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Caliphate of Córdoba

The Caliphate of Córdoba (Arabic: خلافة قرطبة; transliterated Khilāfat Qurṭuba), also known as the Cordoban Caliphate was an Islamic state ruled by the Umayyad dynasty from 929 to 1031. Its territory comprised Iberia and parts of North Africa, with its capital in Córdoba. It succeeded the Emirate of Córdoba upon the self-proclamation of Umayyad emir Abd ar-Rahman III as caliph in January 929.[3] The period was characterized by an expansion of trade and culture, and saw the construction of masterpieces of al-Andalus architecture.

Caliphate of Córdoba
خلافة قرطبة
Khilāfat Qurṭubah (in Arabic)
929–1031
Caliphate of Córdoba circa 1000 AD
CapitalCórdoba
Common languages
Religion
Predominantly:
Sunni Islam

Minority:
Christianity, Judaism

GovernmentTheocratic monarchy
History 
• Abd ar-Rahman III proclaimed Caliph[1]
929
• Disintegrated into several independent taifa kingdoms
1031
Area
1000 est.[2]600,000 km2 (230,000 sq mi)
Population
• 1000 est.
10,000,000
Today part ofGibraltar (UK)
Morocco
Portugal
Spain

The caliphate disintegrated in the early 11th century during the Fitna of al-Andalus, a civil war between the descendants of caliph Hisham II and the successors of his hajib (court official), Al-Mansur. In 1031, after years of infighting, the caliphate fractured into a number of independent Muslim taifa (kingdoms).[4]

History

Umayyad Dynasty

Rise

Abd ar-Rahman I became emir of Córdoba in 756 after six years in exile after the Umayyads lost the position of caliph in Damascus to the Abbasids in 750.[5] Intent on regaining power, he defeated the area's existing Islamic rulers and united various local fiefdoms into an emirate.[6] Raids then increased the emirate's size; the first to go as far as Corsica occurred in 806.[7]

The emirate's rulers used the title "emir" or "sultan" until the 10th century. In the early 10th century, Abd ar-Rahman III faced a threatened invasion from North Africa by the Fatimid Caliphate, a rival Shiite Islamic empire based in Ifriqiya. Since the Fatimids also claimed the caliphate, in response Abd ar-Rahman III claimed the title of caliph himself.[3] Prior to Abd ar-Rahman's proclamation as the caliph, the Umayyads generally recognized the Abbasid caliph of Baghdad as being the rightful rulers of the Muslim community.[8] Even after repulsing the Fatimids, he kept the more prestigious title.[9] Although his position as caliph was not accepted outside of al-Andalus and its North African affiliates, internally the Spanish Umayyads considered themselves as closer to Muhammad, and thus more legitimate, than the Abbasids.

Prosperity

The caliphate enjoyed increased prosperity during the 10th century. Abd ar-Rahman III united al-Andalus and brought the Christian kingdoms of the north under control by force and through diplomacy. Abd ar-Rahman III stopped the Fatimid advance into Morocco and al-Andalus in order to prevent a future invasion. The plan for a Fatimid invasion was thwarted when Abd ar-Rahman III secured Melilla in 927, Ceuta in 931, and Tangier in 951.[8] In 948, the Idrisid emir Abul-Aish Ahmad recognised the caliphate, although he refused to allow them to occupy Tangier. The Umayyads besieged Tangier in 949 and defeated Abul-Aish, forcing him to retreat. The Umayyads then occupied the rest of northern Morocco.[10]: 63  Although another Fatimid invasion of Morocco occurred in 958 under their general, Jawhar. Al-Hassan II had to recognise the Fatimids.[10]: 75  The Umayyads responded by invading Idrisid Morocco in 973 with their general, Ghalib. By 974, Al-Hassan II was taken to Cordoba, and the remaining Idrisids recognised Umayyad rule.[10]: 75  This period of prosperity was marked by increasing diplomatic relations with Berber tribes in North Africa, Christian kings from the north, and with France, Germany and Constantinople.[11] The caliphate became very profitable during the reign of Abd ar-Rahman III, by increasing the public revenue to 6,245,000 dinars from Abd ar-Rahman II. The profits made during this time were divided into three parts: the payment of the salaries and maintenance of the army, the preservation of public buildings, and the needs of the caliph.[8] The death of Abd ar-Rahman III led to the rise of his 46-year-old son, Al-Hakam II, in 961. Al-Hakam II continued his father's policy toward Christian kings and North African rebels. Al-Hakam's reliance on his advisers was greater than his father's because the previous prosperity under Abd ar-Rahman III allowed al-Hakam II to let the caliphate run by itself. This style of rulership suited al-Hakam II since he was more interested in his scholarly and intellectual pursuits than ruling the caliphate. The caliphate was at its intellectual and scholarly peak under al-Hakam II.[12][13]

Fall

The death of al-Hakam II in 976 marked the beginning of the end of the caliphate. Before his death, al-Hakam named his only son Hisham II successor. Although the 10-year-old child was ill-equipped to be caliph, Al-Mansur Ibn Abi Aamir (top adviser to al-Hakam, also known as Almanzor), who had sworn an oath of obedience to Hisham II, pronounced him caliph. In 996, Almanzor sent an invasion force to Morocco. After three months of struggle, his forces retreated to Tangier. Almanzor then sent a powerful reinforcement under his son Abd al-Malik. The armies clashed near Tangier. The Umayyads would enter Fes on 13 October 998 once the gates of the city were opened.[14] Almanzor had great influence over Subh, the mother and regent of Hisham II. Almanzor, along with Subh, isolated Hisham in Córdoba while systematically eradicating opposition to his own rule, allowing Berbers from Africa to migrate to al-Andalus to increase his base of support.[15] While Hisham II was caliph, he was merely a figurehead.[16] The power nominally held by Caliph Hisham was retained by Almanzor's sons, Abd al-Malik al-Muzaffar, who died in 1008, and Abd al-Rahman Sanchuelo. However, while Abd al-Rahman was leading a raid on the Christian north, a revolt tore through Córdoba and deposed him, and he was killed when he tried to restore himself to power.[17][18]

The title of caliph became symbolic, without power or influence. The death of Abd al-Rahman Sanchuelo in 1009 marked the beginning of the Fitna of al-Andalus, with rivals claiming to be the new caliph, violence sweeping the caliphate, and intermittent invasions by the Hammudid dynasty.[13] Beset by factionalism, the caliphate crumbled in 1031 into a number of independent taifas, including the Taifa of Córdoba, Taifa of Seville and Taifa of Zaragoza. The last Córdoban Caliph was Hisham III (1027–1031).

Reform of army and administration

The separation between the temporal power, held by Almanzor, and the spiritual, in the hands of Hisham as Caliph, increased the importance of military force, a symbol – along with the new majesty of the chamberlain's court, rival of that of the caliph himself – of the power of Almanzor, and an instrument to guarantee the payment of taxes.[19]

Almanzor successfully continued the military reforms begun by Al-Hakam[20] and his predecessors,[21] covering many aspects.[22] On one hand, he increased the professionalization of the regular army,[21] necessary both to guarantee his military power in the capital and to ensure the availability of forces for his numerous campaigns, one of the sources of his political legitimacy.[22] This policy de-emphasized levies and other non-professional troops, which he replaced with taxes used to support the professional troops—often saqalibas [21] or Maghrebis—which freed the natives of al-Andalus from military service.[23][22][24] Recruitment of saqalibas and Berbers was not new, but Almanzor expanded it.[21][25][26] On the other hand, he created new units, unlike the regular army of the Caliphate, that were faithful primarily to himself[25] and served to control the capital.[22] Emir Abd al-Rahman I had already used Berbers and saqalibas for a permanent army of forty thousand to end the conflicts that hitherto had plagued the emirate.[27] At the time of Emir Muhammad I, the army reached thirty-five to forty thousand combatants, half of them Syrian military contingents.[28] This massive hiring of mercenaries and slaves meant that, according to Christian chroniclers, "ordinarily the Saracen armies amount to 30, 40, 50, or 60,000 men, even when in serious occasions they reach 100, 160, 300 and even 600,000 fighters." [29] In fact, it has been argued that, in Almanzor's time, the Cordovan armies could muster six hundred thousand laborers and two hundred thousand horses "drawn from all provinces of the empire."[30]

 
Almanzor's troops, as represented in the Cantigas de Santa Maria. The chamberlain carried out wide-ranging military reforms.

In order to eliminate a possible threat to his power and to improve military efficiency, Almanzor abolished the system of tribal units[31][32][33] that had been in decline due to lack of Arabs and institution of pseudo-feudalism on the frontiers,[34] in which the different tribes each had their own commander and that had caused continuous clashes, and replaced it with mixed units[35] without clear loyalty under orders from Administration officials.[36] The nucleus of the new army, however, was formed increasingly by Maghrebi Berber forces.[24][26][34] The ethnic rivalries among Arabs, Berbers and Slavs within the Andalusian army were skillfully used by Almanzor to maintain his own power[26]—for example, by ordering that every unit of the army consist of diverse ethnic groups so that they would not unite against him;[37] and thus preventing the emergence of possible rivals.[38] However, once their centralizing figure disappeared, these units were one of the main causes of the 11th-century civil war called the Fitna of al-Andalus.[38] Berber forces were also joined by contingents of well-paid Christian mercenaries,[39] who formed the bulk of Almanzor's personal guard and participated in his campaigns in Christian territories.[40] Almanzor's completion of this reform, begun by his predecessors, fundamentally divided the population into two unequal groups: a large mass of civilian taxpayers and a small professional military caste, generally from outside the peninsula.[41]

The increase in military forces and their partial professionalization led to an increase in financial expenses to sustain them.[21] This represented an additional incentive to carry out campaigns, which produced loot and land with which to pay the troops.[40] These lands, when handed over to the soldiers as payment, were thereafter subject to tribute and ceased to operate under a system of border colonization.[42][43] The Caliphal army was funded by the taxpaying farmers in exchange for military exemptions, and consisted of local recruits as well as foreign mercenaries – Berber militias, Slav and Black slaves, mercenary Christian companies and jihadi volunteers.[44] At that time al-Andalus was known as Dar Jihad, or "country of jihad", and attracted many volunteers, and though these were relatively few compared to the total army, their zeal in combat more than compensated for this.[45]

