107_006|year=2021|publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-43610-7 |s2cid=236580880}}</ref>
*711: The invasion of Christian-ruled Iberia by Arab-Berber armies of the Umayyad Caliphate begins.

*717: First Umayyad foray ].
The annual commemoration of the surrender of Sultan Boabdil in Granada on 2 January acquired a markedly nationalistic undertone during the early years of the ] and, since the death of the dictator ] in 1975, it has served as glue for extreme right groups by facilitating their open-air physical gatherings and providing them with an occasion which they can use to explicitly state their political demands.<ref name="garciasanjuan" /> A ] unit usually parades and sings ''El novio de la muerte'' ("Boyfriend of death").<ref>{{Cite web |date=2 January 2020 |title=Así sonó 'El novio de la muerte' cantado por la Legión este 2 de enero en Granada |url=https://www.ideal.es/granada/toma-granada-legion-sono-novio-muerte-20200102144112-nt.html |access-date=9 March 2022 |website=Ideal |language=es}}</ref> The ] has also waged a ] by claiming dates in the history of the Reconquista, such as the aforementioned 2 January or 2 February, regional festivities for the related ] (] and ]).<ref name="garciasanjuan">{{Cite web|url=https://www.eldiario.es/andalucia/en-abierto/manipulacion-pasado-ultraderecha-reaccion-academica_132_7374060.html|website=]|first=Alejandro|last=García Sanjuan|date=3 April 2021|title=La manipulación del pasado por la ultraderecha y la reacción académica}}</ref>
*719: ]ic ] rule in Iberia at its widest, covering almost all of the Iberian Peninsula and across the Pyrenees in Narbonne.

*718 or 722: ] in the north-west of Iberia, establishing a Christian principality in Asturias.
==See also==
*739 Berber garrison driven from Galicia.{{Citation needed|date=November 2014}}
* ]
*742: Berber garrisons give up their positions north of the ] to join the ].
*759: ] conquers the last Muslim strongholds in present-day France.
*801: The Carolingians led by ] conquer ], sack ], and establish the ].
*809: The Carolingians fail to take and hold ] and Tortosa, retreating to their Ebro marches.<ref name=Collins1990>{{cite book|last=Collins|first=Roger|title=The Basques|year=1990|publisher=Basil Blackwell|location=Oxford, UK|isbn=0631175652|edition=2nd |page=104|ref=harv}}</ref>{{rp|124}}
*868: Conquest of the city of ], leading to the establishment of the ] (Latin for later Portugal).
*871: Capture of ] by the Asturians, ] established.
*914: ] briefly retake Barcelona.
*1085: Landmark conquest of ] by Castilian forces. Over half of Iberia conquered by Christian-ruled kingdoms.
*1086: ] defeated Castilian army and halted its advance at ].
*1097: ]; two-thirds of the Iberian peninsula conquered by Christian-ruled kingdoms.
*1118: Navarro-Aragonese troops capture the Muslim strongholds of ] and ].
*1147: ], where Second Crusade and the Kingdom of Portugal defeat the ].
*1195: The ] establishes ] authority in the south of the Iberia.
*1212: The key battle of ] heralds the steady political decline of the Iberian Muslim kingdoms.
*1236: ] and the former capital of the caliphate ] are conquered by Castilian forces.
*1249: King ] takes ] (in the Algarve), ending the Portuguese Reconquista in 1249.<ref>Setton, Kenneth Meyer, ''A History of the Crusades: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries'', (University of Wisconsin Press, 1976), 432.</ref>
*1249: The Emirate of Granada remains the only Muslim state in Iberia.
*1300s and 1400s: Marinid Muslims seize control of some towns on the southern coast but are soon driven out, leaving only a few isolated towns in the south of Granada still controlled by the Moors.
*1492: Following the ] (25 November 1491), the Moors surrender the city, completing the Reconquista.


==Notes== ==Notes==
Line 347: Line 368:


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{More footnotes|date=January 2009}}
{{reflist}}


==Bibliography== ==Bibliography==
{{Div col}}
*Bishko, Charles Julian, 1975. ''The Spanish and Portuguese Reconquest, 1095–1492'' in ''A History of the Crusades, vol. 3: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries'', edited by Harry W. Hazard, (University of Wisconsin Press)

* Fletcher, R. A. "Reconquest and Crusade in Spain c. 1050-1150", Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 37, 1987. pp.
* Barton, Simon. ''Beyond the Reconquista: New Directions in the History of Medieval Iberia (711–1085)'' (2020)
* García Fitz, Francisco, ''Guerra y relaciones políticas. Castilla-León y los musulmanes, ss. XI-XIII'', Universidad de Sevilla, 2002.
* Bishko, Charles Julian, 1975. ''The Spanish and Portuguese Reconquest, 1095–1492'' in ''A History of the Crusades, vol. 3: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries'', edited by Harry W. Hazard, (University of Wisconsin Press)
* García Fitz, Francisco & Feliciano Novoa Portela ''Cruzados en la Reconquista'', Madrid, 2014.
* {{Cite book |last1=Bradbury |first1=Jim |date=2004 |title=The Routledge Companion to Medieval Warfare |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3FRsBgAAQBAJ |location=Abingdon |publisher=Routledge |pages=21, 314 |isbn=978-1134598472 |access-date=6 April 2022}}
* Lomax, Derek William: ''The Reconquest of Spain.'' Longman, London 1978. ISBN 0-582-50209-8

* Nicolle, David and Angus McBride. ''El Cid and the Reconquista 1050-1492'' (Men-At-Arms, No 200) (1988), focus on soldiers
* Brescó, Ignacio, and Floor van Alphen. "Chapter 4 – Reenacting the Reconquista Myth? Some Reflections on Moros y Cristianos Festivals in Spain" in ''Historical Reenactment'' (Berghahn, 2022) {{doi|10.1515/9781800735415-006}}
* O´Callaghan, Joseph F.: ''Reconquest and crusade in Medieval Spain'' (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002), ISBN 0-8122-3696-3

* O'Callaghan, Joseph F. ''The Last Crusade in the West: Castile and the Conquest of Granada'' (University of Pennsylvania Press; 2014) 364 pages;
*{{Cite book |last=Catlos |first=Brian A. |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1003304619 |title=Kingdoms of Faith : A New History of Islamic Spain |date=2018 |isbn=978-0-465-05587-6 |location=New York |publisher=Basic Books |oclc=1003304619 }}
*Payne, Stanley, "", in ''A History of Spain and Portugal'': Volume One.
* {{cite book | last = Collins | first = Roger | author-link = Roger Collins | title = The Arab Conquest of Spain, 710–797 | publisher = Blackwell Publishing | location = Oxford | year = 1989 | isbn = 0-631-15923-1}}
*Reuter, Timothy; ]; Luscombe, David; ] (eds.), ''" The New Cambridge Medieval History"'', Cambridge University Press, Sep 14, 1995, ISBN 0-521-36291-1.
* {{cite journal |first=Alan |last=Deyermond |title=The Death and Rebirth of Visigothic Spain in the ''Estoria de España'' |journal=Revista Canadiense de Estudios Hispánicos |volume=9 |issue=3 |year=1985 |pages=345–367}}
*Riley-Smith, Jonathan, ''The Atlas of the Crusades''. Facts On File, Oxford (1991)
*{{Cite book |editor-last=Fábregas |editor-first=Adela |title=The Nasrid kingdom of Granada between East and West : (thirteenth to fifteenth centuries) |date=2021 |isbn=978-90-04-44234-4 |location=Leiden |publisher=Brill}}
*Watt, W. Montgomery: A History of Islamic Spain. ] (1992).
* Fletcher, R. A. "Reconquest and Crusade in Spain c. 1050–1150", ''Transactions of the Royal Historical Society'' 37, (1987). pp. 252–285. {{doi|10.2307/3679149}}
*Watt, W. Montgomery: The Influence of Islam on Medieval Europe. (Edinburgh 1972).

