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Spain in the Middle Ages

Spain in the Middle Ages is a period in the History of Spain that began in the 5th Century following the Fall of the Western Roman Empire and ended with the beginning of the Early modern period in 1492.

The history of Spain is marked by waves of conquerors who brought their distinct cultures to the peninsula. After the migration of the Vandals and Alans down the Mediterranean coast of Hispania from 408, the history of medieval Spain begins with the Iberian kingdom of the Arianist Visigoths (507–711), who were converted to Catholicism along with their king Reccared in 587. Visigothic culture in Spain can be seen as a phenomenon of Late Antiquity as much as part of the Age of Migrations.

From Northern Africa in 711, the Muslim Umayyad Caliphate crossed into Spain, at the invitation of a Visigothic clan to assist it in rising against King Roderic. Over the period 711–788, the Umayyads conquered most of the lands of the Visigothic kingdom of Hispania and established the territory known as Al-Andalus. A revolt during the conquest established the Christian Kingdom of Asturias in the north of Spain.

Much of the period is marked by conflict between the Muslim and Christian states of Spain, referred to as the Reconquista, or the Reconquest (i.e., The Christians "reconquering" their lands as a religious crusade). The border between Muslim and Christian lands wavered southward through 700 years of war, which marked the peninsula as a militarily contested space. The medieval centuries also witnessed episodes of warfare between Spain's Christian states and between the Muslim taifas, successor states of the Caliphate of Cordoba. Wars between the Crown of Aragon and the Crown of Castile were sparked by dynastic rivalries or disagreements over tracts of land conquered or to be conquered from the Muslim south.

The Middle Ages in Spain are often said to end in 1492 with the final acts of the Reconquista in the capitulation of the Nasrid Emirate of Granada and the Alhambra decree ordering the expulsion of the Jews. Early Modern Spain was first united as an institution in the reign of Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor as Charles I of Spain.

Early medieval Spain

When the Germanic tribes invaded the provinces of the Roman Empire, the hordes, urged forward by the pressure of the Huns in their rear, hurled themselves for the first time upon the Pyrenean Peninsula – the Alani, a people of Scythian, or Tatar, race; the Vandals and Suebians, Germanic races. The Alani were, for the most part, quickly brought into subjection. The Vandals, after establishing themselves in Baetica, to which they gave the name of Vandalusia (Andalusia), passed on into Africa, while the Visigoths hemmed in the Suebi in Galicia until the latter were completely brought under control. These Visigoths, or Western Goths, after sacking Rome under the leadership of Alaric (410), turned towards the Iberian Peninsula, with Athaulf for their leader, and occupied the northeastern portion. Wallia extended his rule over most of the peninsula, keeping the Suebians shut up in Galicia. Theodoric I took part, with the Romans and Franks, in the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains, where Attila was routed.[1]

Euric (466), who put an end to the last remnants of Roman power in the peninsula, may be considered the first monarch of Spain, though the Suebians still maintained their independence in Galicia. Euric was also the first king to give written laws to the Visigoths. In the following reigns the Catholic kings of France assumed the role of protectors of the Hispano-Roman Catholics against the Arianism of the Visigoths, and in the wars which ensued Alaric II and Amalaric lost their lives.[1]

 
Visigothic church of Santa Comba de Bande, Ourense. Galicia, Spain.

Athanagild, having risen against King Agila, called in the Byzantine Greeks and, in payment for the succour they gave him, ceded to them the maritime places of the southeast (554). Liuvigild restored the political unity of the peninsula, subduing the Suebians, but the religious divisions of the country, reaching even the royal family, brought on a civil war. St. Hermengild, the king's son, putting himself at the head of the Catholics, was defeated and taken prisoner, and suffered martyrdom for rejecting communion with the Arians. Reccared, son of Liuvigild and brother of St. Hermengild, added religious unity to the political unity achieved by his father, accepting the Catholic faith in the Third Council of Toledo (589).[1]

Sisebut and Suintila completed the expulsion of the Byzantines from Spain. Chindasuinth and Recceswinth laboured for legislative unity, and legalized marriages, hitherto prohibited, between Goths and Latins. In 711, North African Berber soldiers with some Arabs commanded by Tariq ibn Ziyad crossed the Strait of Gibraltar, engaging a Visigothic force led by King Roderic at the Battle of Guadalete in a moment of serious in-fighting and division across the Visigothic Kingdom.