According to modern studies, these mercenary contingents made it possible to increase the total size of the Caliphal army from thirty or fifty thousand troops in the time of Abd al-Rahman III to fifty or ninety thousand.[28][46][47] Others, like Évariste Lévi-Provençal, argue that the Cordoban armies in the field with the Almanzor were between thirty-five thousand and seventy or seventy-five thousand soldiers.[44][48] Contemporary figures are contradictory: some accounts claim that their armies numbered two hundred thousand horsemen and six hundred thousand foot soldiers, while others talk about twelve thousand horsemen, three thousand mounted Berbers and two thousand sūdān, African light infantry.[49] According to the chronicles, in the campaign that swept Astorga and León, Almanzor led twelve thousand African and five thousand Al Andalus horsemen, and forty thousand infantry.[30] It is also said that, in his last campaigns, he mobilized forty-six thousand horsemen, while another six hundred guarded the train, twenty-six thousand infantry, two hundred scouts or 'police' and one hundred and thirty drummers.[50] or that the garrison of Cordoba consisted of 10,500 horsemen and many others kept the northern border in dispersed detachments.[39] However, it is much more likely that the leader's armies, even in their most ambitious campaigns, may not have exceeded twenty thousand men.[39] It can be argued that until the eleventh century no Muslim army on campaign exceeded thirty thousand troops, while during the eighth century the trans-Pyrenean expeditions totaled ten thousand men and those carried out against Christians in the north of the peninsula were even smaller.[28]

In the time of Emir Al-Hakam I, a palatine guard of 3000 riders and 2000 infantry was created, all Slavic slaves.[51] This proportion between the two types of troops was maintained until Almanzor's reforms. The massive incorporation of North African horsemen relegated the infantry to sieges and fortress garrisons.[52] This reform led to entire tribes, particularly Berber riders, being moved to the peninsula.[53]

The main weapon of the peninsular campaigns, which required speed and surprise, was the light cavalry.[33] To try to counteract them, the Castilians created the role of "villain knights" – ennobling those free men who were willing to keep a horse to increase the mounted units – through the Fuero de Castrojeriz of 974.[33] For similar reasons, the Barcelonan count Borrell II created the figure of the homes of paratge- who obtained privileged military status by fighting against the Cordobans armed on horseback – after losing their capital in the fall of 985.[54] In contrast to the prominent role the navy had played in previous decades under Abd al-Rahman III,[55] under Almanzor it served only as a means of transporting ground troops,[56] such as between the Maghreb and the Iberian Peninsula, or Alcácer do Sal's ships in the campaign against Santiago de Compostela in 997.[56]

During this time, military industry flourished in factories around Córdoba.[45] It was said to be able to produce a thousand bows and twenty thousand arrows monthly,[45][47] and 1300 shields[45] and three thousand campaign stores annually.[45][47]

As for the fleet, its network of ports was reinforced with a new base in the Atlantic, in Alcácer do Sal, which protected the area of Coimbra, recovered in the 980s, and served as the origin of the units that participated in the campaign against Santiago.[42] On the Mediterranean shore, the naval defense was centered at the base of al-Mariya, now Almería.[57] The dockyards of the fleet had been built in Tortosa in 944.[58]

Initially the maritime defense of the Caliphate was led by Abd al-Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn Rumahis, a veteran admiral who had served Al-Hakam II and was Qadi of Elvira[59] and Pechina.[57] He repulsed raids by al-Magus (idolaters) or al-Urdumaniyun ('men of the north', vikings),[60] in the west of al-Andalus in mid-971;[61] at the end of that year, when they tried to invade Al Andalus,[62] the admiral left Almería and defeated them off the coast of Algarve.[63] In April 973, he transported the army of Ghalib from Algeciras[64] to subdue the rebellious tribes of the Maghreb and end Fatimid ambitions in that area.[65] As in 997, when the Al Andalus fleet hit the Galician coast, in 985 it had ravaged the Catalans.[66] During the Catalan campaign, Gausfred I, Count of Empurias and Roussillon, tried to gather an army to help the locals but then several flotillas of Berber pirates threatened their coasts, forcing them to stay to defend their lands.[67]

To ensure control of the military, Almanzor eliminated the main figures who could have opposed his reforms:[42] in addition to the death of Ghalib, the participation of the governor of Zaragoza in the plot of his eldest son served as a justification to replace him[68] with another, more amenable, member of the same clan, the Banu Tujib.[69][70] The admiral of the fleet,[71] who maintained a significant budget, was poisoned[72] in January 980[73] and replaced by a man faithful to Almanzor.[59][70]

As in the Army he encouraged the recruitment of Berbers faithful to him, so in the Administration he favored the saqalibas to the detriment of native officials, again with the aim of surrounding himself with personnel loyal only to him.[23]

Land transport routes were dotted with strongholds,[45] since ancient Al Andalus dignitaries sought to control communications.[74] Messengers were bought in Sudan and specially trained to handle Almanzor's messages and to transmit the official reports that his foreign ministries wrote about the annual campaigns.[74]

The Caliphate ruled by Almanzor was a rich and powerful state. According to Colmeiro, it is estimated that in a pre-industrial society, for every million inhabitants, ten thousand soldiers could be mustered. Even assuming the chronicles exaggerated tenfold the real numbers – these speak of eight hundred thousand soldiers – the caliphate could have had eight million inhabitants.[30] Those who use more bullish criteria estimate between seven[75] and ten[76] million, but the population was probably much fewer.[75][30] Traditionally speaking, around the year 1000, the caliphate occupied four hundred thousand square kilometers and was populated by three million souls.[77] By comparison, the Iberian Christian states comprised one hundred and sixty thousand square kilometers and half a million people.[78] By the 10th century, 75% of the population under the Umayyads had converted to Islam, a number reaching 80% two centuries later.[79] By comparison, at the time of the Muslim invasion, Spain had about four million inhabitants, although there is no shortage of historians who would raise that estimate to seven or eight million.[79]

His realm also had large cities like Córdoba, which surpassed one hundred thousand inhabitants; Toledo, Almería and Granada, which were around thirty thousand; and Zaragoza, Valencia and Málaga, all above fifteen thousand.[75] This contrasted sharply with the Christian north of the peninsula, which lacked large urban centers.[80]

Culture

Literature and scholarship

Córdoba was the cultural[81] and intellectual centre of al-Andalus, with translations of ancient Greek texts into Arabic, Latin and Hebrew. During the reign of al-Hakam II, the royal library possessed an estimated 400,000 to 500,000 volumes.[13][82][83] For comparison, the Abbey of Saint Gall in Switzerland contained just over 100 volumes.[13] Advances in science, history, geography, philosophy, and language occurred during the Caliphate.[84] Al-Andalus's prosperity and the caliph's patronage attracted travelers, diplomats and scholars. They continued the legacy of figures such as Ziryab in the 9th century by bringing in new styles of art, music, and literature from the eastern Islamic world.[85]: 164  Cordoba also became a center of culture and high society in its own right. Poets sought the patronage of its court, as with the example of Ibn Darraj al-Qastali, who served as court poet for Abd al-Rahman III, Al-Hakam II, and Almanzor. Other poets, such as Yusuf al-Ramadi, composed works on nature and love. Muwashshah, a form of Andalusi vernacular poetry combining vernacular Arabic and the vernacular Romance language, grew more popular during this period.[85]: 165  Writers also began to compose histories devoted to the Umayyad dynasty of Al-Andalus, such as Ahmad al-Razi's History of the Rulers of al-Andalus (Arabic: أخبار ملوك الأندلس, romanizedAkhbār mulūk al-Andalus). These histories also provided information on the land and its people. Many ideas and myths concerning the history of al-Andalus – including stories about its initial Muslim conquest in the 8th century – began to appear in this period.[85]: 165–166 

Christians and Jews contributed to the intellectual and cultural spheres of al-Andalus, although this required that they publicly respect the higher status of the Arabic language and of the Islamic religion.[85]: 166  Hasdai ibn Shaprut was one of the most well-known Jewish figures of this time. In addition to serving in the caliph's court and being highly versed in Arabic culture, Hasdai was also a patron of Hebrew scholarship. He was determined to establish the Jewish community of al-Andalus as independent from the Jewish academies of Baghdad and the Middle East, which helped bring about the Golden Age of Jewish culture in the region.[85]: 168  By contrast, Latin culture within Al-Andalus declined as local Christians became increasingly Arabized. The Latin language was retained in liturgy. However, Andalusi Christians did journey to and from the Christian-controlled territories to the north and in the rest of Europe, contributing to the transmission of knowledge from al-Andalus to the rest of Europe.[85]: 169 

Some upper-class women also had the resources to receive education and participate in high culture in the domains of poetry and even religion.[85]: 166–167  Examples include 'Aisha ibn Ahmad, who was born from a noble family and wrote poetry, copied the Qur'an, and founded libraries. Lubna, a slave in the service of al-Hakam II, served as one of the caliph's scribes (or secretaries) and a librarian.[85]: 166 [86] Although religious domains were still dominated by men, Fatima bint Yahya al-Maghami was a well-known faqih (expert on Islamic law and jurisprudence) who taught both men and women.[85]: 167 [86]

Arts

The caliph's official workshops, such as those at Madinat al-Zahra, fabricated luxury products for use at court or as gifts for guests, allies, and diplomats, which stimulated artistic production. Many objects produced in the caliph's workshops later made their way into the collections of museums and Christian cathedrals in Europe.[85]: 139–141  Among the most famous objects of this period are ivory boxes which are carved with vegetal, figurative, and epigraphic motifs. Notable surviving examples include the Pyxis of al-Mughira, the Pyxis of Zamora, and the Leyre Casket.[83][87] The caliphal workshops also produced fine silks, including tiraz textiles, ceramics, and leatherwork.[83][87]: 41–44  Metalwork objects were also produced, of which the most famous surviving piece is the so-called "Cordoba Stag", a bronze fountain spout carved in the form of a stag which was made at Madinat al-Zahra and preserved by the Archeological Museum of Cordoba. Two other bronze examples of similar craftsmanship, shaped like deers, are kept at the National Archeological Museum in Madrid and the Islamic Art Museum in Doha.[88][89][90][91][92]: 211–212  While the production of ivory and silk objects largely stopped after the Caliphate's collapse, production in other mediums like leather and ceramic continued in later periods.[83]

Marble was also carved for decorative elements in some buildings, such as wall paneling and window grilles.[92]: 46, 242–255  One of the most prolific types of marble craftsmanship were capitals, which continued the general configuration of Roman Corinthian capitals but were deeply carved with Islamic vegetal motifs (known as ataurique in Spanish) in a distinctive style associated with the caliphal period.[92]: 244–245  These capitals later became prized spolia and can be found in later buildings across the region built under the Almoravids and Almohads.[93] Another notable example is a marble basin, now kept at the Dar Si Said Museum in Marrakesh, which was crafted at Madinat al-Zahra between 1002 and 1007 to serve as an ablutions basin and dedicated to 'Abd al-Malik, the son of al-Mansur, before being shipped to Morocco and re-used in new buildings.[94][93][92]: 46, 242–255 

Architecture

 
The excavated and partly reconstructed remains of Madinat al-Zahra, outside Cordoba, Spain (10th century)