*Villegas-Aristizabal, Lucas, 2013, "Revisiting the Anglo-Norman Crusaders’ Failed Attempt to Conquer Lisbon c. 1142’, Portuguese Studies 29:1, pp.&nbsp;7–20. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5699/portstudies.29.1.0007
* García Fitz, Francisco, ''Guerra y relaciones políticas. Castilla-León y los musulmanes, ss. XI–XIII'', Universidad de Sevilla, 2002.
*Villegas-Aristizabal, Lucas, 2009, "Anglo-Norman Involvement in the Conquest and Settlement of Tortosa, 1148-1180", Crusades 8, pp.&nbsp;63–129. http://www.academia.edu/1619392/Anglo-Norman_Intervention_in_the_Conquest_and_Settlement_of_Tortosa_Crusades_8_2009_600_dpi_black_and_white_with_OCR
* {{Cite journal|last1=García Fitz|first1=Francisco|title=La Reconquista: un estado de la cuestión|url=http://www.durango-udala.net/portalDurango/RecursosWeb/DOCUMENTOS/1/1_1945_3.pdf|journal=Clío & Crímen: Revista del Centro de Historia del Crimen de Durango|language=es|issue=6|date=2009|issn=1698-4374|access-date=12 December 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160418002857/http://www.durango-udala.net/portalDurango/RecursosWeb/DOCUMENTOS/1/1_1945_3.pdf|archive-date=18 April 2016|url-status=live}}
* García Fitz, Francisco & Feliciano Novoa Portela ''Cruzados en la Reconquista'', Madrid, 2014.
* García-Sanjuán, Alejandro. "Rejecting al-Andalus, exalting the Reconquista: historical memory in contemporary Spain." ''Journal of Medieval Iberian Studies'' 10.1 (2018): 127–145.
* {{cite book |first=J. N. |last=Hillgarth |location=Toronto |publisher=Pontifical Institute for Medieval Studies |year=2009 |title=The Visigoths in History and Legend }}
*{{Cite book |last=Kamen |first=Henry |title=Spain, 1469–1714: a society of conflict |date=2005 |publisher=Pearson/Longman |isbn=978-0-582-78464-2 |edition=3rd |location=Harlow (GB) New York |url=https://archive.org/details/spain14691714soc00kame}}
* Linehan, Peter. ''History and the historians of medieval Spain'' (Oxford UP, 1993) pp. 95–127.
* Lomax, Derek William: ''The Reconquest of Spain.'' Longman, London 1978. {{ISBN|0-582-50209-8}}
* Lopez, Cesar, Mario Carretero, and Maria Rodriguez-Moneo. "Conquest or reconquest? Students’ conceptions of nation embedded in a historical narrative." ''Journal of the Learning Sciences'' 24.2 (2015): 252–285.
* McKitterick, Rosamond, ed. ''The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 2, c. 700–c. 900'' (2015)
* Nicolle, David and Angus McBride. ''El Cid and the Reconquista 1050–1492'' (Men-At-Arms, No 200) (1988), focus on soldiers
* O'Callaghan, Joseph F.: ''Reconquest and Crusade in Medieval Spain'' (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002), {{ISBN|0-8122-3696-3}}
*{{Cite book |last=O'Callaghan |first=Joseph F. |title=The Last Crusade in the West : Castile and the Conquest of Granada |date=2014 |isbn=978-0-8122-0935-8 |edition= |location=Philadelphia |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press}}
* Payne, Stanley, "", in ''A History of Spain and Portugal'': Volume One.
* Queimada e Silva, Tiago . "The Reconquista revisited: mobilising medieval Iberian history in Spain, Portugal and beyond." in ''The Crusades in the Modern World'' (2019) pp: 57–74.
* {{cite book |author=Reilly|first= Bernard F. |title=The Medieval Spains |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge, UK |year=1993 |isbn=0-521-39741-3 |series=Cambridge Medieval Textbooks}}
* Riley-Smith, Jonathan, ''The Atlas of the Crusades''. Facts on File, Oxford (1991)
* Van Alphen, Floor, and Brady Wagoner. "Reconstructing the ‘Reconquista’: Students’ negotiation of a Spanish master narrative." ''Memory studies'' 16.5 (2023): 1156–1172.

* Villegas-Aristizábal, Lucas, 2013, "Revisiting the Anglo-Norman Crusaders' Failed Attempt to Conquer Lisbon c. 1142", Portuguese Studies 29:1, pp.&nbsp;7–20. {{JSTOR|10.5699/portstudies.29.1.0007}}
* Villegas-Aristizábal, Lucas, 2009, "", Crusades 8, pp.&nbsp;63–129.
* Villegas-Aristizábal, Lucas, 2018, "Was the Portuguese Led Military Campaign against Alcácer do Sal in the Autumn of 1217 Part of the Fifth Crusade?" Al-Masāq 30:1 {{doi|10.1080/09503110.2018.1542573}}
* Watt, W. Montgomery: A History of Islamic Spain. ] (1992).
* Watt, W. Montgomery: The Influence of Islam on Medieval Europe. (Edinburgh 1972).
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Latest revision as of 09:20, 23 December 2024

Medieval Christian military campaigns

For other uses, see Reconquista (disambiguation).

Detail of the Cantiga #63 (13th century), which deals with a late 10th-century battle in San Esteban de Gormaz involving the troops of Count García and Almanzor.

The Reconquista (Spanish and Portuguese for 'reconquest') or the reconquest of al-Andalus was a series of military and cultural campaigns that European Christian kingdoms waged against the Muslim kingdoms following the Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula by the Umayyad Caliphate, culminating in the reign of the Catholic Monarchs of Spain. The beginning of the Reconquista is traditionally dated to the Battle of Covadonga (c. 718 or 722), in which an Asturian army achieved the first Christian victory over the forces of the Umayyad Caliphate since the beginning of the military invasion. The Reconquista ended in 1492 with the fall of the Nasrid kingdom of Granada to the Catholic Monarchs.

In the late 10th century, the Umayyad vizier Almanzor waged a series of military campaigns for 30 years in order to subjugate the northern Christian kingdoms. When the Caliphate of Córdoba disintegrated in the early 11th century, a series of petty successor states known as taifas emerged. The northern kingdoms took advantage of this situation and struck deep into al-Andalus; they fostered civil war, intimidated the weakened taifas, and made them pay large tributes (parias) for "protection".

In the 12th century, the Reconquista was above all a political action to develop the kingdoms of Portugal, León-Castile and Aragon. The king's action took precedence over that of the local lords, with the help of the military orders and also supported by repopulation. Following a Muslim resurgence under the Almohads in the 12th century, the great Moorish strongholds fell to Christian forces in the 13th century, after the decisive Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa (1212), the Siege of Córdoba (1236) and the Siege of Seville (1248)—leaving only the Muslim enclave of Granada as a tributary state in the south. After the surrender of Granada in January 1492, the entire Iberian peninsula was controlled by Christian rulers. On 30 July 1492, as a result of the Alhambra Decree, the Jewish communities in Castile and Aragon—some 200,000 people—were forcibly expelled. The conquest was followed by a series of edicts (1499–1526) which forced the conversions of Muslims in Castile, Navarre, and Aragon, who were later expelled from the Iberian realms of the Spanish Crown by a series of decrees starting in 1609. Approximately three million Muslims emigrated or were driven out of Spain between 1492 and 1610.

Beginning in the 19th century, traditional historiography has used the term Reconquista for what was earlier thought of as a restoration of the Visigothic Kingdom over conquered territories. The concept of Reconquista, consolidated in Spanish historiography in the second half of the 19th century, was associated with the development of a Spanish national identity, emphasizing Spanish nationalist and romantic aspects. It is rememorated in the Moros y Cristianos festival, very popular in parts of Southeastern Spain, and which can also be found in a few places in former Spanish colonies. Pursuant to an Islamophobic worldview, the concept is a symbol of significance for the 21st century European far-right.

Concept and duration

Battles in the Reconquista
8th century
9th century
10th century
11th century
12th century
13th century
14th century
15th century
Post-Reconquista Rebellions

North Africa

The term Reconquista, used to describe the struggle between Christians and Muslims in the Iberian peninsula during the Middle Ages, was not used by writers of the period. Since its development as a term in medieval historiography occurred centuries after the events it references, it has acquired various meanings. Its meaning as an actual reconquest has been subject to the particular concerns or prejudices of scholars, who have sometimes wielded it as a weapon in ideological disputes.

A discernible irredentist ideology that would later become part of the concept of "Reconquista", a Christian reconquest of the peninsula, appeared in writings by the end of the 9th century. For example, the anonymous Christian chronicle Chronica Prophetica (883–884) claimed a historical connection between the Visigothic Kingdom conquered by the Muslims in 711 and the Kingdom of Asturias in which the document was produced, and stressed a Christian and Muslim cultural and religious divide in Hispania, and a necessity to drive out the Muslims and restore conquered territories. In fact, in the writings of both sides, there was a sense of divide based on ethnicity and culture between the inhabitants of the small Christian kingdoms in the north and the dominant elite in the Muslim-ruled south.

One of the arguments challenging the concept of Reconquista is that for the majority of the 781 years of Islamic rule in Iberia, Muslims and Christians coexisted and were not at war with each other.

The linear approach to the origins of a Reconquista taken in early twentieth-century historiography is complicated by a number of issues. For example, periods of peaceful coexistence, or at least of limited and localised skirmishes on the frontiers, were more prevalent over the 781 years of Muslim rule in Iberia than periods of military conflict between the Christian kingdoms and al-Andalus. Additionally, both Christian and Muslim rulers fought other Christians and Muslims, and cooperation and alliances between Muslims and Christians were not uncommon, such as between the Arista dynasty and Banu Qasi as early as the 9th century. Blurring distinctions even further were the mercenaries from both sides who simply fought for whoever paid the most. The period is seen today to have had long episodes of relative religious coexistence and tolerance. The idea of a continuous Reconquista has been challenged by modern scholars.

The Islamic Almohad dynasty and surrounding states, including the Christian Kingdoms of Portugal, Leon, Castile, Navarre, and the Crown of Aragon, c. 1200.

The Crusades, which started late in the 11th century, bred the religious ideology of a Christian reconquest. In the years just before the Council of Clermont took place, Spanish kings used religious differences as a reason to fight against Muslims, although this argument was not extensively used beforehand. In al-Andalus at that time, the Christian states were confronted by the Almoravids, and to an even greater degree, they were confronted by the Almohads, who espoused a similarly staunch Muslim Jihad ideology. In fact, previous documents which date from the 10th and 11th centuries are mute on any idea of "reconquest". Propaganda accounts of Muslim-Christian hostility came into being to support that idea, most notably the Chanson de Roland, an 11th-century French chanson de geste that offers a fictionalised retelling of the Battle of Roncevaux Pass dealing with the Iberian Saracens (Moors), and centuries later introduced in the French school system with a view to instilling moral and national values in the population following the 1870 defeat of the French in the Franco-Prussian War, regardless of the actual events.