Medieval Islamic Spain

For specific medieval Muslim dynasties and their rulers, see:

Medieval Christian Spain

For Medieval Northern (Christian) Spain see individual kingdoms and polities such as: Kingdom of Asturias, Kingdom of Galicia, Marca Hispanica, Kingdom of Aragon, Catalan counties, Principality of Catalonia, Kingdom of Pamplona/Navarre, Kingdom of León, Kingdom of Castile, Lordship of Biscay, Kingdom of Valencia, Kingdom of Majorca, Principality of Tarragona, Crown of Aragon or Crown of Castile.

The 3 Reconquest

The fugitive Goths found a retreat in those mountains where the Romans had never been able to effectively establish their authority; only a few years after the Battle of Guadalete, they gained a victory over Alqama in the Battle of Covadonga. Don Pelayo, or Pelagius, the Gothic chieftain who was victor at Covadonga, was acclaimed king, and took up his residence at Cangas de Onís. His son Favila was killed while hunting, torn to pieces by a bear, and was succeeded by Alfonso I, son-in-law of Don Pelayo, who expanded his kingdom as far as Galicia and Tierra de Campos (the "Gothic Fields" or Campos Góticos).[1]

Fruela I (727–728) founded Oviedo. He was assassinated, and was succeeded by several kings (Aurelius, Silo, Mauregato, and Bermudo I, the Deacon) and at last Alfonso II, the Chaste, who set up his court at Oviedo, recommenced the great expeditions against the Muslims, and seems to have invited Charlemagne to come to Asturias, thus occasioning the Frankish monarch's expedition which ended in the disaster of Roncevaux. The Vikings invaded Galicia in 844 but were expelled by Ramiro I from A Coruña; 70 Viking ships were captured and burned.[2] Vikings returned to Galicia in 859, during the reign of Ordoño I. They were faced with an army led by Don Pedro who dispersed them and destroyed 38 of their ships. Alfonso III, the Great, continued the forays as far as the Sierra Morena, and founded Burgos, the future capital of Castile. His sons rebelled against him, and he abdicated the crown, dividing his dominions among them. With him ended the Kingdom of Asturias, the territory of which soon became subject to León.[1]

Another rallying-point of the Reconquest was Aragón; the other two, Navarre and Catalonia, were placed by the circumstances of their origin in peculiar relations with France. The Basques on either side of the Western Pyrenees dissatisfied with Frankish rule, rebelled on several occasions. At Roncevaux they annihilated the forces of Charlemagne, and in 824 another victory secured the independence of the Basques of Pamplona. The names and dates of their kings, or chieftains, are very uncertain until we come to Sancho II, Abarca. He abdicated in favour of his son, García II, the Trembler, in whose time the Leónese and Navarrese together were routed at Valdejunquera.[1] Sancho III, the Great, was one of the monarchs who most influenced Spanish history; he was eventually King of Navarre, Castile, Aragón, and Sobrarbe. At his death (1035) he divided his kingdoms, giving Navarre to his eldest son García, Castile, with the title of King, to Fernando, Aragón to Ramiro, and Sobrarbe to Gonzálo.