Abd ar-Rahman III marked his political ascendancy with the creation of a vast and lavish palace-city called Madinat al-Zahra (also spelled and pronounced today as "Medina Azahara"), located just outside Cordoba.[95] Construction began in 936–940 and continued in multiple phases throughout his reign and the reign of his son son, Al-Hakam II (r. 961–976). The new city included ceremonial reception halls, a congregational mosque, administrative and government offices, aristocratic residences, gardens, a mint, workshops, barracks, service quarters, and baths.[96][97]

 
The mosaic-decorated mihrab (center) and the interlacing arches of the maqsura in the Great Mosque of Cordoba, in the extension added by al-Hakam II after 962

He also expanded the courtyard (sahn) of Cordoba's Great Mosque and built its first true minaret (a tower from which the call to prayer was issued). The minaret, with a square floor plan, set another precedent that was followed in the architecture of other mosques in the region. Abd ar Rahman III's cultured successor, al-Hakam II, further expanded the mosque's prayer hall, starting in 962. He endowed it with some of its most significant architectural flourishes and innovations, which included interlacing multifoil arches, decorative ribbed domes, and a richly-ornamented mihrab (niche symbolizing the direction of prayer) with Byzantine-influenced gold mosaics.[98][95]

A much smaller but historically notable work from the late caliphate period is the Bab al-Mardum Mosque (later known as the Church of San Cristo de la Luz) in Toledo, which features a variety of ribbed domes resting on horseshoe arches and an exterior façade with Arabic inscriptions carved in brick. Other monuments from the Caliphate period in al-Andalus include several of Toledo's old city gates, the former mosque (and later monastery) of Almonaster la Real, the Castle of Tarifa, the Castle of Baños de la Encina (near Seville), the Caliphal Baths of Cordoba, and, possibly, the Baths of Jaen.[95]

In the 10th century much of northern Morocco also came directly within the sphere of influence of the Cordoban Caliphate, with competition from the Fatimid Caliphate further east.[99] Early contributions to Moroccan architecture from this period include expansions to the Qarawiyyin and Andalusiyyin mosques in Fes and the addition of their square-shafted minarets, carried out under the sponsorship of Abd ar-Rahman III and following the example of the minaret he built for the Great Mosque of Cordoba.[100][98]

Economy

 
Córdoban dinar of Hisham II

The economy of the caliphate was diverse and successful, with trade predominating. Muslim trade routes connected al-Andalus with the outside world via the Mediterranean. Industries revitalized during the caliphate included textiles, ceramics, glassware, metalwork, and agriculture. The Arabs introduced crops such as rice, watermelon, banana, eggplant and hard wheat. Fields were irrigated with water wheels. Some of the most prominent merchants of the caliphate were Jews. Jewish merchants had extensive networks of trade that stretched the length of the Mediterranean Sea. Since there was no international banking system at the time, payments relied on a high level of trust, and this level of trust could only be cemented through personal or family bonds, such as marriage. Jews from al-Andalus, Cairo, and the Levant all intermarried across borders. Therefore, Jewish merchants in the caliphate had counterparts abroad that were willing to do business with them.[101] The Cordoban economy was also exceptionally active in part due to its robust system of coinage, which was maintained and improved upon form the Abbasid rule.[102]

Cordoba was one of the major centers in the mediterranean slave trade. This was in part due to its geographical location and in part to its own reliance on the practice. Geographically, Cordoba is in the southern central region of Spain, with access to the sea via the Guadalquivir river.[103] It used this location to its advantage as its main suppliers of Christian slaves were the Northern European lands and the buyers of these same slaves were in the Muslim lands, regions with which it had already had trade connections. The slave trade in Cordoba also thrived because of the administration's reliance on slaves. These slaves were owned by the caliph and held important positions within the household and the military. Slaves in particular made up a significant portion of the caliphate's army.[104] 

Religion

 
Exterior of the Great Mosque

The caliphate had an ethnically, culturally, and religiously diverse society. A minority of ethnic Muslims of Arab descent occupied the priestly and ruling positions, another Muslim minority were primarily soldiers and muladi converts were found throughout society. Jews comprised about ten percent of the population: little more numerous than the Arabs and about equal in numbers to the Berbers. They were primarily involved in business and intellectual occupations. The Christian minority (Mozarabs) professed by and large the Visigothic rite. The Mozarabs were in a lower strata of society, heavily taxed with few civil rights and culturally influenced by the Muslims. Ethnic Arabs occupied the top of the social hierarchy; Muslims had a higher social standing than Jews, who had a higher social standing than Christians. Christians and Jews were considered dhimmis, required to pay jizya (a protection tax).[105]

Half of the population in Córdoba is reported to have been Muslim by the 10th century, with an increase to 70 percent by the 11th century. That was due less to local conversion than to Muslim immigration from the rest of the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa. Christians saw their status decline from their rule under the Visigoths, meanwhile the status of Jews improved during the Caliphate. While Jews were persecuted under the Visigoths, Jewish communities benefited from Umayyad rule by obtaining more freedom, affluence and a higher social standing.[101]

Population

According to Thomas Glick, "Despite the withdrawal of substantial numbers during the drought and famine of the 750s, fresh Berber migration from North Africa was a constant feature of Andalusi history, increasing in tempo in the tenth century. Hispano-Romans who converted to Islam, numbering six or seven millions, comprised the majority of the population and also occupied the lowest rungs on the social ladder."[106][107] It is also estimated that the capital city held around 450,000 people, making it the second largest city in Europe at the time.[108]

List of caliphs

Caliphs of Córdoba
Umayyad Caliphs of Córdoba
Caliph Reign
ʿAbd al-Rahmān III al-Nāṣir li-Dīn Allāh 16 January 929 – 15 October 961
Al-Ḥakam II al-Mustanṣir bi-llāh 15 October 961 – 16 October 976
Hishām II al-Muʾayyad bi-llāh 16 October 976 – 1009
Muhammad II al-Mahdī bi'llāh 1009
Sulaymān al-Mustaʿin bi'llāh 1009–1010
Hishām II al-Muʾayyad bi-llāh 1010 – 19 April 1013
Sulaymān al-Mustaʿin bi'llāh 1013–1016
ʿAbd al-Raḥmān IV al-Murtaḍā bi-llāh 1017
Hammudid Caliphs of Córdoba
ʿAli ibn Ḥammud al-Nāṣir li-Dīn Allāh 1016–1018
Al-Ma'mun al-Qāsim ibn Ḥammud 1018–1021
Yaḥya ibn ʿAli ibn Ḥammud al-Muʿtali bi-llāh 1021–1023
Al-Ma'mun al-Qāsim ibn Ḥammud 1023
Umayyad Caliphs of Córdoba (Restored)
ʿAbd al-Rahmān V al-Mustaẓhir bi-llāh 1023–1024
Muhammad III al-Mustakfi bi-llāh 1024–1025
Hammudid Caliphs of Córdoba (Interregnum)
Yaḥya ibn ʿAli ibn Ḥammud al-Muʿtali bi-llāh 1025–1026
Umayyad Caliphs of Córdoba (Restored)
Hisham III al-Muʿtad bi-llāh 1026–1031
End of the Caliphate