The consolidation of the modern idea of a "Reconquista" is inextricably linked to the foundational myths of Spanish nationalism in the 19th century, associated with the development of a Centralist, Castilian, and staunchly Catholic brand of nationalism, evoking nationalistic, romantic and sometimes colonialist themes. The concept gained further track in the 20th century during the Francoist dictatorship. It thus became one of the key tenets of the historiographical discourse of National Catholicism, the mythological and ideological identity of the regime. The discourse was underpinned in its most traditional version by an avowed historical illegitimacy of al-Andalus and the subsequent glorification of the Christian conquest.

The idea of a "liberation war" of reconquest against the Muslims, who were viewed as foreigners, suited the anti-Republican rebels during the Spanish Civil War, the rebels agitated for the banner of a Spanish fatherland, a fatherland which, according to them, was being threatened by regional nationalisms and communism. Their rebellious pursuit was thus a crusade for the restoration of the Church's unity, where Franco stood for both Pelagius of Asturias and El Cid. The Reconquista has become a rallying call for right and far-right parties in Spain to expel from office incumbent progressive or peripheral nationalist options, as well as their values, in different political contexts as of 2018.

The same kind of propaganda was circulated during the Spanish Civil War by the Republicans, who wanted to portray their enemies as foreign invaders, especially given the prominence of the Army of Africa among Franco's troops, an army which was made up of native North African soldiers.

Some contemporary authors consider the "Reconquista" proof that the process of Christian state-building in Iberia was frequently defined by the reclamation of lands that had been lost to the Moors in generations past. In this way, state-building might be characterised—at least in ideological, if not practical, terms—as a process by which Iberian states were being "rebuilt". In turn, other recent historians dispute the whole concept of "Reconquista" as a concept created a posteriori in the service of later political goals. A few historians point out that Spain and Portugal did not previously exist as nations, and therefore the heirs of the Christian Visigothic Kingdom were not technically reconquering them, as the name suggests. One of the first Spanish intellectuals to question the idea of a "reconquest" that lasted for eight centuries was José Ortega y Gasset, writing in the first half of the 20th century. However, the term Reconquista is still widely in use.

History and military campaigns

Background

Further information: Islam in Spain

Landing in Visigothic Hispania and initial expansion

Further information: Umayyad conquest of Hispania and Battle of Guadalete

In 711, North African Berber soldiers with some Arabs commanded by Tariq ibn Ziyad crossed the Strait of Gibraltar, engaging a Visigothic force led by King Roderic at the Battle of Guadalete (July 19–26) in a moment of severe in-fighting and division across the Visigothic Kingdom of Hispania. Many of Roderic's troops deserted, leading to his defeat. He drowned while crossing the Guadalquivir River.

After Roderic's defeat, the Umayyad governor of Ifrikiya Musa ibn-Nusayr joined Tariq, directing a campaign against different towns and strongholds in Hispania. Some, like Mérida, Cordova, or Zaragoza in 712, probably Toledo, were taken, but many agreed to a treaty in exchange for maintaining autonomy, in Theodemir's dominion (region of Tudmir), or Pamplona, for example. The invading Islamic armies did not exceed 60,000 men.

Islamic rule

Main articles: Berbers and Islam and Berber Revolt
The Caliphate of Córdoba in the early 10th century

After the establishment of a local Emirate, Caliph Al-Walid I, ruler of the Umayyad Caliphate, removed many of the successful Muslim commanders. Tariq ibn Ziyad was recalled to Damascus and replaced with Musa ibn-Nusayr, who had been his former superior. Musa's son, Abd al-Aziz ibn Musa, apparently married Egilona, Roderic's widow, and established his regional government in Seville. He was suspected of being under the influence of his wife and was accused of wanting to convert to Christianity and of planning a secessionist rebellion. Apparently a concerned Al-Walid I ordered Abd al-Aziz's assassination. Caliph Al-Walid I died in 715 and was succeeded by his brother Sulayman ibn Abd al-Malik. Sulayman seems to have punished the surviving Musa ibn-Nusayr, who very soon died during a pilgrimage in 716. In the end, Abd al-Aziz ibn Musa's cousin, Ayyub ibn Habib al-Lakhmi became the wali (governor) of al-Andalus.

A serious weakness amongst the Muslim conquerors was the ethnic tension between Berbers and Arabs. The Berbers were indigenous inhabitants of North Africa who had only recently converted to Islam; they provided most of the soldiery of the invading Islamic armies but sensed Arab discrimination against them. This latent internal conflict jeopardised Umayyad unity. The Umayyad forces arrived and crossed the Pyrenees by 719. The last Visigothic king Ardo resisted them in Septimania, where he fended off the Berber-Arab armies until 720.

After the Islamic Moorish conquest of most of the Iberian Peninsula in 711–718 and the establishment of the emirate of al-Andalus, an Umayyad expedition suffered a major defeat at the Battle of Toulouse and was halted for a while on its way north. Odo of Aquitaine had married his daughter to Uthman ibn Naissa, a rebel Berber and lord of Cerdanya, in an attempt to secure his southern borders in order to fend off Charles Martel's attacks on the north. However, a major punitive expedition led by Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi, the latest emir of al-Andalus, defeated and killed Uthman, and the Muslim governor mustered an expedition north across the western Pyrenees, looted areas up to Bordeaux, and defeated Odo in the Battle of the River Garonne in 732.

A desperate Odo turned to his archrival Charles Martel for help, who led the Frankish and remaining Aquitanian armies against the Umayyad armies and defeated them at the Battle of Poitiers in 732, killing Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi. While Moorish rule began to recede in what is today France, it would remain in parts of the Iberian peninsula for another 760 years.

Early Reconquista

Beginning of the Reconquista

Main article: Kingdom of Asturias

A drastic increase of taxes on Christians by the emir Anbasa ibn Suhaym Al-Kalbi provoked several rebellions in al-Andalus, which a series of succeeding weak emirs were unable to suppress. Around 722, a Muslim military expedition was sent into the north in late summer to suppress a rebellion led by Pelagius of Asturias (Pelayo in Spanish, Pelayu in Asturian). Traditional historiography has hailed Pelagius's victory at Covadonga as the beginning of the Reconquista.

Two northern realms, Navarre and Asturias, despite their small size, demonstrated an ability to maintain their independence. Because the Umayyad rulers based in Córdoba were unable to extend their power over the Pyrenees, they decided to consolidate their power within the Iberian peninsula. Arab-Berber forces made periodic incursions deep into Asturias, but this area was a cul-de-sac on the fringes of the Islamic world fraught with inconveniences during campaigns and of little interest.

It comes then as no surprise that, besides focusing on raiding the Arab-Berber strongholds of the Meseta, Alfonso I of Asturias centred on expanding his domains at the expense of the neighbouring Galicians and Basques at either side of his realm just as much. During the first decades, Asturian control over part of the kingdom was weak, and for this reason it had to be continually strengthened through matrimonial alliances and war with other peoples from the north of the Iberian Peninsula. After Pelayo's death in 737, his son Favila of Asturias was elected king. Favila, according to the chronicles, was killed by a bear during a trial of courage. Pelayo's dynasty in Asturias survived and gradually expanded the kingdom's boundaries until all of northwest Hispania was included by roughly 775. However, credit is due to him and to his successors, the Banu Alfons from the Arab chronicles. Further expansion of the northwestern kingdom towards the south occurred during the reign of Alfonso II of Asturias (from 791 to 842). A king's expedition arrived in and pillaged Lisbon in 798, probably concerted with the Carolingians.

The Asturian kingdom became firmly established with the recognition of Alfonso II as king of Asturias by Charlemagne and the Pope. During his reign, the bones of St. James the Great were declared to have been found in Galicia, at Santiago de Compostela. Pilgrims from all over Europe opened a channel of communication between the isolated Asturias and the Carolingian lands and beyond, centuries later.

Frankish invasions

Main articles: Umayyad invasion of Gaul and Marca Hispanica

After the Umayyad conquest of the Iberian heartland of the Visigothic kingdom, the Muslims crossed the Pyrenees and gradually took control of Septimania, starting in 719 with the conquest of Narbonne through 725 when Carcassonne and Nîmes were secured. From the stronghold of Narbonne, they tried to conquer Aquitaine but suffered a major defeat at the Battle of Toulouse (721).

Ten years after halting their advance north, Odo of Aquitaine married his daughter to Uthman ibn Naissa, a rebel Berber and lord of Cerdanya (perhaps all of contemporary Catalonia as well), in an attempt to secure his southern borders to fend off Charles Martel's attacks on the north. However, a major punitive expedition led by Abdul Rahman Al Ghafiqi, the latest emir of al-Andalus, defeated and killed Uthman.

After expelling the Muslims from Narbonne in 759 and driving their forces back over the Pyrenees, the Carolingian king Pepin the Short conquered Aquitaine in a ruthless eight-year war. Charlemagne followed his father by subduing Aquitaine by creating counties, taking the Church as his ally and appointing counts of Frankish or Burgundian stock, like his loyal William of Gellone, making Toulouse his base for expeditions against al-Andalus. Charlemagne decided to organize a regional subkingdom, the Spanish March, which included part of contemporary Catalonia, in order to keep the Aquitanians in check and to secure the southern border of the Carolingian Empire against Muslim incursions. In 781, his three-year-old son Louis was crowned king of Aquitaine, under the supervision of Charlemagne's trustee William of Gellone, and was nominally in charge of the incipient Spanish March.