Unification of Spain

Several difficulties stood in the way to the union of the various states formed in Spain by the Reconquest. Navarre and Catalonia were in particularly close contact with France, and the marriage of Ramón Berenguer the Great with Dulcia, heiress of Provence, made the relations between the peoples of the langue d'oc so close that the subsequent development of Catalonia was connected rather with that of the South of France. In Navarre, when the dynasty of Sancho the Elder became extinct, the Crown passed in succession to the houses of Blois (1234) of France, and of Évreux (1349–1441), with the result that Navarre, until the 15th century, lived in much closer relations with the French monarchy than with the Spanish states. On the other hand, the feudal system introduced in the western kingdoms by the House of Navarre brought about repeated partitions of states. Ferdinand I divided his kingdom into five parts, Castile, León, Galicia, Zamora, and Toro, though his son Sancho the Strong despoiled his brothers and restored the kingdom to unity. But Alfonso VII separated Castile and León, leaving the former to his son Sancho, and the latter to Ferdinand I.[1]

Another result of feudal customs being introduced by the Burgundian princes was the separation of Portugal. For Alfonso VI gave his daughters Urraca and Teresa in marriage to Raymond of Burgundy and Henry of Burgundy respectively who founded two dynasties: that of Portugal, and that of Castile and León, which began with Alfonso VII. The Kingdoms of Asturias, Galicia, León, and Castile were united under Ferdinand III, heir of León through his father Alfonso IX, and of Castile through his mother Berengaria. In the same way Catalonia and Aragón were united by the marriage of Ramón Berenguer with Doña Petronila, daughter of Ramiro the Monk, of Aragón.[1]

 
Aragonese Castle in Reggio Calabria, Italy

The kingdom formed by the union of Aragón and Catalonia was the first to complete the Reconquest in their regional area, they then directed their strength eastward. Peter II the Catholic, sovereign of Aragón and Catalonia, went to Rome to seek the annulment of his marriage with Maria of Montpellier and to have himself crowned by the pope. The former purpose he failed to accomplish; the latter occasioned him a great deal of trouble, as the Aragónese nobles refused to recognize the position of vassalage to the Holy See in which Peter had placed his kingdom. These nobles then forced for the first time the union, which was the cause of such serious disturbances until Peter IV with his dagger cut in pieces the document which recorded it. Peter II the Catholic, fell in the Battle of Muret (1213), defending his Albigensian kinsmen against Simon de Montfort, whom Innocent III had sent against them. His son, James I, the Conqueror, completed the Catalan-Aragónese Reconquest, winning Majorca (1228) and Valencia (1238) besides helping his son-in-law, Alfonso X, to complete the conquest of Murcia. His son and successor gave new direction to Catalan-Aragónese policy by enforcing the rights of his wife, Constance, to the kingdoms of Sicily and Naples. Profiting by the rising of the Sicilian Vespers against the Angevins (1282), he gained Sicily and attacked Naples.[1]

This conquest, however, placed the kings of Aragón in a position of antagonism with the popes, who defended the rights of the House of Anjou. Martin IV, having excommunicated Peter III, led the Aragónese nobles to take advantage in extending their privileges at the expense of royal power. The demands of the nobles increased in the reign of Alfonso III, who was forced to confirm to them the famous Privilegio de la Union. James II became reconciled with the Holy See, accepting Corsica and Sardinia in lieu of Sicily. Peter IV, the Ceremonious, defeated the nobles at Epila (1348) and used his dagger to cut in pieces the charter they had extorted from his predecessors. In the meantime, the Catalans and Aragónese who were left in Sicily offered themselves to Emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos to fight the Turks. Having conquered them, they turned their arms against the Greeks, who treacherously slew their leaders; but for this treachery the Spaniards, under Bernard of Rocafort and Berenguer of Entenca, exacted the terrible penalty which is celebrated in history as "The Catalan Vengeance" and moreover seized the Duchies of Athens and Neopatras (1313). The royal line of Aragón became extinct with Martin the Humane, and the Compromise of Caspe gave the Crown to the dynasty of Castile, thus preparing the final union. Alfonso V, the Magnanimous, once more turned Aragonese policy to the direction of Italy, where he possessed the Kingdom of Sicily and acquired that of Naples by having himself made adoptive son of Queen Joanna. With these events began the Italian wars which were not to end until the 18th century.[1]