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Azizur Rahman, Syed (2001). The Story of Islamic Spain (snippet view). New Delhi: Goodword Books. p. 129. ISBN 978-81-87570-57-8. Retrieved 5 September 2010. [Emir Abdullah died on] 16 Oct., 912 after 26 years of inglorious rule leaving his fragmented and bankrupt kingdom to his grandson 'Abd ar-Rahman. The following day, the new sultan received the oath of allegiance at a ceremony held in the "Perfect salon" (al-majils al-kamil) of the Alcazar.
  2. ^ Taagepera, Rein (September 1997). "Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities: Context for Russia". International Studies Quarterly. 41 (3): 495. doi:10.1111/0020-8833.00053. JSTOR 2600793. Retrieved 7 September 2018.
  3. ^ a b Barton 2004, p. 38.
  4. ^ Chejne 1974, pp. 43–49.
  5. ^ Hughes, Aaron W. (2013). Muslim identities : an introduction to Islam. New York. p. 108. ISBN 9780231531924. OCLC 833763900.
  6. ^ Barton 2004, p. 37.
  7. ^ Stanton, Charles D. (2015-06-30). Medieval maritime warfare. Barnsley, South Yorkshire. p. 111. ISBN 9781473856431. OCLC 905696269.
  8. ^ a b c O'Callaghan, J. F. (1983). A History of Medieval Spain. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. p. 119.
  9. ^ Reilly 1993, p. 84.
  10. ^ a b c Abun-Nasr, Jamil (1987). A history of the Maghrib in the Islamic period. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521337674.
  11. ^ Chejne 1974, p. 35.
  12. ^ Chejne 1974, pp. 37–38.
  13. ^ a b c d Catlos, Brain A. (2014). Infidel Kings and Unholy Wars: Faith, Power, and Violence in the Age of Crusades and Jihad. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux. p. 30.
  14. ^ Abi Zar, Ibn; al-Qirtas, Rawd (1964). Annotated Spanish translation: A. Huici Miranda, Rawd el-Qirtas. 2nd edition, Anubar Ediciones (in Spanish). Vol. 1. Valencia. ISBN 84-7013-007-2.
  15. ^ Chejne 1974, pp. 38–40.
  16. ^ Catlos, Brain A. (2014). Infidel Kings and Unholy Wars: Faith, Power, and Violence in the Age of Crusades and Jihad. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux. p. 23. ISBN 9780374712051.
  17. ^ Chejne 1974, pp. 42–43.
  18. ^ Reilly 1993, pp. 87–89.
  19. ^ Echevarría Arsuaga 2011, p. 119.
  20. ^ Valdés Fernández 1999, p. 37.
  21. ^ a b c d e Kennedy 1996, p. 117.
  22. ^ a b c d Echevarría Arsuaga 2011, p. 128.
  23. ^ a b Valdés Fernández 1999, p. 15.
  24. ^ a b Castellanos Gómez 2002, p. 46.
  25. ^ a b Bariani 2003, p. 126.
  26. ^ a b c Fletcher 2000, p. 95.
  27. ^ Dozy 2010, p. 239.
  28. ^ a b c Cruz Hernández 1992, p. 326.
  29. ^ Colmeiro y Penido 1863, p. 172.
  30. ^ a b c d Colmeiro y Penido 1863, p. 173.
  31. ^ Valdés Fernández 1999, p. 14.
  32. ^ Bariani 2003, p. 131.
  33. ^ a b c Castellanos Gómez 2002, p. 45.
  34. ^ a b Echevarría Arsuaga 2011, p. 130.
  35. ^ Bariani 2003, p. 134.
  36. ^ Echevarría Arsuaga 2011, p. 129.
  37. ^ Vara 2012.
  38. ^ a b Russell & Carr 1982, p. 70.
  39. ^ a b c Bariani 2003, p. 140.
  40. ^ a b Echevarría Arsuaga 2011, p. 133.
  41. ^ Kennedy 1996, p. 119.
  42. ^ a b c Echevarría Arsuaga 2011, p. 134.
  43. ^ Kennedy 1996, p. 118.
  44. ^ a b Ríu Ríu 1988, p. 72.
  45. ^ a b c d e f Fletcher 2000, p. 77.
  46. ^ Fletcher 1991, p. 23.
  47. ^ a b c Fletcher 1999, p. 39.
  48. ^ Weiner 2001, p. 15.
  49. ^ Bariani 2003, p. 138.
  50. ^ Vallvé Bermejo 1992, p. 125: "Normalmente participaban en sus aceifas doce mil hombres de a caballo, inscritos en la escalilla militar y a los que, además de la acostumbrada soldada, se les proporcionaban una caballería con sus arreos, armas, alojamiento, pagas y gratificaciones para diversos gastos, y forraje para las caballerías, según su categoría."
  51. ^ Arié 1984, p. 124.
  52. ^ Arié 1984, p. 137.
  53. ^ González Batista 2007, p. 116.
  54. ^ Castellanos Gómez 2002, p. 93.
  55. ^ De Bordejé Morencos 1992, p. 111.
  56. ^ a b De Bordejé Morencos 1992, p. 113.
  57. ^ a b Martínez Enamorado & Torremocha Silva 2001, p. 146.
  58. ^ Vernet Ginés 1979, p. 403.
  59. ^ a b Ballestín Navarro 2004, p. 153.
  60. ^ Crespi, Gabriele (1982). "L'Europe Musulmane". Les Formes de la nuit. No. 2. Saint Léger-Vauban: Zodiaque, pp. 55. En francés. ISSN 0763-7608.
  61. ^ Morales Romero 2004, p. 195.
  62. ^ Allen 2002, p. 130.
  63. ^ Tapia Garrido 1976, p. 166.
  64. ^ Martínez Enamorado & Torremocha Silva 2001, p. 93.
  65. ^ Jiménez Losantos 1999, p. 78.
  66. ^ Lévi Provençal 1957, p. 62.
  67. ^ Frers 2008, p. 66.
  68. ^ Ballestín Navarro 2004, p. 152.
  69. ^ Castellanos Gómez 2002, p. 100.
  70. ^ a b Echevarría Arsuaga 2011, p. 135.
  71. ^ Suárez Fernández 1976, p. 354.
  72. ^ Lévi Provençal 1957, p. 431.
  73. ^ Ballestín Navarro 2004, p. 154.
  74. ^ a b Fletcher 1999, p. 40.
  75. ^ a b c Matés Baco & Agustín González 2006, p. 48.
  76. ^ Ríu Ríu 1988, p. 66.
  77. ^ Fusi Azpurúa 2012, p. 50.
  78. ^ Fusi Azpurúa 2012, p. 49.
  79. ^ a b Marín Guzmán 2006, p. 109.
  80. ^ Mitre Fernández 1979, p. 134.
  81. ^ Barton 2004, pp. 40–41.
  82. ^ Slamecka, Vladimir (9 August 2018). "Information processing". Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. Retrieved 5 October 2022. The Bayt al-Ḥikmah ("House of Wisdom"), founded in AD 830 in Baghdad, contained a public library with a large collection of materials on a wide range of subjects, and the 10th-century library of Caliph al-Ḥakam in Cordova, Spain, boasted more than 400,000 books.
  83. ^ a b c d M. Bloom, Jonathan; S. Blair, Sheila, eds. (2009). "Córdoba". The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195309911.
  84. ^ Barton 2004, p. 42.
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  87. ^ a b Dodds, Jerrilynn D., ed. (1992). Al-Andalus: The Art of Islamic Spain. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0870996371.
  88. ^ "Cervatillo de Madinat al-Zahra - Obras Singulares - Museo arqueológico y etnológico de Córdoba". www.museosdeandalucia.es. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  89. ^ Llorente, Margarita Sánchez. "Fountain spout - Discover Islamic Art - Virtual Museum". Discover Islamic Art - Museum With No Frontiers. from the original on 2020-11-26. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  90. ^ "Qantara - Spout of a fountain in the form of a stag". Qantara-med. from the original on 2021-04-19. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  91. ^ "Doha Hind". www.mia.org.qa. Retrieved 2021-11-16.
  92. ^ a b c d Dodds, Jerrilynn D., ed. (1992). Al-Andalus: The Art of Islamic Spain. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0870996371.
  93. ^ a b Rosser-Owen, Mariam (2014). "Andalusi Spolia in Medieval Morocco: "Architectural Politics, Political Architecture"". Medieval Encounters. 20 (2): 152–198. doi:10.1163/15700674-12342164.
  94. ^ El Khatib-Boujibar, Naima. "Ablutions basin". Discover Islamic Art, Museum With No Frontiers. Retrieved June 5, 2020.
  95. ^ a b c Barrucand, Marianne; Bednorz, Achim (1992). Moorish architecture in Andalusia. Taschen. ISBN 3822876348.
  96. ^ Ruggles, D. Fairchild (2008). Islamic Gardens and Landscapes. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 152–153. ISBN 9780812207286.
  97. ^ Vallejo Triano, Antonio (2007). "Madinat Al-Zahra; Transformation of a Caliphal City". In Anderson, Glaire D.; Rosser-Owen, Mariam (eds.). Revisiting al-Andalus: perspectives on the material culture of Islamic Iberia and beyond. Brill. p. 3. ISBN 978-90-04-16227-3.
  98. ^ a b Marçais, Georges (1954). L'architecture musulmane d'Occident. Paris: Arts et métiers graphiques.
  99. ^ Abun-Nasr, Jamil (1987). A history of the Maghrib in the Islamic period. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521337674.
  100. ^ Le Tourneau, Roger (1949). Fès avant le protectorat: étude économique et sociale d'une ville de l'occident musulman. Casablanca: Société Marocaine de Librairie et d'Édition.
  101. ^ a b Karabell, Zachary (2007). Peace Be Upon You: The Story of Muslim, Christian, and Jewish Coexistence. New York: Albert A. Knopf. p. 70.
  102. ^ HÉBERT, RAYMOND J. (1991). "THE COINAGE OF ISLAMIC SPAIN". Islamic Studies. 30 (1/2): 113–128. ISSN 0578-8072.
  103. ^ Bennison, Amira K. (2009). The great caliphs : the golden age of the 'Abbasid Empire. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-15489-4. OCLC 593239917.
  104. ^ O'Connell, Monique (2016). The Mediterranean world : from the fall of Rome to the rise of Napoleon. Eric Dursteler. Baltimore. ISBN 978-1-4214-1901-5. OCLC 921240187.
  105. ^ "This day, Mary 15, in Jewish history". Cleveland Jewish News.
  106. ^ Glick 2005, p. 202.
  107. ^ "The rate of conversion is slow until the tenth century (less than one-quarter of the eventual total number of converts had been converted); the explosive period coincides closely with the reign of 'Abd al-Rahman III (912–961); the process is completed (eighty percent converted) by around 1100. The curve, moreover, makes possible a reasonable estimate of the religious distribution of the population. Assuming that there were seven million Hispano-Romans in the peninsula in 711 and that the numbers of this segment of the population remained level through the eleventh century (with population growth balancing out Christian migration to the north), then by 912 there would have been approximately 2.8 million indigenous Muslims (muwalladûn) plus Arabs and Berbers. At this point Christians still vastly outnumbered Muslims. By 1100, however, the number of indigenous Muslims would have risen to a majority of 5.6 million." Glick 2005, pp. 23–24
  108. ^ Tertius Chandler, Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth: An Historical Census, Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 1987. ISBN 0-88946-207-0. Figures in main tables are preferentially cited. Part of Chandler's estimates are summarized or modified at The Institute for Research on World-Systems; Largest Cities Through History by Matt T. Rosenberg; or The Etext Archives 2008-02-11 at the Wayback Machine. Chandler defined a city as a continuously built-up area (urban) with suburbs but without farmland inside the municipality.

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  • Fletcher, Richard (2000). La España mora. Translated by Julio Rodríguez Puértolas. Nerea. p. 213. ISBN 9788489569409.
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  • Valdés Fernández, Fernando (1999). Almanzor y los terrores del milenio. Santa María la Real. p. 160. ISBN 9788489483095.
  • Vallvé Bermejo, Joaquín (1992). El Califato de Córdoba. Madrid: Mapfre. Edición de Elena Romero. p. 351. ISBN 978-8-47100-406-2.
  • Vernet Ginés, Juan (1979). Estudios sobre la historia de la ciencia medieval. Barcelona: Universidad Autónoma de Barcelona. p. 508.
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Further reading

  • Ambrosio, B.; Hernandez, C.; Noveletto, A.; Dugoujon, J. M.; Rodriguez, J. N.; Cuesta, P.; Fortes-Lima, C.; Caderon, R. (2010). "Searching the peopling of the Iberian Peninsula from the perspective of two Andalusian subpopulations: a study based on Y-chromosome haplogroups J and E". Collegium Antropologicum 34 (4): 1215–1228.
  • Fletcher, Richard (2001). Moorish Spain (Hardcover ed.). Orion. ISBN 1-84212-605-9.
  • Guichard, P. (1976). Al-Andalus: Estructura antropológica de una sociedad islámica en Occidente. Barcelona: Barral Editores. ISBN 8421120166