Meanwhile, the takeover of the southern fringes of al-Andalus by Abd ar-Rahman I in 756 was opposed by Yusuf ibn Abd al-Rahman, autonomous governor (wāli) or king (malik) of al-Andalus. Abd ar-Rahman I expelled Yusuf from Cordova, but it took still decades for him to expand to the north-western Andalusian districts. He was also opposed externally by the Abbasids of Baghdad who failed in their attempts to overthrow him. In 778, Abd al-Rahman closed in on the Ebro valley. Regional lords saw the Umayyad emir at the gates and decided to enlist the nearby Christian Franks. According to Ali ibn al-Athir, a Kurdish historian of the 12th century, Charlemagne received the envoys of Sulayman al-Arabi, Husayn, and Abu Taur at the Diet of Paderborn in 777. These rulers of Zaragoza, Girona, Barcelona, and Huesca were enemies of Abd ar-Rahman I, and in return for Frankish military aid against him offered their homage and allegiance.

Reconquista of the main towns, per year (present-day state borders)

Charlemagne, seeing an opportunity, agreed upon an expedition and crossed the Pyrenees in 778. Near the city of Zaragoza Charlemagne received the homage of Sulayman al-Arabi. However the city, under the leadership of Husayn, closed its gates and refused to submit. Unable to conquer the city by force, Charlemagne decided to retreat. On the way home the rearguard of the army was ambushed and destroyed by Basque forces at the Battle of Roncevaux Pass. The Song of Roland, a highly romanticised account of this battle, would later become one of the most famous chansons de geste of the Middle Ages. Around 788 Abd ar-Rahman I died and was succeeded by Hisham I. In 792 Hisham proclaimed a jihad, advancing in 793 against the Kingdom of Asturias and Carolingian Septimania (Gothia). They defeated William of Gellone, Count of Toulouse, in battle, but William led an expedition the following year across the eastern Pyrenees. Barcelona, a major city, became a potential target for the Franks in 797, as its governor Zeid rebelled against the Umayyad emir of Córdoba. An army of the emir managed to recapture it in 799, but Louis, at the head of an army, crossed the Pyrenees and besieged the city for seven months until it finally capitulated in 801.

The main passes in the Pyrenees were Roncesvalles, Somport and La Jonquera. Charlemagne established across them the vassal regions of Pamplona, Aragon, and Catalonia respectively. Catalonia was itself formed from a number of small counties, including Pallars, Girona, and Urgell; it was called the Marca Hispanica by the late 8th century. They protected the eastern Pyrenees passes and shores and were under the direct control of the Frankish kings. Pamplona's first king was Iñigo Arista, who allied with his Muslim kinsmen the Banu Qasi and rebelled against Frankish overlordship and overcame a Carolingian expedition in 824 that led to the setup of the Kingdom of Pamplona. Aragon, founded in 809 by Aznar Galíndez, grew around Jaca and the high valleys of the Aragon River, protecting the old Roman road. By the end of the 10th century, Aragon, which then was just a county, was annexed by Navarre. Sobrarbe and Ribagorza were small counties and had little significance to the progress of the Reconquista.

In the late 9th century under Count Wilfred, Barcelona became the de facto capital of the region. It controlled the other counties' policies in a union, which led in 948 to the independence of Barcelona under Count Borrel II, who declared that the new dynasty in France (the Capets) were not the legitimate rulers of France nor, as a result, of his county. These states were small and, with the exception of Navarre, did not have the capacity for attacking the Muslims in the way that Asturias did, but their mountainous geography rendered them relatively safe from being conquered, and their borders remained stable for two centuries.

Northern Christian realms

See also: Spain in the Middle Ages § Medieval Christian Spain, and Portugal in the Middle Ages § Reconquista in Portugal

The northern principalities and kingdoms survived in their mountainous strongholds (see above). However, they started a definite territorial expansion south at the turn of the 10th century (Leon, Najera). The fall of the Caliphate of Cordova (1031) heralded a period of military expansion for the northern kingdoms, now divided into several mighty regional powers after the division of the Kingdom of Navarre (1035). Myriad autonomous Christian kingdoms emerged thereafter.

Kingdom of Asturias (718–924)

Main article: Kingdom of Asturias See also: Kingdom of Galicia and Duchy of Cantabria

The Kingdom of Asturias was located in the Cantabrian Mountains, a wet and mountainous region in the north of the Iberian Peninsula. It was the first Christian power to emerge. The kingdom was established by a Visigothic nobleman, named Pelagius (Pelayo), who had possibly returned after the Battle of Guadalete in 711 and was elected leader of the Asturians, and the remnants of the gens Gothorum (the Hispano-Gothic aristocracy and the Hispano-Visigothic population who took refuge in the North). Historian Joseph F. O'Callaghan says an unknown number of them fled and took refuge in Asturias or Septimania. In Asturias they supported Pelagius's uprising, and joining with the indigenous leaders, formed a new aristocracy.

The population of the mountain region consisted of native Astures, Galicians, Cantabri, Basques and other groups unassimilated into Hispano-Gothic society, laying the foundations for the Kingdom of Asturias and starting the Astur-Leonese dynasty that spanned from 718 to 1037 and led the initial efforts in the Iberian peninsula to take back the territories then ruled by the Moors. Although the new dynasty first ruled in the mountains of Asturias, with the capital of the kingdom established initially in Cangas de Onís, and was in its dawn mostly concerned with securing the territory and settling the monarchy, the latest kings (particularly Alfonso III of Asturias) emphasised the nature of the new kingdom as heir of that in Toledo and the restoration of the Visigothic nation in order to vindicate the expansion to the south. However, such claims have been overall dismissed by modern historiography, emphasizing the distinct, autochthonous nature of the Cantabro-Asturian and Vasconic domains with no continuation to the Gothic Kingdom of Toledo.

Pelagius's kingdom initially was little more than a gathering point for the existing guerrilla forces. During the first decades, the Asturian dominion over the different areas of the kingdom was still lax, and for this reason it had to be continually strengthened through matrimonial alliances with other powerful families from the north of the Iberian Peninsula. Thus, Ermesinda, Pelagius's daughter, was married to Alfonso, Dux Peter of Cantabria's son. Alfonso's son Fruela married Munia, a Basque from Álava, after crushing a Basque uprising (probably resistance). Their son is reported to be Alfonso II, while Alfonso I's daughter Adosinda married Silo, a local chief from the area of Flavionavia, Pravia.

Alfonso's military strategy was typical of Iberian warfare at the time. Lacking the means needed for wholesale conquest of large territories, his tactics consisted of raids in the border regions of Vardulia. With the plunder he gained further military forces could be paid, enabling him to raid the Muslim cities of Lisbon, Zamora, and Coimbra. Alfonso I also expanded his realm westwards conquering Galicia.

Saint James the Great depicted as Saint James the Moor-slayer. Legend of the Reconquista

During the reign of King Alfonso II (791–842), the kingdom was firmly established, and a series of Muslim raids caused the transfer of the Asturian capital to Oviedo. The king is believed to have initiated diplomatic contacts with the kings of Pamplona and the Carolingians, thereby gaining official recognition for his kingdom and his crown from the Pope and Charlemagne.

The bones of St. James the Great were proclaimed to have been found in Iria Flavia (present day Padrón) in 813 or probably two or three decades later. The cult of the saint was transferred later to Compostela (from Latin campus stellae, literally "the star field"), possibly in the early 10th century when the focus of Asturian power moved from the mountains over to Leon, to become the Kingdom of León or Galicia-Leon. Santiago's were among many saint relics proclaimed to have been found across north-western Hispania. Pilgrims started to flow in from other Iberian Christian realms, sowing the seeds of the later Way of Saint James (11–12th century) that sparked the enthusiasm and religious zeal of continental Christian Europe for centuries.

Despite numerous battles, neither the Umayyads nor the Asturians had sufficient forces to secure control over these northern territories. Under the reign of Ramiro, famed for the highly legendary Battle of Clavijo, the border began to slowly move southward and Asturian holdings in Castile, Galicia, and Leon were fortified, and an intensive program of re-population of the countryside began in those territories. In 924 the Kingdom of Asturias became the Kingdom of León, when Leon became the seat of the royal court (it didn't bear any official name).

Kingdom of León (910–1230)

Main articles: Kingdom of León, Kingdom of Galicia, County of Portugal, and Portugal in the Reconquista

Alfonso III of Asturias repopulated the strategically important city Leon and established it as his capital. King Alfonso began a series of campaigns to establish control over all the lands north of the Douro river. He reorganised his territories into the major duchies (Galicia and Portugal) and major counties (Saldaña and Castile), and fortified the borders with many castles. At his death in 910 the shift in regional power was completed as the kingdom became the Kingdom of León. From this power base, his heir Ordoño II was able to organize attacks against Toledo and even Seville.

