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What was the purpose of the Reconquista?
What was Reconquista in medieval Spain & Portugal?
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May 13, 2024 · Reconquista, in medieval Spain and Portugal, a series of campaigns by Christian states to recapture territory from the Muslims (Moors), who had occupied most of the Iberian Peninsula in the early 8th century. Learn more about the history and significance of the Reconquista in this article.
- Was The Reconquista a Crusade
The Reconquista began not as a religious crusade but rather...
- Battle of Covadonga
When Don Pelayo was elected king of Asturias around 718, he...
- Battle of Alarcos
Battle of Alarcos, (July 18, 1195), celebrated Almohad...
- Battle of Las Navas De Tolosa
Meanwhile, on June 22 the Almohad caliph Muḥammad al-Nāṣir...
- Was The Reconquista a Crusade
- Medieval Iberia
- The Military Orders
- The Second Crusade & Siege of Lisbon
- Christian Victory
- Legacy
The Muslim Moors, based in North Africa, had conquered most of the Iberian peninsula, then controlled by the Visigoths, in the early 8th century CE. By the 11th century CE, the Christian kingdoms of northern Spain were strong enough to attempt to retake some of the lost territories; an ambition greatly helped by the civil wars within the Cordoba Ca...
Alfonso I of Aragon (r. 1104-1134 CE) gave huge estates (in fact most of his kingdom as he had no heir) to the Knights Hospitaller and Knights Templar, both military orders of professional warrior-monks who would make themselves indispensable to the defence of the Crusader States in the Middle East. The lure, although later reduced by Spanish noble...
The Second Crusade (1147-1149 CE) was primarily concerned with recapturing Edessa in Upper Mesopotamia, but it did have additional objectives in Iberia and the Baltic, with both these campaigns also being backed by Pope Eugenius III (r. 1145-1153 CE). The Papacy had already backed crusades to the Iberian peninsula in 1113-14 CE, 1117-18 CE and 1123...
When the idea of liberating the Iberian peninsula received the backing of Pope Innocent III (r. 1198-1216 CE) in 1212 CE, it was a timely boost to the Spanish kings who had suffered a heavy defeat at the Battle of Alarcos in 1195 CE. The Christians in Spain were suffering from a lack of unity, too. King Alfonso IX of Léon (r. 1188-1230 CE) had made...
Few Muslims were converted to Christianity in the reconquered territories of Iberia, and most were permitted to remain and practise their religion as a protected minority, in effect, reversing the status of Muslims and Christians of the past few centuries. Christians were encouraged to migrate southwards, Arab place names were replaced and many mos...
- Mark Cartwright
Dec 3, 2023 · Updated 3 December, 2023 - 21:56 Robbie Mitchell. Reclaiming Iberia: The Epic Tale of the Reconquista in Spain. Read Later. Print. The Reconquista, a pivotal chapter in medieval European history, represents the centuries-long struggle in the Iberian Peninsula as Christian kingdoms sought to reclaim their territories from Islamic rule.
- Robbie Mitchell
La Reconquista [a] (mot espagnol et portugais, en français : « la Reconquête ») est le nom donné à la période de conflit entre les royaumes chrétiens du Nord de l'Espagne et les territoires musulmans d'Al-Andalus, qui a été établie depuis la reconquête omeyyade de l'Hispanie wisigothe en 711, suivie par d'autres dynasties musulmanes ...
Jan 9, 2017 · On the 2 January Emir Mohamed XII of Granada, faced with overwhelming enemy strength, surrendered his kingdom and its beautiful Alhambra palace to the Christians after a ten-year war. The Reconquista was complete. 1492 is a year that rings throughout history. Across the world, people remember Columbus, his reaching of the Americas and the dawn ...
- History Hit
This chronology presents the timeline of the Reconquista, a series of military and political actions taken following the Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula that began in 711.
The Reconquista refers to the defeat of the Moors, or Muslims, in Spain in 1492 by the Christians. The Moors were from North Africa, and they had invaded Europe around 711....