Coordinates: 37°53′N 4°46′W / 37.883°N 4.767°W / 37.883; -4.767

caliphate, córdoba, arabic, خلافة, قرطبة, transliterated, khilāfat, qurṭuba, also, known, cordoban, caliphate, islamic, state, ruled, umayyad, dynasty, from, 1031, territory, comprised, iberia, parts, north, africa, with, capital, córdoba, succeeded, emirate, . The Caliphate of Cordoba Arabic خلافة قرطبة transliterated Khilafat Qurṭuba also known as the Cordoban Caliphate was an Islamic state ruled by the Umayyad dynasty from 929 to 1031 Its territory comprised Iberia and parts of North Africa with its capital in Cordoba It succeeded the Emirate of Cordoba upon the self proclamation of Umayyad emir Abd ar Rahman III as caliph in January 929 3 The period was characterized by an expansion of trade and culture and saw the construction of masterpieces of al Andalus architecture Caliphate of Cordobaخلافة قرطبة Khilafat Qurṭubah in Arabic 929 1031Caliphate of Cordoba circa 1000 ADCapitalCordobaCommon languagesAndalusian Arabic Mozarabic Berber languages Hebrew Medieval Hebrew ReligionPredominantly Sunni Islam Minority Christianity JudaismGovernmentTheocratic monarchyHistory Abd ar Rahman III proclaimed Caliph 1 929 Disintegrated into several independent taifa kingdoms1031Area1000 est 2 600 000 km2 230 000 sq mi Population 1000 est 10 000 000Preceded by Succeeded byEmirate of CordobaIdrisid dynasty Taifa of CordobaTaifa of DeniaTaifa of ZaragozaTaifa of BadajozTaifa of ToledoTaifa of ValenciaAlmoravid dynastyToday part ofGibraltar UK MoroccoPortugalSpainThe caliphate disintegrated in the early 11th century during the Fitna of al Andalus a civil war between the descendants of caliph Hisham II and the successors of his hajib court official Al Mansur In 1031 after years of infighting the caliphate fractured into a number of independent Muslim taifa kingdoms 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Umayyad Dynasty 1 1 1 Rise 1 1 2 Prosperity 1 1 3 Fall 2 Reform of army and administration 3 Culture 3 1 Literature and scholarship 3 2 Arts 3 3 Architecture 4 Economy 5 Religion 6 Population 7 List of caliphs 8 See also 9 Notes and references 10 Bibliography 11 Further readingHistory EditUmayyad Dynasty Edit Rise Edit Abd ar Rahman I became emir of Cordoba in 756 after six years in exile after the Umayyads lost the position of caliph in Damascus to the Abbasids in 750 5 Intent on regaining power he defeated the area s existing Islamic rulers and united various local fiefdoms into an emirate 6 Raids then increased the emirate s size the first to go as far as Corsica occurred in 806 7 The emirate s rulers used the title emir or sultan until the 10th century In the early 10th century Abd ar Rahman III faced a threatened invasion from North Africa by the Fatimid Caliphate a rival Shiite Islamic empire based in Ifriqiya Since the Fatimids also claimed the caliphate in response Abd ar Rahman III claimed the title of caliph himself 3 Prior to Abd ar Rahman s proclamation as the caliph the Umayyads generally recognized the Abbasid caliph of Baghdad as being the rightful rulers of the Muslim community 8 Even after repulsing the Fatimids he kept the more prestigious title 9 Although his position as caliph was not accepted outside of al Andalus and its North African affiliates internally the Spanish Umayyads considered themselves as closer to Muhammad and thus more legitimate than the Abbasids Prosperity Edit The caliphate enjoyed increased prosperity during the 10th century Abd ar Rahman III united al Andalus and brought the Christian kingdoms of the north under control by force and through diplomacy Abd ar Rahman III stopped the Fatimid advance into Morocco and al Andalus in order to prevent a future invasion The plan for a Fatimid invasion was thwarted when Abd ar Rahman III secured Melilla in 927 Ceuta in 931 and Tangier in 951 8 In 948 the Idrisid emir Abul Aish Ahmad recognised the caliphate although he refused to allow them to occupy Tangier The Umayyads besieged Tangier in 949 and defeated Abul Aish forcing him to retreat The Umayyads then occupied the rest of northern Morocco 10 63 Although another Fatimid invasion of Morocco occurred in 958 under their general Jawhar Al Hassan II had to recognise the Fatimids 10 75 The Umayyads responded by invading Idrisid Morocco in 973 with their general Ghalib By 974 Al Hassan II was taken to Cordoba and the remaining Idrisids recognised Umayyad rule 10 75 This period of prosperity was marked by increasing diplomatic relations with Berber tribes in North Africa Christian kings from the north and with France Germany and Constantinople 11 The caliphate became very profitable during the reign of Abd ar Rahman III by increasing the public revenue to 6 245 000 dinars from Abd ar Rahman II The profits made during this time were divided into three parts the payment of the salaries and maintenance of the army the preservation of public buildings and the needs of the caliph 8 The death of Abd ar Rahman III led to the rise of his 46 year old son Al Hakam II in 961 Al Hakam II continued his father s policy toward Christian kings and North African rebels Al Hakam s reliance on his advisers was greater than his father s because the previous prosperity under Abd ar Rahman III allowed al Hakam II to let the caliphate run by itself This style of rulership suited al Hakam II since he was more interested in his scholarly and intellectual pursuits than ruling the caliphate The caliphate was at its intellectual and scholarly peak under al Hakam II 12 13 Fall Edit The death of al Hakam II in 976 marked the beginning of the end of the caliphate Before his death al Hakam named his only son Hisham II successor Although the 10 year old child was ill equipped to be caliph Al Mansur Ibn Abi Aamir top adviser to al Hakam also known as Almanzor who had sworn an oath of obedience to Hisham II pronounced him caliph In 996 Almanzor sent an invasion force to Morocco After three months of struggle his forces retreated to Tangier Almanzor then sent a powerful reinforcement under his son Abd al Malik The armies clashed near Tangier The Umayyads would enter Fes on 13 October 998 once the gates of the city were opened 14 Almanzor had great influence over Subh the mother and regent of Hisham II Almanzor along with Subh isolated Hisham in Cordoba while systematically eradicating opposition to his own rule allowing Berbers from Africa to migrate to al Andalus to increase his base of support 15 While Hisham II was caliph he was merely a figurehead 16 The power nominally held by Caliph Hisham was retained by Almanzor s sons Abd al Malik al Muzaffar who died in 1008 and Abd al Rahman Sanchuelo However while Abd al Rahman was leading a raid on the Christian north a revolt tore through Cordoba and deposed him and he was killed when he tried to restore himself to power 17 18 The title of caliph became symbolic without power or influence The death of Abd al Rahman Sanchuelo in 1009 marked the beginning of the Fitna of al Andalus with rivals claiming to be the new caliph violence sweeping the caliphate and intermittent invasions by the Hammudid dynasty 13 Beset by factionalism the caliphate crumbled in 1031 into a number of independent taifas including the Taifa of Cordoba Taifa of Seville and Taifa of Zaragoza The last Cordoban Caliph was Hisham III 1027 1031 Reform of army and administration EditThe separation between the temporal power held by Almanzor and the spiritual in the hands of Hisham as Caliph increased the importance of military force a symbol along with the new majesty of the chamberlain s court rival of that of the caliph himself of the power of Almanzor and an instrument to guarantee the payment of taxes 19 Almanzor successfully continued the military reforms begun by Al Hakam 20 and his predecessors 21 covering many aspects 22 On one hand he increased the professionalization of the regular army 21 necessary both to guarantee his military power in the capital and to ensure the availability of forces for his numerous campaigns one of the sources of his political legitimacy 22 This policy de emphasized levies and other non professional troops which he replaced with taxes used to support the professional troops often saqalibas 21 or Maghrebis which freed the natives of al Andalus from military service 23 22 24 Recruitment of saqalibas and Berbers was not new but Almanzor expanded it 21 25 26 On the other hand he created new units unlike the regular army of the Caliphate that were faithful primarily to himself 25 and served to control the capital 22 Emir Abd al Rahman I had already used Berbers and saqalibas for a permanent army of forty thousand to end the conflicts that hitherto had plagued the emirate 27 At the time of Emir Muhammad I the army reached thirty five to forty thousand combatants half of them Syrian military contingents 28 This massive hiring of mercenaries and slaves meant that according to Christian chroniclers ordinarily the Saracen armies amount to 30 40 50 or 60 000 men even when in serious occasions they reach 100 160 300 and even 600 000 fighters 29 In fact it has been argued that in Almanzor s time the Cordovan armies could muster six hundred thousand laborers and two hundred thousand horses drawn from all provinces of the empire 30 Almanzor s troops as represented in the Cantigas de Santa Maria The chamberlain carried out wide ranging military reforms In order to eliminate a possible threat to his power and to improve military efficiency Almanzor abolished the system of tribal units 31 32 33 that had been in decline due to lack of Arabs and institution of pseudo feudalism on the frontiers 34 in which the different tribes each had their own commander and that had caused continuous clashes and replaced it with mixed units 35 without clear loyalty under orders from Administration officials 36 The nucleus of the new army however was formed increasingly by Maghrebi Berber forces 24 26 34 The ethnic rivalries among Arabs Berbers and Slavs within the Andalusian army were skillfully used by Almanzor to maintain his own power 26 for example by ordering that every unit of the army consist of diverse ethnic groups so that they would not unite against him 37 and thus preventing the emergence of possible rivals 38 However once their centralizing figure disappeared these units were one of the main causes of the 11th century civil war called the Fitna of al Andalus 38 Berber forces were also joined by contingents of well paid Christian mercenaries 39 who formed the bulk of Almanzor s personal guard and participated in his campaigns in Christian territories 40 Almanzor s completion of this reform begun by his predecessors fundamentally divided the population into two unequal groups a large mass of civilian taxpayers and a small professional military caste generally from outside the peninsula 41 The increase in military forces and their partial professionalization led to an increase in financial expenses to sustain them 21 This represented an additional incentive to carry out campaigns which produced loot and land with which to pay the troops 40 These lands when handed over to the soldiers as payment were thereafter subject to tribute and ceased to operate under a system of border colonization 42 43 The Caliphal army was funded by the taxpaying farmers in exchange for military exemptions and consisted of local recruits as well as foreign mercenaries Berber militias Slav and Black slaves mercenary Christian companies and jihadi volunteers 44 At that time al Andalus was known as Dar Jihad or country of jihad and attracted many volunteers and though these were relatively few compared to the total army their zeal in combat more than compensated for this 45 According to