The Caliphate of Córdoba was gaining power, and began to attack Leon. King Ordoño allied with Navarre against Abd-al-Rahman, but they were defeated in Valdejunquera in 920. For the next 80 years, the Kingdom of León suffered civil wars, Moorish attack, internal intrigues and assassinations, and the partial independence of Galicia and Castile, thus delaying the reconquest and weakening the Christian forces. It was not until the following century that the Christians started to see their conquests as part of a long-term effort to restore the unity of the Visigothic kingdom.

The only point during this period when the situation became hopeful for Leon was the reign of Ramiro II. King Ramiro, in alliance with Fernán González of Castile and his retinue of caballeros villanos, defeated the Caliph in Simancas in 939. After this battle, when the Caliph barely escaped with his guard and the rest of the army was destroyed, King Ramiro obtained 12 years of peace, but he had to give González the independence of Castile as payment for his help in the battle. After this defeat, Moorish attacks abated until Almanzor began his campaigns. Alfonso V finally regained control over his domains in 1002. Navarre, though attacked by Almanzor, remained intact.

The conquest of Leon did not include Galicia which was left to temporary independence after the withdrawal of the Leonese king. Galicia was conquered soon after (by Ferdinand, son of Sancho the Great, around 1038). Subsequent kings titled themselves kings of Galicia and Leon, instead of merely king of Leon as the two were in a personal union.

At the end of the 11th century, King Afonso VI of León reached the Tagus (1085), repeating the same policy of alliances and developing collaboration with Frankish knights. The original repoblación was then complete. His aim was to create a Hispanic empire like the Visigothic Kingdom (418–720) to reclaim his hegemony over the entire Iberian Peninsula. Within this context, the territory between the Douro and the Tagus was repopulated and a western nucleus was formed in Portugal that wanted independence. This marks the beginning of the Portuguese Repovoação ou Repovoamento occurred during the reigns of the House of Burgundy up to the middle of the thirteenth century when the Portuguese Reconquista was also brought to an end with the ultimate conquering of Gharb al-Andalus when in March 1249 the city of Faro was conquered by Afonso III of Portugal.

Kingdom of Castile (1037–1230)

Main article: Kingdom of Castile
20th century ceramic depiction of the conquest of Toledo by Alfonso VI, at the Plaza de España

Ferdinand I of Leon was the leading king of the mid-11th century. He conquered Coimbra and attacked the taifa kingdoms, often demanding the tributes known as parias. Ferdinand's strategy was to continue to demand parias until the taifa was greatly weakened both militarily and financially. He also repopulated the Borders with numerous fueros. Following the Navarrese tradition, on his death in 1064 he divided his kingdom between his sons. His son Sancho II of Castile wanted to reunite the kingdom of his father and attacked his brothers, with a young noble at his side: Rodrigo Díaz, later known as El Cid Campeador. Sancho was killed in the siege of Zamora by the traitor Bellido Dolfos (also known as Vellido Adolfo) in 1072. His brother Alfonso VI took over Leon, Castile and Galicia.

Alfonso VI the Brave gave more power to the fueros and repopulated Segovia, Ávila and Salamanca. Once he had secured the Borders, King Alfonso conquered the powerful Taifa kingdom of Toledo in 1085. Toledo, which was the former capital of the Visigoths, was a very important landmark, and the conquest made Alfonso renowned throughout the Christian world. However, this "conquest" was conducted rather gradually, and mostly peacefully, during the course of several decades. However, Toledo was not fully secured and integrated into Alfonso's kingdom until after a period of gradual resettlement and consolidation, during which Christian settlers were encouraged to move into the area.

Alfonso VI was first and foremost a tactful monarch who chose to understand the kings of taifa and employed unprecedented diplomatic measures to attain political feats before considering the use of force. He adopted the title Imperator totius Hispaniae ("Emperor of all Hispania", referring to all the Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula, and not just the modern country of Spain). Alfonso's more aggressive policy towards the taifas worried the rulers of those kingdoms, who called on the African Almoravids for help.

Kingdom of Navarre (824–1620)

Main article: Kingdom of Navarre

The Kingdom of Pamplona primarily extended along either side of the Pyrenees on the Atlantic Ocean. The kingdom was formed when local leader Íñigo Arista led a revolt against the regional Frankish authority and was elected or declared King in Pamplona (traditionally in 824), establishing a kingdom inextricably linked at this stage to their kinsmen, the muwallad Banu Qasi of Tudela.

Although relatively weak until the early 11th century, Pamplona took a more active role after the accession of Sancho the Great (1004–1035). The kingdom expanded greatly under his reign, as it absorbed Castile, Leon, and what was to be Aragon, in addition to other small counties that would unite and become the Principality of Catalonia. This expansion also led to the independence of Galicia, as well as gaining overlordship over Gascony.

In the 12th century, however, the kingdom contracted to its core, and in 1162 King Sancho VI declared himself king of Navarre. Throughout its early history, the Navarrese kingdom engaged in frequent skirmishes with the Carolingian Empire, from which it maintained its independence, a key feature of its history until 1513.

Kingdom and Crown of Aragon (1035–1706)

Main articles: Kingdom of Aragon, County of Barcelona, Principality of Catalonia, Kingdom of Valencia, Kingdom of Mallorca, and Crown of Aragon
The Moors request permission from James I of Aragon

The Kingdom of Aragon started off as an offshoot of the Kingdom of Navarre. It was formed when Sancho III of Navarre decided to divide his large realm among all his sons. Aragon was the portion of the realm which passed to Ramiro I of Aragon, an illegitimate son of Sancho III. The kingdoms of Aragon and Navarre were several times united in personal union until the death of Alfonso the Battler in 1135.

In 1137, the heiress of the kingdom married the count of Barcelona, and their son Alfonso II ruled from 1162 the combined possessions of his parents, resulting in the composite monarchy that modern historians call the Crown of Aragon. Alfonso successfully reincorporated the Principality of Tarragona into their realm, expelling the Norman d'Aguiló family.

In the following centuries, the Crown of Aragon conquered a number of territories in the Iberian peninsula and the Mediterranean, including the kingdom of Valencia and the kingdom of Mallorca. James I of Aragon, also known as James the Conqueror, expanded his territories to the north, south and east. James also signed the Treaty of Corbeil (1258), in which the French king renounced to any feudal claim over Catalonia.

Early in his reign, James attempted to reunite the Aragonese and Navarrese crowns through a treaty with the childless Sancho VII of Navarre. But the Navarrese nobles rejected him, and chose Theobald IV of Champagne in his stead.

Later on, Ferdinand II of Aragon, married Isabella of Castile, leading to a dynastic union which eventually gave birth to modern Spain, after the conquest of Upper Navarre (Navarre south of the Pyrenees) and the Emirate of Granada.

Kingdom of Portugal (1139–1249)

Main article: Portugal in the Reconquista
Statue of Geraldo Geraldes Sem Pavor or Gerald the Fearless. A Portuguese folk hero with the head of a Moor

In 1139, after an overwhelming victory in the Battle of Ourique against the Almoravids, Afonso Henriques was proclaimed the first King of Portugal by his troops. According to the legend, Christ announced from heaven Afonso's great deeds, whereby he would establish the first Portuguese Cortes at Lamego and be crowned by the Primate Archbishop of Braga. In 1142 a group of Anglo-Norman crusaders on their way to the Holy Land helped King Afonso Henriques in a failed Siege of Lisbon (1142). In the Treaty of Zamora in 1143, Alfonso VII of Leon and Castile recognized Portuguese independence from the Kingdom of León.

In 1147, Portugal captured Santarém, and seven months later the city of Lisbon was also brought under Portuguese control after the Siege of Lisbon. By the papal bull Manifestis Probatum, Pope Alexander III recognized Afonso Henriques as King of Portugal in 1179.

With Portugal finally recognized as an independent kingdom by its neighbors, Afonso Henriques and his successors, aided by Crusaders and the military monastic orders the Knights Templar, the Order of Aviz or the Order of Saint James, pushed the Moors to the Algarve on the southern coast of Portugal. After several campaigns, the Portuguese part in the Reconquista came to an end with the definitive capture of the Algarve in 1249. With all of Portugal now under the control of Afonso III of Portugal, religious, cultural and ethnic groups became gradually homogenized.

Cross of the Order of Christ

After the completion of the Reconquista, the Portuguese territory was a Roman Catholic realm. Nonetheless, Denis of Portugal carried out a short war with Castile for possession of the towns of Serpa and Moura. After this, Denis avoided war. In 1297, he signed the Treaty of Alcanizes with Ferdinand IV of Castile, establishing a permanent border between the two kingdoms.

During the suppression of the Knights Templar all over Europe, under the influence of Philip IV of France and Pope Clement V requesting its annihilation by 1312, King Denis reinstituted the Templars of Tomar as the Order of Christ in 1319. Denis believed that the Order's assets should by their nature stay in any given Order instead of being taken by the King, largely for the Templars' contribution to the Reconquista and the reconstruction of Portugal after the wars.

The experience gained during the battles of the Reconquista was fundamental to Conquest of Ceuta, the first step to the establishment of the Portuguese Empire. Likewise, the contact with Muslim's navigation techniques and sciences enabled the creation of Portuguese nautical innovations such as the caravel – the principal Portuguese ship during their voyages of exploration in the Age of Discovery.

Minor Christian realms

Minor Christian realms were the Kingdom of Viguera (970–1005), the Lordship of Albarracín (1167–1300), the Principality of Tarragona (1129–1173), and the Principality of Valencia (1094–1102).