modern studies these mercenary contingents made it possible to increase the total size of the Caliphal army from thirty or fifty thousand troops in the time of Abd al Rahman III to fifty or ninety thousand 28 46 47 Others like Evariste Levi Provencal argue that the Cordoban armies in the field with the Almanzor were between thirty five thousand and seventy or seventy five thousand soldiers 44 48 Contemporary figures are contradictory some accounts claim that their armies numbered two hundred thousand horsemen and six hundred thousand foot soldiers while others talk about twelve thousand horsemen three thousand mounted Berbers and two thousand sudan African light infantry 49 According to the chronicles in the campaign that swept Astorga and Leon Almanzor led twelve thousand African and five thousand Al Andalus horsemen and forty thousand infantry 30 It is also said that in his last campaigns he mobilized forty six thousand horsemen while another six hundred guarded the train twenty six thousand infantry two hundred scouts or police and one hundred and thirty drummers 50 or that the garrison of Cordoba consisted of 10 500 horsemen and many others kept the northern border in dispersed detachments 39 However it is much more likely that the leader s armies even in their most ambitious campaigns may not have exceeded twenty thousand men 39 It can be argued that until the eleventh century no Muslim army on campaign exceeded thirty thousand troops while during the eighth century the trans Pyrenean expeditions totaled ten thousand men and those carried out against Christians in the north of the peninsula were even smaller 28 In the time of Emir Al Hakam I a palatine guard of 3000 riders and 2000 infantry was created all Slavic slaves 51 This proportion between the two types of troops was maintained until Almanzor s reforms The massive incorporation of North African horsemen relegated the infantry to sieges and fortress garrisons 52 This reform led to entire tribes particularly Berber riders being moved to the peninsula 53 The main weapon of the peninsular campaigns which required speed and surprise was the light cavalry 33 To try to counteract them the Castilians created the role of villain knights ennobling those free men who were willing to keep a horse to increase the mounted units through the Fuero de Castrojeriz of 974 33 For similar reasons the Barcelonan count Borrell II created the figure of the homes of paratge who obtained privileged military status by fighting against the Cordobans armed on horseback after losing their capital in the fall of 985 54 In contrast to the prominent role the navy had played in previous decades under Abd al Rahman III 55 under Almanzor it served only as a means of transporting ground troops 56 such as between the Maghreb and the Iberian Peninsula or Alcacer do Sal s ships in the campaign against Santiago de Compostela in 997 56 During this time military industry flourished in factories around Cordoba 45 It was said to be able to produce a thousand bows and twenty thousand arrows monthly 45 47 and 1300 shields 45 and three thousand campaign stores annually 45 47 As for the fleet its network of ports was reinforced with a new base in the Atlantic in Alcacer do Sal which protected the area of Coimbra recovered in the 980s and served as the origin of the units that participated in the campaign against Santiago 42 On the Mediterranean shore the naval defense was centered at the base of al Mariya now Almeria 57 The dockyards of the fleet had been built in Tortosa in 944 58 Initially the maritime defense of the Caliphate was led by Abd al Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn Rumahis a veteran admiral who had served Al Hakam II and was Qadi of Elvira 59 and Pechina 57 He repulsed raids by al Magus idolaters or al Urdumaniyun men of the north vikings 60 in the west of al Andalus in mid 971 61 at the end of that year when they tried to invade Al Andalus 62 the admiral left Almeria and defeated them off the coast of Algarve 63 In April 973 he transported the army of Ghalib from Algeciras 64 to subdue the rebellious tribes of the Maghreb and end Fatimid ambitions in that area 65 As in 997 when the Al Andalus fleet hit the Galician coast in 985 it had ravaged the Catalans 66 During the Catalan campaign Gausfred I Count of Empurias and Roussillon tried to gather an army to help the locals but then several flotillas of Berber pirates threatened their coasts forcing them to stay to defend their lands 67 To ensure control of the military Almanzor eliminated the main figures who could have opposed his reforms 42 in addition to the death of Ghalib the participation of the governor of Zaragoza in the plot of his eldest son served as a justification to replace him 68 with another more amenable member of the same clan the Banu Tujib 69 70 The admiral of the fleet 71 who maintained a significant budget was poisoned 72 in January 980 73 and replaced by a man faithful to Almanzor 59 70 As in the Army he encouraged the recruitment of Berbers faithful to him so in the Administration he favored the saqalibas to the detriment of native officials again with the aim of surrounding himself with personnel loyal only to him 23 Land transport routes were dotted with strongholds 45 since ancient Al Andalus dignitaries sought to control communications 74 Messengers were bought in Sudan and specially trained to handle Almanzor s messages and to transmit the official reports that his foreign ministries wrote about the annual campaigns 74 The Caliphate ruled by Almanzor was a rich and powerful state According to Colmeiro it is estimated that in a pre industrial society for every million inhabitants ten thousand soldiers could be mustered Even assuming the chronicles exaggerated tenfold the real numbers these speak of eight hundred thousand soldiers the caliphate could have had eight million inhabitants 30 Those who use more bullish criteria estimate between seven 75 and ten 76 million but the population was probably much fewer 75 30 Traditionally speaking around the year 1000 the caliphate occupied four hundred thousand square kilometers and was populated by three million souls 77 By comparison the Iberian Christian states comprised one hundred and sixty thousand square kilometers and half a million people 78 By the 10th century 75 of the population under the Umayyads had converted to Islam a number reaching 80 two centuries later 79 By comparison at the time of the Muslim invasion Spain had about four million inhabitants although there is no shortage of historians who would raise that estimate to seven or eight million 79 His realm also had large cities like Cordoba which surpassed one hundred thousand inhabitants Toledo Almeria and Granada which were around thirty thousand and Zaragoza Valencia and Malaga all above fifteen thousand 75 This contrasted sharply with the Christian north of the peninsula which lacked large urban centers 80 Culture EditLiterature and scholarship Edit Cordoba was the cultural 81 and intellectual centre of al Andalus with translations of ancient Greek texts into Arabic Latin and Hebrew During the reign of al Hakam II the royal library possessed an estimated 400 000 to 500 000 volumes 13 82 83 For comparison the Abbey of Saint Gall in Switzerland contained just over 100 volumes 13 Advances in science history geography philosophy and language occurred during the Caliphate 84 Al Andalus s prosperity and the caliph s patronage attracted travelers diplomats and scholars They continued the legacy of figures such as Ziryab in the 9th century by bringing in new styles of art music and literature from the eastern Islamic world 85 164 Cordoba also became a center of culture and high society in its own right Poets sought the patronage of its court as with the example of Ibn Darraj al Qastali who served as court poet for Abd al Rahman III Al Hakam II and Almanzor Other poets such as Yusuf al Ramadi composed works on nature and love Muwashshah a form of Andalusi vernacular poetry combining vernacular Arabic and the vernacular Romance language grew more popular during this period 85 165 Writers also began to compose histories devoted to the Umayyad dynasty of Al Andalus such as Ahmad al Razi s History of the Rulers of al Andalus Arabic أخبار ملوك الأندلس romanized Akhbar muluk al Andalus These histories also provided information on the land and its people Many ideas and myths concerning the history of al Andalus including stories about its initial Muslim conquest in the 8th century began to appear in this period 85 165 166 Christians and Jews contributed to the intellectual and cultural spheres of al Andalus although this required that they publicly respect the higher status of the Arabic language and of the Islamic religion 85 166 Hasdai ibn Shaprut was one of the most well known Jewish figures of this time In addition to serving in the caliph s court and being highly versed in Arabic culture Hasdai was also a patron of Hebrew scholarship He was determined to establish the Jewish community of al Andalus as independent from the Jewish academies of Baghdad and the Middle East which helped bring about the Golden Age of Jewish culture in the region 85 168 By contrast Latin culture within Al Andalus declined as local Christians became increasingly Arabized The Latin language was retained in liturgy However Andalusi Christians did journey to and from the Christian controlled territories to the north and in the rest of Europe contributing to the transmission of knowledge from al Andalus to the rest of Europe 85 169 Some upper class women also had the resources to receive education and participate in high culture in the domains of poetry and even religion 85 166 167 Examples include Aisha ibn Ahmad who was born from a noble family and wrote poetry copied the Qur an and founded libraries Lubna a slave in the service of al Hakam II served as one of the caliph s scribes or secretaries and a librarian 85 166 86 Although religious domains were still dominated by men Fatima bint Yahya al Maghami was a well known faqih expert on Islamic law and jurisprudence who taught both men and women 85 167 86 Arts Edit The caliph s official workshops such as those at Madinat al Zahra fabricated luxury products for use at court or as gifts for guests allies and diplomats which stimulated artistic production Many objects produced in the caliph s workshops later made their way into the collections of museums and Christian cathedrals in Europe 85 139 141 Among the most famous objects of this period are ivory boxes which are carved with vegetal figurative and epigraphic motifs Notable surviving examples include the Pyxis of al Mughira the Pyxis of Zamora and the Leyre Casket 83 87 The caliphal workshops also produced fine silks including tiraz textiles ceramics and leatherwork 83 87 41 44 Metalwork objects were also produced of which the most famous surviving piece is the so called Cordoba Stag a bronze fountain spout carved in the form of a stag which was made at Madinat al Zahra and preserved by the Archeological Museum of Cordoba Two other bronze examples of similar craftsmanship shaped like deers are kept at the National Archeological Museum in Madrid and the Islamic Art Museum in Doha 88 89 90 91 92 211 212 While the production of ivory and silk objects largely stopped after the Caliphate s collapse production in other mediums like leather and ceramic continued in later periods 83 Marble was also carved for decorative elements in some buildings such as wall paneling and window grilles 92 46 242 255 One of the most prolific types of marble craftsmanship were capitals which continued the general configuration of Roman Corinthian capitals