Southern Islamic realms

Further information: al-Andalus

Umayyads

Main articles: Emirate of Córdoba and Caliphate of Córdoba
The Battle of the Puig at El Puig de Santa Maria in 1237

During the 9th century the Berbers returned to North Africa in the aftermath of revolts. Many governors of large cities distant from the capital, Córdoba, had planned to establish their independence. Then, in 929, the Emir of Córdoba (Abd-ar-Rahman III), the leader of the Umayyad dynasty, declared himself Caliph, independent from the Abbasids in Baghdad. He took all the military, religious, and political power and reorganised the army and the bureaucracy.

After regaining control over the dissident governors, Abd-ar-Rahman III tried to conquer the remaining Christian kingdoms of the Iberian peninsula, attacking them several times and forcing them back beyond the Cantabrian Mountains. Abd-ar-Rahman's grandson later became a puppet in the hands of the great Vizier Almanzor (al-Mansur, "the victorious"). Almanzor waged several campaigns attacking and sacking Burgos, Leon, Pamplona, Barcelona, and Santiago de Compostela before his death in 1002.

Taifas

Main article: Taifa

Between Almanzor's death and 1031, al-Andalus suffered many civil wars, which ended in the division into the Taifa kingdoms. The taifas were small kingdoms, established by the city governors. The result was many (up to 34) small kingdoms, each centered upon its capital. Their governors had no larger-scale vision of the Moorish presence in the Iberian peninsula and had no qualms about attacking their neighbouring kingdoms whenever they could gain advantage by doing so.

The split into the taifa states weakened the Islamic presence, and the Christian kingdoms further advanced as Alfonso VI of Leon and Castile conquered Toledo in 1085. Surrounded by enemies, taifa rulers sent a desperate appeal to the Berber chieftain Yusuf ibn Tashfin, leader of the Almoravids. Taifas reemerged when the Almoravid dynasty collapsed in the 1140s, and again when the Almohad Caliphate declined in the 1220s.

Almoravids

Main article: Almoravid dynasty
Extent of the Reconquista into Almohad territory as of 1157.
Capture of Seville by Ferdinand III of Castile (painted by Francisco Pacheco)

The Almoravids were a Muslim militia composed of Berbers, and unlike previous Muslim rulers, they were not so tolerant towards Christians and Jews. Their armies entered the Iberian peninsula on several occasions (1086, 1088, 1093) and defeated King Alfonso at the Battle of Sagrajas in 1086, but initially their purpose was to unite all the taifas into a single Almoravid Caliphate. Their actions halted the southward expansion of the Christian kingdoms. Their only defeat came at Valencia in 1094, due to the actions of El Cid.

Meanwhile, Navarre lost all importance under King Sancho IV, for he lost Rioja to Sancho II of Castile, and nearly became the vassal of Aragon. At his death, the Navarrese chose as their king Sancho Ramírez, King of Aragon, who thus became Sancho V of Navarre and I of Aragon. Sancho Ramírez gained international recognition for Aragon, uniting it with Navarre and expanding the borders south, conquering Wasqa Huesca deep in the valleys in 1096 and building a fort, El Castellar, 25 km from Saraqusta Zaragoza.

Catalonia came under intense pressure from the taifas of Zaragoza and Lérida, as well as from internal disputes, as Barcelona suffered a dynastic crisis that led to open war among the smaller counties. But by the 1080s, the situation had calmed down, and the dominion of Barcelona over the smaller counties was restored.

Almohads

Main article: Almohad Caliphate
The Surrender of Granada by Francisco Pradilla Ortiz

After a brief period of disintegration (the second Taifa period), the Almohads, the rising power in North Africa, took over most of al-Andalus. However they were decisively defeated at the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa (1212) by a Christian coalition, losing almost all the remaining lands of al-Andalus in the following decades. By 1252 only the Emirate of Granada remained intact but as a vassal state of Castile.

Granada War and the end of Muslim rule

Main articles: Granada War and Treaty of Granada (1491)

Ferdinand and Isabella completed the Reconquista with a war against the Emirate of Granada that started in 1482 and ended with Granada's surrender on 2 January 1492. The Moors in Castile previously numbered "half a million within the realm". By 1492 some 100,000 had died or been enslaved, 200,000 had emigrated, and 200,000 remained in Castile. Many of the Muslim elite, including Granada's former Emir Muhammad XII, who had been given the area of the Alpujarras mountains as a principality, found life under Christian rule intolerable and emigrated to Fez in North Africa.

In 1497, Spanish forces took Melilla, west of Oran, and the island of Djerba, south of Tunis, and went on to more important gains, with the bloody seizure of Oran in 1509, and the capture of Bougie and Tripoli in 1510. The Spanish capture of Tripoli cost them some 300 men, while the inhabitants suffered between 3,000 and 5,000 killed and another 5,000–6,000 carried off as slaves. Soon thereafter, however, they faced competition from the rapidly expanding Ottoman Empire in the east and were pushed back.

Infighting

Christian infighting

Clashes and raids on bordering Andalusian lands did not keep the Christian kingdoms from battling among themselves or allying with Muslim kings. Some Muslim kings had Christian-born wives or mothers. Some Christian mercenaries, like El Cid, were contracted by taifa kings to fight against their neighbours. Indeed, El Cid's first battle experience was gained fighting for a Muslim state against a Christian state. At the Battle of Graus in 1063, he and other Castilians fought on the side of al-Muqtadir, Muslim sultan of Zaragoza, against the forces of Ramiro I of Aragon. There is even an instance of a crusade being declared against another Christian king in Hispania. Although Christian rulers Fernán González of Castile and Ramiro II of León had cooperated to defeat the Muslims at the Battle of Simancas (939), Fernán attacked Ramiro soon after and the Leonese–Castilian war that followed lasted until Ramiro's victory in 944. Ramiro II's death caused the war of the Leonese succession (951–956) between his sons, and the winner Ordoño III of León concluded peace with caliph Abd al-Rahman III of Córdoba.

A map of Christian realms in the north and Islamic taifas in the south (1037). During the Reconquista, the Iberian states not only fought along religious lines, but also amongst themselves and internally, especially during wars of succession and clan feuds.

After the defeat of Alfonso VIII, King of Castile, at Alarcos, Kings Alfonso IX of Leon and Sancho VII of Navarre entered an alliance with the Almohads and invaded Castile in 1196. By the end of the year Sancho VII had dropped out of the war under Papal pressure. Early in 1197, at the request of Sancho I, King of Portugal, Pope Celestine III declared a crusade against Alfonso IX and released his subjects from their responsibilities to the king, declaring that "the men of his realm shall be absolved from their fidelity and his dominion by authority of the apostolic see." Together the Kings of Portugal, Castile, and Aragon invaded Leon. In the face of this onslaught combined with pressure from the Pope, Alfonso IX was finally forced to sue for peace in October 1197.

In the late years of al-Andalus, Castile had the might to conquer the remnants of the kingdom of Granada, but the kings preferred to wait and claim the tribute of the Muslim parias. The trade of Granadan goods and the parias were a major means by which African gold entered medieval Europe.

Muslim infighting

Similarly, there was frequent Muslim infighting throughout the existence of al-Andalus. The Abbasid Revolution (747–750) divided Muslim rulers in Iberia into the pro-Abbasid Caliphate faction (based in Baghdad) and the pro-Umayyad faction (reconstituted as the Emirate of Córdoba). Charlemagne's failed 778 campaign into Iberia was prompted by the invitation of the pro-Abbasid governor of Barcelona, Sulayman al-Arabi, which led to a brief Abbasid-Carolingian Alliance against the Umayyads. During the Fitna of al-Andalus (1009–1031), the Umayyad-run Caliphate of Córdoba fell apart into rival taifas headed by Islamic emirs warring each other. After the Christian king of Castile and León conquered Toledo in 1085, the emirs requested Yusuf ibn Tashfin, leader of the strict Islamic Almoravid sect, to come to their defence, which he did at the Battle of Sagrajas (1086). However, Yusuf soon turned on the Muslim emirs of Spain, defeating them all and conquering their lands by 1091. A similar scenario occurred in 1147–1157, when the Almoravid dynasty fell, a Second Taifas period happened, and the Muslim-controlled cities of al-Andalus were conquered by the new Almohad Caliphate. The War of the Granada succession (1482–1492) took place after the deposition of emir Abu'l-Hasan Ali of Granada by his son Muhammad XII of Granada; the deposed emir's brother Muhammad XIII of Granada also joined the fight. This succession conflict took place simultaneously with the Granada War, and was ended only by the Castilian conquest in 1492.

Christian repopulation

Further information: Medieval demography and Repoblación

The Reconquista was a process not only of war and conquest, but also of repopulation. Christian kings moved their own people to locations abandoned by Muslims in order to have a population capable of defending the borders. The main repopulation areas were the Douro Basin (the northern plateau), the high Ebro valley (La Rioja) and central Catalonia. The repopulation of the Douro Basin took place in two distinct phases. North of the river, between the 9th and 10th centuries, the "pressure" (or presura) system was employed. South of the Douro, in the 10th and 11th centuries, the presura led to the "charters" (forais or fueros). Fueros were used even south of the Central Range.