but were deeply carved with Islamic vegetal motifs known as ataurique in Spanish in a distinctive style associated with the caliphal period 92 244 245 These capitals later became prized spolia and can be found in later buildings across the region built under the Almoravids and Almohads 93 Another notable example is a marble basin now kept at the Dar Si Said Museum in Marrakesh which was crafted at Madinat al Zahra between 1002 and 1007 to serve as an ablutions basin and dedicated to Abd al Malik the son of al Mansur before being shipped to Morocco and re used in new buildings 94 93 92 46 242 255 The Pyxis of al Mughira a carved ivory casket made at Madinat al Zahra dated to 968 Vegetal motifs and figurative imagery carved in ivory on the Leyre Casket made in 1004 1005 The Stag of Cordoba a bronze fountain spout from Madinat al Zahra 10th century Example of a marble capital from Madinat al Zahra 10th century Marble basin crafted for Abd al Malik son of al Mansur between 1002 and 1007Architecture Edit See also Moorish architecture The excavated and partly reconstructed remains of Madinat al Zahra outside Cordoba Spain 10th century Abd ar Rahman III marked his political ascendancy with the creation of a vast and lavish palace city called Madinat al Zahra also spelled and pronounced today as Medina Azahara located just outside Cordoba 95 Construction began in 936 940 and continued in multiple phases throughout his reign and the reign of his son son Al Hakam II r 961 976 The new city included ceremonial reception halls a congregational mosque administrative and government offices aristocratic residences gardens a mint workshops barracks service quarters and baths 96 97 The mosaic decorated mihrab center and the interlacing arches of the maqsura in the Great Mosque of Cordoba in the extension added by al Hakam II after 962 He also expanded the courtyard sahn of Cordoba s Great Mosque and built its first true minaret a tower from which the call to prayer was issued The minaret with a square floor plan set another precedent that was followed in the architecture of other mosques in the region Abd ar Rahman III s cultured successor al Hakam II further expanded the mosque s prayer hall starting in 962 He endowed it with some of its most significant architectural flourishes and innovations which included interlacing multifoil arches decorative ribbed domes and a richly ornamented mihrab niche symbolizing the direction of prayer with Byzantine influenced gold mosaics 98 95 A much smaller but historically notable work from the late caliphate period is the Bab al Mardum Mosque later known as the Church of San Cristo de la Luz in Toledo which features a variety of ribbed domes resting on horseshoe arches and an exterior facade with Arabic inscriptions carved in brick Other monuments from the Caliphate period in al Andalus include several of Toledo s old city gates the former mosque and later monastery of Almonaster la Real the Castle of Tarifa the Castle of Banos de la Encina near Seville the Caliphal Baths of Cordoba and possibly the Baths of Jaen 95 In the 10th century much of northern Morocco also came directly within the sphere of influence of the Cordoban Caliphate with competition from the Fatimid Caliphate further east 99 Early contributions to Moroccan architecture from this period include expansions to the Qarawiyyin and Andalusiyyin mosques in Fes and the addition of their square shafted minarets carried out under the sponsorship of Abd ar Rahman III and following the example of the minaret he built for the Great Mosque of Cordoba 100 98 Economy Edit Cordoban dinar of Hisham II The economy of the caliphate was diverse and successful with trade predominating Muslim trade routes connected al Andalus with the outside world via the Mediterranean Industries revitalized during the caliphate included textiles ceramics glassware metalwork and agriculture The Arabs introduced crops such as rice watermelon banana eggplant and hard wheat Fields were irrigated with water wheels Some of the most prominent merchants of the caliphate were Jews Jewish merchants had extensive networks of trade that stretched the length of the Mediterranean Sea Since there was no international banking system at the time payments relied on a high level of trust and this level of trust could only be cemented through personal or family bonds such as marriage Jews from al Andalus Cairo and the Levant all intermarried across borders Therefore Jewish merchants in the caliphate had counterparts abroad that were willing to do business with them 101 The Cordoban economy was also exceptionally active in part due to its robust system of coinage which was maintained and improved upon form the Abbasid rule 102 Cordoba was one of the major centers in the mediterranean slave trade This was in part due to its geographical location and in part to its own reliance on the practice Geographically Cordoba is in the southern central region of Spain with access to the sea via the Guadalquivir river 103 It used this location to its advantage as its main suppliers of Christian slaves were the Northern European lands and the buyers of these same slaves were in the Muslim lands regions with which it had already had trade connections The slave trade in Cordoba also thrived because of the administration s reliance on slaves These slaves were owned by the caliph and held important positions within the household and the military Slaves in particular made up a significant portion of the caliphate s army 104 Religion Edit Exterior of the Great MosqueThe caliphate had an ethnically culturally and religiously diverse society A minority of ethnic Muslims of Arab descent occupied the priestly and ruling positions another Muslim minority were primarily soldiers and muladi converts were found throughout society Jews comprised about ten percent of the population little more numerous than the Arabs and about equal in numbers to the Berbers They were primarily involved in business and intellectual occupations The Christian minority Mozarabs professed by and large the Visigothic rite The Mozarabs were in a lower strata of society heavily taxed with few civil rights and culturally influenced by the Muslims Ethnic Arabs occupied the top of the social hierarchy Muslims had a higher social standing than Jews who had a higher social standing than Christians Christians and Jews were considered dhimmis required to pay jizya a protection tax 105 Half of the population in Cordoba is reported to have been Muslim by the 10th century with an increase to 70 percent by the 11th century That was due less to local conversion than to Muslim immigration from the rest of the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa Christians saw their status decline from their rule under the Visigoths meanwhile the status of Jews improved during the Caliphate While Jews were persecuted under the Visigoths Jewish communities benefited from Umayyad rule by obtaining more freedom affluence and a higher social standing 101 Population EditAccording to Thomas Glick Despite the withdrawal of substantial numbers during the drought and famine of the 750s fresh Berber migration from North Africa was a constant feature of Andalusi history increasing in tempo in the tenth century Hispano Romans who converted to Islam numbering six or seven millions comprised the majority of the population and also occupied the lowest rungs on the social ladder 106 107 It is also estimated that the capital city held around 450 000 people making it the second largest city in Europe at the time 108 List of caliphs EditCaliphs of CordobaUmayyad Caliphs of CordobaCaliph ReignʿAbd al Rahman III al Naṣir li Din Allah 16 January 929 15 October 961Al Ḥakam II al Mustanṣir bi llah 15 October 961 16 October 976Hisham II al Muʾayyad bi llah 16 October 976 1009Muhammad II al Mahdi bi llah 1009Sulayman al Mustaʿin bi llah 1009 1010Hisham II al Muʾayyad bi llah 1010 19 April 1013Sulayman al Mustaʿin bi llah 1013 1016ʿAbd al Raḥman IV al Murtaḍa bi llah 1017Hammudid Caliphs of CordobaʿAli ibn Ḥammud al Naṣir li Din Allah 1016 1018Al Ma mun al Qasim ibn Ḥammud 1018 1021Yaḥya ibn ʿAli ibn Ḥammud al Muʿtali bi llah 1021 1023Al Ma mun al Qasim ibn Ḥammud 1023Umayyad Caliphs of Cordoba Restored ʿAbd al Rahman V al Mustaẓhir bi llah 1023 1024Muhammad III al Mustakfi bi llah 1024 1025Hammudid Caliphs of Cordoba Interregnum Yaḥya ibn ʿAli ibn Ḥammud al Muʿtali bi llah 1025 1026Umayyad Caliphs of Cordoba Restored Hisham III al Muʿtad bi llah 1026 1031End of the CaliphateSee also EditHistory of Islam History of Gibraltar History of Algeria History of Portugal History of Morocco History of Spain List of Sunni Muslim dynasties Martyrs of Cordoba Timeline of Septimania Umayyad conquest of HispaniaNotes and references Edit Azizur Rahman Syed 2001 The Story of Islamic Spain snippet view New Delhi Goodword Books p 129 ISBN 978 81 87570 57 8 Retrieved 5 September 2010 Emir Abdullah died on 16 Oct 912 after 26 years of inglorious rule leaving his fragmented and bankrupt kingdom to his grandson Abd ar Rahman The following day the new sultan received the oath of allegiance at a ceremony held in the Perfect salon al majils al kamil of the Alcazar Taagepera Rein September 1997 Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities Context for Russia International Studies Quarterly 41 3 495 doi 10 1111 0020 8833 00053 JSTOR 2600793 Retrieved 7 September 2018 a b Barton 2004 p 38 Chejne 1974 pp 43 49 Hughes Aaron W 2013 Muslim identities an introduction to Islam New York p 108 ISBN 9780231531924 OCLC 833763900 Barton 2004 p 37 Stanton Charles D 2015 06 30 Medieval maritime warfare Barnsley South Yorkshire p 111 ISBN 9781473856431 OCLC 905696269 a b c O Callaghan J F 1983 A History of Medieval Spain Ithaca Cornell University Press p 119 Reilly 1993 p 84 a b c Abun Nasr Jamil 1987 A history of the Maghrib in the Islamic period Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521337674 Chejne 1974 p 35 Chejne 1974 pp 37 38 a b c d Catlos Brain A 2014 Infidel Kings and Unholy Wars Faith Power and Violence in the Age of Crusades and Jihad New York Farrar Straus and Giroux p 30 Abi Zar Ibn al Qirtas Rawd 1964 Annotated Spanish translation A Huici Miranda Rawd el Qirtas 2nd edition Anubar Ediciones in Spanish Vol 1 Valencia ISBN 84 7013 007 2 Chejne 1974 pp 38 40 Catlos Brain A 2014 Infidel Kings and Unholy Wars Faith Power and Violence in the Age of Crusades and Jihad New York Farrar Straus and Giroux p 23 ISBN 9780374712051 Chejne 1974 pp 42 43 Reilly 1993 pp 87 89 Echevarria Arsuaga 2011 p 119 Valdes Fernandez 1999 p 37 a b c d e Kennedy 1996 p 117 a b c d Echevarria Arsuaga 2011 p 128 a b Valdes Fernandez 1999 p 15 a b Castellanos Gomez 2002 p 46 a b Bariani 2003 p 126 a b c Fletcher 2000 p 95 Dozy 2010 p 239 a b c Cruz Hernandez 1992 p 326 Colmeiro y Penido 1863 p 172 a b c d Colmeiro y Penido 1863 p 173 Valdes Fernandez 1999 p 14 Bariani 2003 p 131 a b c Castellanos Gomez 2002 p 45 a b Echevarria Arsuaga 2011 p 130 Bariani 2003 p 134 Echevarria Arsuaga 2011 p 129 Vara 2012 a b Russell amp Carr 1982 p 70 a b c Bariani 2003 p 140 a b Echevarria Arsuaga 2011 p 133 Kennedy 1996 p 119 a b c Echevarria Arsuaga 2011 p 134 Kennedy 1996 p 118 a b Riu Riu 1988 p 72 a b c d e f Fletcher 2000 p 77 Fletcher 1991 p 23 a b c Fletcher 1999 p 39 Weiner 2001 p 15 Bariani 2003 p 138 Vallve Bermejo 1992 p 125 Normalmente participaban en sus aceifas doce mil hombres de a caballo inscritos en la escalilla militar y a los que ademas de la acostumbrada soldada se les proporcionaban una caballeria con sus arreos armas alojamiento pagas y gratificaciones para diversos gastos y forraje para las caballerias segun su categoria