The presura referred to a group of peasants who crossed the mountains and settled in the abandoned lands of the Douro Basin. Asturian laws promoted this system, for instance granting a peasant all the land he was able to work and defend as his own property. Of course, Asturian and Galician minor nobles and clergymen sent their own expeditions with the peasants they maintained. This led to very feudalised areas, such as Leon and Portugal, whereas Castile, an arid land with vast plains and harsh climate, only attracted peasants with no hope in Biscay. As a consequence, Castile was governed by a single count, but had a largely non-feudal territory with many free peasants. Presuras also appear in Catalonia, when the count of Barcelona ordered the Bishop of Urgell and the count of Gerona to repopulate the plains of Vic.

During the 10th century and onwards, cities and towns gained more importance and power, as commerce reappeared and the population kept growing. Fueros were charters documenting the privileges and usages given to all the people repopulating a town. The fueros provided a means of escape from the feudal system, as fueros were only granted by the monarch. As a result, the town council was dependent on the monarch alone and, in turn, was required to provide auxilium—aid or troops—for their monarch. The military force of the towns became the caballeros villanos. The first fuero was given by count Fernán González to the inhabitants of Castrojeriz in the 940's. The most important towns of medieval Hispania had fueros, or forais. In Navarre, fueros were the main repopulating system. Later on, in the 12th century, Aragon also employed the system; for example, the fuero of Teruel, which was one of the last fueros, in the early 13th century.

From the mid-13th century on, no more charters were granted, as the demographic pressure had disappeared and other means of re-population were created. Fueros remained as city charters until the 18th century in Aragon, Valencia and Catalonia and until the 19th century in Castile and Navarre. Fueros had an immense importance for those living under them, who were prepared to go to war to defend their rights under the charter. In the 19th century, the abolition of the fueros in Navarre would be one of the causes of the Carlist Wars. In Castile, disputes over the system contributed to the war against Charles I (Castilian War of the Communities).

Christian military culture

Reconquista as Crusade

At the First Council of the Lateran, Pope Callixtus II declared the Reconquista as part of Crusades and its participants as Crusaders having an equal spiritual standing with those in the east.

In the 13th century, Pope Innocent III declared a crusade and persuaded warriors from many parts of Europe in and outside the Iberian peninsula to assist the Iberians against the Almohad Caliphate army. The Almohads then advanced into Europe with the intent of undoing the previous achievements of the Reconquista and marching on Rome itself. The crusading campaign culminated in a resounding Crusader victory at the Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa, effectively turning the tide of war in favour of the Christians.

Other Motivations

Territories of the military orders of the Iberian kingdoms towards the end of 15th century

Jim Bradbury (2004) noted that the Christian belligerents in the Reconquista were not all equally motivated by religion, and that a distinction should be made between 'secular rulers' on the one hand, and on the other hand Christian military orders which came from elsewhere (including the three main orders of Knights Templar, Knights Hospitaller and Teutonic Knights), or were established inside Iberia (such as those of Santiago, Alcántara and Calatrava). ' were more committed to religious war than some of their secular counterparts, were opposed to treating with Muslims and carried out raids and even atrocities, such as decapitating Muslim prisoners.'

On the other hand, Christian armies sometimes forged temporary alliances with Islamic emirs, and Christian mercenaries were quite willing to fight for Arab and Berber rulers if the price was right. El Cid is a well-known example of a Christian mercenary leader who was in paid military service of the Islamic kings of Zaragoza for years. Mercenaries were an important factor, as many kings did not have enough soldiers available. Norsemen, Flemish spearmen, Frankish knights, Moorish mounted archers (archers who travelled on horseback), and Berber light cavalry were the main types of mercenaries available and used in the conflict.

Christian cavalry and infantry

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Medieval Christian armies mainly comprised two types of forces: the cavalry (mostly nobles, but including commoner knights from the 10th century on) and the infantry, or peones (peasants). Infantry only went to war if needed, which was not frequent. In an atmosphere of constant conflict, warfare and daily life were strongly intertwined during this period. These armies reflected the need for society to be on constant alert during the first chapters of the Reconquista. These forces were capable of moving long distances in short times.

Coat of arms of Alcanadre. La Rioja, Spain, depicting heads of slain Moors

Cavalry tactics in Hispania involved knights approaching the enemy, throwing javelins, then withdrawing to a safe distance before commencing another assault. Once the enemy formation was sufficiently weakened, the knights charged with thrusting spears (lances did not arrive in Hispania until the 11th century). There were three types of knights (caballeros): royal knights, noble knights (caballeros hidalgos), and commoner knights (caballeros villanos, or "mounted soldier from a villa"). Royal knights were mainly nobles with a close relationship with the king, and thus claimed a direct Gothic inheritance.

Royal knights in the early stages of the Reconquista were equipped with mail hauberk, kite shield, a long sword (designed to fight from the horse), javelins, spears and an axe. Noble knights came from the ranks of the infanzones or lower nobles, whereas the commoner knights were not noble but were wealthy enough to afford a horse. Uniquely in Europe, these horsemen comprised a militia cavalry force with no feudal links, being under the sole control of the king or the count of Castile because of fueros (charters) with the crown. Both noble and common knights wore padded armour and carried javelins, spears and round-tasselled shield (influenced by Moorish shields), as well as a sword.

The peones were peasants who went to battle in service of their feudal lord. Poorly equipped, with bows and arrows, spears and short swords, they were mainly used as auxiliary troops. Their function in battle was to contain the enemy troops until the cavalry arrived and to block the enemy infantry from charging the knights. The longbow, the composite bow, and the crossbow were the basic types of bows and were especially popular in the infantry.

Equipment

In the early Middle Ages in Hispania, armour was typically made of leather, with iron scales. Head protections consisted of a round helmet with nose protector (influenced by the designs used by Vikings, who attacked during the 8th and 9th centuries) and a chain mail headpiece. Shields were often round or kidney-shaped, except for the kite-shaped designs used by the royal knights. Usually adorned with geometric designs, crosses or tassels, shields were made out of wood and had a leather cover.

Steel swords were the most common weapon. The cavalry used long double-edged swords and the infantry short, single-edged ones. Guards were either semicircular or straight, but always highly ornamented with geometrical patterns. Spears and javelins were up to 1.5 metres long and had an iron tip. The double-axe—made of iron, 30 cm long, and possessing an extremely sharp edge—was designed to be equally useful as a thrown weapon or in close combat. Maces and hammers were not common, but some specimens have remained and are thought to have been used by members of the cavalry.

Technological changes

This style of warfare remained dominant in the Iberian Peninsula until the late 11th century, when lance tactics entered from France, although the traditional horse javelin-shot techniques continued to be used. In the 12th and 13th centuries, soldiers typically carried a sword, a lance, a javelin, and either bow and arrows or crossbow and darts/bolts. Armor consisted of a coat of mail over a quilted jacket, extending at least to the knees, a helmet or iron cap, and bracers protecting the arms and thighs, either metal or leather.

The Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa (1212), an important turning point of the Reconquista

Shields were round or triangular, made of wood, covered with leather, and protected by an iron band; the shields of knights and nobles would bear the family's coat of arms. Knights rode in both the Muslim style, a la jineta (i.e. the equivalent of a modern jockey's seat), a short stirrup strap and bended knees allowed for better control and speed, or in the French style, a la brida, a long stirrup strap allowed for more security in the saddle (i.e. the equivalent of the modern cavalry seat, which is more secure) when acting as heavy cavalry. Horses were occasionally fitted with a coat of mail as well.

Around the 14th and 15th centuries heavy cavalry gained a predominant role, including knights wearing full plate armor.

Conversions and expulsions

Main articles: Treaty of Granada (1491), Alhambra decree, Expulsion of the Moriscos, Forced conversions of Muslims in Spain, and Persecution of Jews and Muslims by Manuel I of Portugal
Forces of Muhammed IX, Nasrid Sultan of Granada, at the Battle of La Higueruela, 1431

The new Christian hierarchy demanded heavy taxes from non-Christians and gave them rights, such as in the Treaty of Granada (1491) only for Moors in recently Islamic Granada. On 30 July 1492, all the Jewish community—some 200,000 people—were forcibly expelled. The next year, the Alhambra decree ordered the expulsion of practicing Jews, leading many of them to convert to Catholicism. In 1502, Queen Isabella I declared that conversion to Catholicism was compulsory within the Kingdom of Castile. Holy Roman Emperor Charles V imposed the same religious requirement on Moors in the Kingdom of Aragon in 1526, forcing its Muslim population to convert during the Revolt of the Germanies.

Spanish Inquisition

Main article: Spanish Inquisition

Making things more complex were the many former Muslims and Jews known as Moriscos, Marranos, and Conversos, who shared ancestors in common with many Christians, especially among the aristocracy, causing much concern over loyalty and attempts by the aristocracy to hide their non-Christian ancestry. Some—the numbers are debated—continued to secretly practice their religions and use their languages well into the sixteenth century. Those that the Spanish Inquisition found to be secretly practicing Islam or Judaism were executed, imprisoned, or exiled.

Nevertheless, all those deemed to be "New Christians" were repeatedly suspected of illegally continuing in secret to practice their religions. Various crimes against the Spanish state including continued practice of Islam or Judaism. New Christians were subject to many discriminatory practices starting in the sixteenth century.

Classifications and later consequences

Saint Dominic presiding over an auto-da-fé, by Pedro Berruguete (around 1495)

The many advances and retreats created several social types:

  • The Muwallad: native Iberians under Islamic rule who converted to Islam after the arrival of the Muslim Arabs and Berbers.
  • The Mozarabs: Christians in Muslim-held lands. Some of them migrated to the north of the peninsula in times of persecution bringing elements of the styles, food and agricultural practices learned from the Andalusians, while they continued practicing their Christianity with older forms of Catholic worship and their own versions of the Latin language.
  • "New Christians": Jews converting to Christianity called conversos, or pejoratively Marranos. Jews converted to Christianity voluntarily or through force. Some were Crypto-Jews who continued practicing Judaism secretly. All remaining Jews were expelled from Spain as a consequence of the 1492 Alhambra Decree, and from Portugal in 1497. Former Jews were subject to the Spanish and Portuguese Inquisitions, established to enforce Christian faith and practice, which often resulted in secret investigations and public punishments of conversos in autos-da-fé ("acts of faith"), often public executions by burning the victim alive.
  • The Mudéjar: Muslims in Christian-held lands.
  • Moriscos: Muslim conversos. Muslims who converted to Catholicism. A significant number were Crypto-Muslims who continued practicing Islam secretly. They ranged from successful skilled artisans, valued and protected in Aragon, to impoverished peasants in Castile. After the Alhambra Decree the entire Islamic population was forced to convert or leave, and at the beginning of the seventeenth century a significant number were expelled in the expulsion of the Moriscos.

Legacy

See also: History of Spain, History of Portugal, and Portugal in the period of discoveries

Since the 19th century, traditional Western and especially Iberian historiography has stressed the existence of the Reconquista, a continual phenomenon by which the Christian Iberian kingdoms opposed and conquered the Muslim kingdoms, understood as a common enemy who had militarily seized territory from native Iberian Christians. However, modern scholarship has challenged this concept of a "reconquista" as a national myth tied to Spanish nationalism. The concept has served the idea "that Spain is a nation shaped against Islam", contributing to "a largely biased and distorted vision of the Iberian medieval past, aimed at delegitimizing the Islamic presence (al-Andalus) and therefore at legitimizing the Christian conquest of the Muslim territory." Among other arguments, one of those advanced by scholars is that "no military campaign lasts eight centuries." The term "reconquista" in this sense first appeared in the 19th century, and only entered the dictionary of the Royal Spanish Academy in 1936, with the rise of Francisco Franco. The concept of the reconquista continues to have significance and has even experienced a resurgence in modern politics—especially for the extreme right Spanish party Vox, but also more broadly among xenophobic and especially Islamophobic conservatives in the West, with the influence of the doctrine of a "Clash of Civilizations".

Real, legendary, and fictional episodes from the Reconquista are the subject of much of medieval Galician-Portuguese, Spanish, and Catalan literature such as the cantar de gesta.

Old Mosque in Mértola, Portugal, converted into a church.

Some noble genealogies show the close, though not numerous, relations between Muslims and Christians. For example, Al-Mansur Ibn Abi Aamir, whose rule is considered to have marked the peak of power for Moorish al-Andalus Hispania, married Abda, daughter of Sancho Garcés II of Navarra, who bore him a son, named Abd al-Rahman and commonly known in a pejorative sense as Sanchuelo (Little Sancho; in Arabic: Shanjoul).

After his father's death, Sanchuelo/Abd al-Rahman, as a son of a Christian princess, was a strong contender to take over the ultimate power in Muslim al-Andalus. A hundred years later, King Alfonso VI of Castile, regarded as one of the greatest medieval Spanish kings, designated his son (also named Sancho) by the Muslim princess refugee Zaida of Seville, as his heir.

The Reconquista was a war with long periods of respite between the adversaries, partly for pragmatic reasons and also due to infighting among the Christian kingdoms of the North spanning over seven centuries. Some populations practiced Islam or Christianity as their own religion during these centuries, so the identity of contenders changed over time.

It is noteworthy that the popular hero El Cid, whose name is very much associated with the Reconquista, had at one part of his career actually fought for the Muslim rulers of Zaragoza, whom he defended from its traditional enemy, the Christian Aragon. The most important achievement of El Cid's career, the conquest of the kingdom-city of Valencia, was actually achieved in close alliance with the Banu Hud and other Muslim dynasties opposed to the Almoravids.

French emulation

In 1558, the armies of King Henry II of France managed to conquer the city of Calais, which had been under English rule for centuries. Queen Mary I of England considered the loss of Calais as the greatest disaster of her reign The region around Calais, then-known as the Calaisis, was renamed the Pays Reconquis ("Reconquered Country") in commemoration of its recovery by the French. The French were certainly aware of the Spanish Reconquista, and since at the time Philip II of Spain was Queen Mary's consort, use of this term might have been intended as a deliberate snub to him.

Festivals in modern Spain and Portugal

Moros y Cristianos festival in Pego, Alicante, 2016

Currently, festivals called moros y cristianos (Spanish), moros i cristians (Catalan), mouros e cristãos (Portuguese) and mouros e cristiáns (Galician), which all mean "Moors and Christians", recreate the fights as colorful parades with elaborate garments and many fireworks, especially on the central and southern towns of the Land of Valencia, like Alcoi, Ontinyent or Villena.

Persistent effects

A 2016 study found that the "rate of Reconquest"—how rapidly the Christian frontier was expanded—has persistent effects on the Spanish economy to this day. After an initial phase of military conquest, Christians states incorporated the conquered land. When large frontier regions were incorporated at once, the land was mostly given to the nobility and the military orders, with negative effects on long-term development. The incorporation of small regions, on the other hand, generally allowed for the participation of individual settlers and was more likely to fall under the auspices of the crown. This led to a more equitable distribution of land and greater social equality, with positive effects on long-term development.

Reverberations

The Portuguese forces, personally commanded by King Afonso V, in the conquest of Asilah, Morocco, 1471, from the Pastrana Tapestries.

As the Christian kingdoms completed their conquest of territory on the Iberian Peninsula, they shifted their impetus elsewhere, even to the Maghreb, which is located across the Strait of Gibraltar. A Castilian Crown-sanctioned punitive expedition against Tetouan, a corsair stronghold, was launched as early as 1399–1400. The conquest of Ceuta in 1415 marked the beginning of Portuguese expansion in Africa. Thereby, it allowed Portugal to exert control over Castilian and Aragonese trade through the Strait, and it also allowed Portugal to establish a powerbase for the launching of raid expeditions in Muslim-ruled lands. Some 15th-century political writers promoted the idea of a "Gothic Monarchy", an heir to Rome, that included territory across the Strait.

The African enterprise which was undertaken during the rule of the Catholic Monarchs was nominally endorsed by papal bulls and it was also financed with donations which were used to pay the crusade tax, even if it was viewed with some suspicion by the Papacy. Conquest efforts in Africa on the part of the Catholic Monarchy by and large stalled following the death of Ferdinand II of Aragon. The model of conquest and repopulation by Christian powers in the Peninsula was however never reproduced in Northern Africa, and with the conquered territory—a fortified mark with very few fortresses scattered along an extensive coastline—merely adopting a defensive role, it allowed for Ottoman expansion in the region.

The Portuguese warred with the Ottoman Caliphate in the Mediterranean, Indian Ocean and Southeast Asia as the Portuguese conquered the Ottomans' allies: the Sultanate of Adal in East Africa, the Sultanate of Delhi in South Asia and the Sultanate of Malacca in Southeast Asia.

Christopher Columbus's initial 1492 voyage to the Americas was predicated on the completion of the Granada War, with the Spanish monarchy only able to assent to his overseas journeys once it had completed the process of defeating the Moors. Columbus's views of the New World and the Christian convictions that shaped his actions there were influenced by historical European anti-Muslim ideas that had underpinned the Reconquista itself; he believed that by his voyaging, he would be able to reach the Grand Khan of Asia and create a coalition that could attack the Middle East from both sides and thus bring Jerusalem back under Christian rule.

Far-right motif

An army parade in Granada attended by far-right sympathizers who are waving the Francoist flags (2 January 2016)

Along with the rhetoric of the crusades, the rhetoric of the 'Reconquista' serves as a rallying point in the political discourse of the contemporary far-right in Spain, Portugal and, more broadly, it also serves as a rallying point in the political discourse of the far-right in Europe. Frequently, references to the Reconquista and the crusades are allegorically played as internet meme by 21st-century online far-right groups which seek to convey anti-Muslim sentiments. The theme has also been used as a major rallying point by identitarian groups in France and Italy.

The annual commemoration of the surrender of Sultan Boabdil in Granada on 2 January acquired a markedly nationalistic undertone during the early years of the Francoist regime and, since the death of the dictator Francisco Franco in 1975, it has served as glue for extreme right groups by facilitating their open-air physical gatherings and providing them with an occasion which they can use to explicitly state their political demands. A Spanish Legion unit usually parades and sings El novio de la muerte ("Boyfriend of death"). The far right has also waged a culture war by claiming dates in the history of the Reconquista, such as the aforementioned 2 January or 2 February, regional festivities for the related autonomous communities (Andalusia and Murcia).

See also

Notes

  1. While it is largely spelled in the same way, the pronunciation of it varies among the different languages which are spoken on the Iberian Peninsula as well as in neighboring territories. The pronunciations of it are as follows:
  2. The Arabic term for 'Reconquista' is al-Istirdād (الاسترداد), literally 'the Recovery', although it is more commonly known as suqūṭ al-Andalus (سقوط الأندلس), 'the fall of al-Andalus'.

References

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