Arie 1984 p 124 Arie 1984 p 137 Gonzalez Batista 2007 p 116 Castellanos Gomez 2002 p 93 De Bordeje Morencos 1992 p 111 a b De Bordeje Morencos 1992 p 113 a b Martinez Enamorado amp Torremocha Silva 2001 p 146 Vernet Gines 1979 p 403 a b Ballestin Navarro 2004 p 153 Crespi Gabriele 1982 L Europe Musulmane Les Formes de la nuit No 2 Saint Leger Vauban Zodiaque pp 55 En frances ISSN 0763 7608 Morales Romero 2004 p 195 Allen 2002 p 130 Tapia Garrido 1976 p 166 Martinez Enamorado amp Torremocha Silva 2001 p 93 Jimenez Losantos 1999 p 78 Levi Provencal 1957 p 62 Frers 2008 p 66 Ballestin Navarro 2004 p 152 Castellanos Gomez 2002 p 100 a b Echevarria Arsuaga 2011 p 135 Suarez Fernandez 1976 p 354 Levi Provencal 1957 p 431 Ballestin Navarro 2004 p 154 a b Fletcher 1999 p 40 a b c Mates Baco amp Agustin Gonzalez 2006 p 48 Riu Riu 1988 p 66 Fusi Azpurua 2012 p 50 Fusi Azpurua 2012 p 49 a b Marin Guzman 2006 p 109 Mitre Fernandez 1979 p 134 Barton 2004 pp 40 41 Slamecka Vladimir 9 August 2018 Information processing Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Retrieved 5 October 2022 The Bayt al Ḥikmah House of Wisdom founded in AD 830 in Baghdad contained a public library with a large collection of materials on a wide range of subjects and the 10th century library of Caliph al Ḥakam in Cordova Spain boasted more than 400 000 books a b c d M Bloom Jonathan S Blair Sheila eds 2009 Cordoba The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195309911 Barton 2004 p 42 a b c d e f g h i j Catlos Brian A 2018 Kingdoms of Faith A New History of Islamic Spain New York Basic Books ISBN 9780465055876 a b Sidik Roziah Sidek Mat Suryani Arshad Izziah Abu Bakar Kaseh 2013 The Role And Contribution Of Women In Andalusian Muslim Civilization PDF Australian Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences 7 4 323 327 a b Dodds Jerrilynn D ed 1992 Al Andalus The Art of Islamic Spain New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 0870996371 Cervatillo de Madinat al Zahra Obras Singulares Museo arqueologico y etnologico de Cordoba www museosdeandalucia es Retrieved 2021 11 16 Llorente Margarita Sanchez Fountain spout Discover Islamic Art Virtual Museum Discover Islamic Art Museum With No Frontiers Archived from the original on 2020 11 26 Retrieved 2021 11 16 Qantara Spout of a fountain in the form of a stag Qantara med Archived from the original on 2021 04 19 Retrieved 2021 11 16 Doha Hind www mia org qa Retrieved 2021 11 16 a b c d Dodds Jerrilynn D ed 1992 Al Andalus The Art of Islamic Spain New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 0870996371 a b Rosser Owen Mariam 2014 Andalusi Spolia in Medieval Morocco Architectural Politics Political Architecture Medieval Encounters 20 2 152 198 doi 10 1163 15700674 12342164 El Khatib Boujibar Naima Ablutions basin Discover Islamic Art Museum With No Frontiers Retrieved June 5 2020 a b c Barrucand Marianne Bednorz Achim 1992 Moorish architecture in Andalusia Taschen ISBN 3822876348 Ruggles D Fairchild 2008 Islamic Gardens and Landscapes Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press pp 152 153 ISBN 9780812207286 Vallejo Triano Antonio 2007 Madinat Al Zahra Transformation of a Caliphal City In Anderson Glaire D Rosser Owen Mariam eds Revisiting al Andalus perspectives on the material culture of Islamic Iberia and beyond Brill p 3 ISBN 978 90 04 16227 3 a b Marcais Georges 1954 L architecture musulmane d Occident Paris Arts et metiers graphiques Abun Nasr Jamil 1987 A history of the Maghrib in the Islamic period Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521337674 Le Tourneau Roger 1949 Fes avant le protectorat etude economique et sociale d une ville de l occident musulman Casablanca Societe Marocaine de Librairie et d Edition a b Karabell Zachary 2007 Peace Be Upon You The Story of Muslim Christian and Jewish Coexistence New York Albert A Knopf p 70 HEBERT RAYMOND J 1991 THE COINAGE OF ISLAMIC SPAIN Islamic Studies 30 1 2 113 128 ISSN 0578 8072 Bennison Amira K 2009 The great caliphs the golden age of the Abbasid Empire New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 15489 4 OCLC 593239917 O Connell Monique 2016 The Mediterranean world from the fall of Rome to the rise of Napoleon Eric Dursteler Baltimore ISBN 978 1 4214 1901 5 OCLC 921240187 This day Mary 15 in Jewish history Cleveland Jewish News Glick 2005 p 202 The rate of conversion is slow until the tenth century less than one quarter of the eventual total number of converts had been converted the explosive period coincides closely with the reign of Abd al Rahman III 912 961 the process is completed eighty percent converted by around 1100 The curve moreover makes possible a reasonable estimate of the religious distribution of the population Assuming that there were seven million Hispano Romans in the peninsula in 711 and that the numbers of this segment of the population remained level through the eleventh century with population growth balancing out Christian migration to the north then by 912 there would have been approximately 2 8 million indigenous Muslims muwalladun plus Arabs and Berbers At this point Christians still vastly outnumbered Muslims By 1100 however the number of indigenous Muslims would have risen to a majority of 5 6 million Glick 2005 pp 23 24 Tertius Chandler Four Thousand Years of Urban Growth An Historical Census Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press 1987 ISBN 0 88946 207 0 Figures in main tables are preferentially cited Part of Chandler s estimates are summarized or modified at The Institute for Research on World Systems Largest Cities Through History by Matt T Rosenberg or The Etext Archives Archived 2008 02 11 at the Wayback Machine Chandler defined a city as a continuously built up area urban with suburbs but without farmland inside the municipality Bibliography EditAllen William Edward David ʻAbd al Raḥman ʻAli Ḥajji amp Mariano Gonzalez Campo 2002 Al Ghazal y la embajada hispano musulmana a los vikingos en el siglo IX Madrid Miraguano ediciones p 238 ISBN 9788478132706 Arie Rachel 1984 Historia de Espana Espana Musulmana siglos VIII XV Tomo III Labor p 558 ISBN 9788433594235 Ballestin Navarro Xavier 2004 Al mansur y la Dawla amiriya Una dinamica de poder y legitimidad en el occidente musulman medieval Edicions Universitat Barcelona p 27 ISBN 9788447527724 Bariani Laura 2003 Almanzor Nerea p 298 ISBN 9788489569850 Barton Simon 2004 A History of Spain New York Palgrave MacMillan ISBN 0333632575 Castellanos Gomez Juan 2002 Geoestrategia en la Espana musulmana las campanas militares de Almanzor Ministerio de Defensa p 199 ISBN 9788478239672 Chejne Anwar G 1974 Muslim Spain Its History and Culture Minneapolis The University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0816606889 Colmeiro y Penido Manuel 1863 Historia de la economia politica en Espana Tomo I Madrid Imprenta de Cipriano Lopez p 508 Cruz Hernandez Miguel 1992 El islam de Al Andalus historia y estructura de su realidad social Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores Agencia Espyearla de Cooperacion Internacional Instituto de Cooperacion con el Mundo Arabe p 654 ISBN 9788472326354 De Bordeje Morencos Federico Fernando 1992 El Islam la Espana musulmana y la mar Revista de historia naval 39 97 114 ISSN 0212 467X Dozy Reinhart P 2010 Historia de los musulmanes de Espana Las guerras civiles Madrid Biblioteca Turner p 464 ISBN 978 84 7506 941 8 Echevarria Arsuaga Ana 2011 Almanzor un califa en la sombra Silex Ediciones p 272 ISBN 9788477374640 Fletcher Richard A 1991 The Quest for El Cid Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195069556 Fletcher Richard A 1999 El Cid Nerea Traducido por Javier Sanchez Garcia Gutierrez p 248 ISBN 9788489569294 Fletcher Richard 2000 La Espana mora Translated by Julio Rodriguez Puertolas Nerea p 213 ISBN 9788489569409 Frers Ernesto 2008 Mas alla del legado pirata Historia y leyenda de la pirateria La fabulosa aventura de los bandoleros del mar Barcelona Ediciones Robinbook ISBN 978 84 7927 963 9 Glick Thomas F 2005 1999 Islamic and Christian Spain in the Early Middle Ages The Netherlands Brill Gonzalez Batista Juan 2007 Espana estrategica guerra y diplomacia en la historia de Espana Madrid Silex ediciones p 501 ISBN 9788477371830 Jimenez Losantos Federico 1999 Los nuestros cien vidas en la historia de Espana Barcelona Planeta p 437 ISBN 978 84 08 03304 2 Kennedy Hugh 1996 Muslim Spain and Portugal a political history of al Andalus Longman p 342 ISBN 9780582495159 Levi Provencal Evariste 1957 Historia de Espana Espana musulmana hasta la caida del califato de Cordoba 711 1031 de J C Tomo IV Espasa Calpe Edicion de Ramon Menendez Pidal amp Leopoldo Torres Balbas Traduccion de Emilio Garcia Gomez p 523 ISBN 9788423948000 Fusi Azpurua Juan Pablo 2012 Historia minima de Espana Mexico Turner p 304 ISBN 9788415427650 Marin Guzman Roberto 2006 Sociedad politica y protesta popular en la Espana musulmana publisher Universidad de Costa Rica p 611 ISBN 9789968936965 Martinez Enamorado Virgilio Torremocha Silva Antonio 2001 Almanzor y su epoca al Andalus en la segunda mitad del siglo X Malaga publisher Sarria p 197 ISBN 978 84 95129 55 0 Mates Baco Juan Manuel Agustin Gonzalez Enciso 2006 Historia economica de Espana Barcelona publisher Ariel p 1020 ISBN 9788434445345 Mitre Fernandez Emilio 1979 La Espana medieval sociedades estados culturas Ediciones Akal p 392 ISBN 9788470900945 Morales Romero Eduardo 2004 Historia de los vikingos en Espana ataques e incursiones contra los reinos cristianos y musulmanes de la Peninsula Iberica en los siglos IX XI Madrid Miraguano Ediciones p 238 ISBN 978 84 7813 270 6 Reilly Bernard F 1993 The Medieval Spains Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521394368 Riu Riu Manuel 1988 Historia de Espana Edad Media 711 1500 Tomo II Madrid Espasa Calpe Edicion de Jose Maria Blazquez p 630 ISBN 978 84 239 5090 4 Russell Peter Edward Carr Raymond 1982 Introduccion a la cultura hispanica Historia arte musica Barcelona Publisher Critica p 361 ISBN 978 84 7423 186 1 Suarez Fernandez Luis 1976 Historia de Espana Antigua y Media Vol I Madrid Ediciones Rialp p 729 ISBN 978 84 321 1882 1 Tapia Garrido Jose Angel 1976 Almeria musulmana hasta la conquista de Almeria por Alfonso VII 711 1147 de J C Tomo II Almeria Monte de Piedad y Caja de Ahorros de Almeria p 512 Vara Carlos 2012 Las Navas de Tolosa Barcelona Buenos Aires Parkstone International ISBN 978 84 350 4582 7 Valdes Fernandez Fernando 1999 Almanzor y los terrores del milenio Santa Maria la Real p 160 ISBN 9788489483095 Vallve Bermejo Joaquin 1992 El Califato de Cordoba Madrid Mapfre Edicion de Elena Romero p 351 ISBN 978 8 47100 406 2 Vernet Gines Juan 1979 Estudios sobre la historia de la ciencia medieval Barcelona Universidad Autonoma de Barcelona p 508 Weiner Jack 2001 El Poema de mio Cid el patriarca Rodrigo Diaz de Vivar trasmite sus genes Kassel Reichenberger p 172 ISBN 978 3 935004 38 1 Further reading EditAmbrosio B Hernandez C Noveletto A Dugoujon J M Rodriguez J N Cuesta P Fortes Lima C Caderon R 2010 Searching the peopling of the Iberian Peninsula from the perspective of two Andalusian subpopulations a study based on Y chromosome haplogroups J and E Collegium Antropologicum 34 4 1215 1228 Fletcher Richard 2001 Moorish Spain Hardcover ed Orion ISBN 1 84212 605 9 Guichard P 1976 Al Andalus Estructura antropologica de una sociedad islamica en Occidente Barcelona Barral Editores ISBN 8421120166 Coordinates 37 53 N 4 46 W 37 883 N 4 767 W 37 883 4 767 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Caliphate of Cordoba amp oldid 1146556901, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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