 
The Spanish kingdoms in 1360

Meanwhile, the Reconquest languished in Castile; at first, because of the candidacy of Alfonso X for the crown of the Holy Roman Empire, in which candidacy he had secured a majority of the electoral princes. This was followed by a disputed succession to the throne, the rival claimants being the Cerda heirs (sons of Fernando, the eldest son of Alfonso X) and the second son of Sancho IV. Later, Ferdinand IV succeeded to the throne at the age of nine, being under the tutelage of his mother María de Molina. Alfonso XI was little more than one year old when his father died (1312); and though his reign was in many respects glorious, and he overcame the Marinids in the Battle of Río Salado (1340), still his relationship with Eleanor de Guzmán, by whom he had several children, resulted in the wars of the following reign, that of Pedro the Cruel, who was at last slain by his bastard brother, Henry of Trastámara, and succeeded on the throne as Henry II. John I, who married Beatrice of Portugal (1383), sought to unite the two kingdoms on the death of Ferdinand, the last King of Portugal of the Burgundian line. The Portuguese, however, defeated John of Castile at the Battle of Aljubarrota (1385), and the Portuguese Crown went to the Master of Aviz, who became John I of Portugal. Henry III, who married Catherine of Lancaster, was the first to take the title of Prince of Asturias as heir to the Crown, which he inherited during his minority, as did his son, John II.[1]

Culture

In the post-Roman period before 711, the history of the Spanish language began with Old Spanish; the other Latin-derived Hispanic languages with a considerable body of literature are Catalan (which had a relevant golden age of Valencian), and to a lesser degree Aragonese. Asturian Medieval Spanish, Galician and Basque were primarily oral.

Alfonso X commissioned a translation of an Arabic work on chess, dice and tables games called the Libro de los Juegos in 1283.[3][4] The work contains information on the playing of chess, with over 100 chess problems and chess variants.[5] The king also co-authored several works of music such as the Cantigas d'escarnio e maldicer and the Cantigas de Santa Maria in Galician-Portuguese. The former contains more than 400 poems alongside musical notation, and currently forms one of the largest collections of songs to have survived from the Middle Ages.[6]

Main cities

Medieval Spain was as much as a network of cities as it was interconnected provinces. Cities were cultural and administrative centers, the seats of bishops and sometimes kings, with markets and housing expanding from a central fortified stronghold. Medieval Spanish history can easily be followed through these major cities:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Spain" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. ^ Haywood, John (8 October 2015). Northmen. ISBN 9781781855225.
  3. ^ Burns (1990)
  4. ^ Musser Golladay (2007:31). Although Musser Golladay is not the first to assert that 1283 is the finish date of the Libro de Juegos, the a quo information compiled in her dissertation consolidates the range of research concerning the initiation and completion dates of the Libro de Juegos.
  5. ^ Wollesen, Jens T. "Sub specie ludi...: Text and Images in Alfonso El Sabio's Libro de Acedrex, Dados e Tablas", Zeitschrift für Kunstgeschichte 53:3, 1990. pp. 277–308.
  6. ^ Keller, John E. (2015). Daily life depicted in the Cantigas de Santa Maria. Cash, Annette Grant, 1943–. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky. p. 31. ISBN 9780813159096. OCLC 900344519.

Further reading

  • The Art of medieval Spain, A.D. 500-1200. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 1993. ISBN 0870996851.
  • Linehan, Peter (1993). History and the Historians of Medieval Spain. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780198219453.
  • O'Callaghan, Joseph F. (1975). A History of Medieval Spain. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 9780801492648.
  • Kennedy, Hugh (1996). Muslim Spain and Portugal: A Political History of al-Andalus. London: Longman. ISBN 0582495156.
  • Hillgarth, Jocelyn N. (1976–1978). The Spanish Kingdoms, 1250-1516 (2 vols.). Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0198225318.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)

spain, middle, ages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Spain in the Middle Ages news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions July 2022 Spain in the Middle Ages is a period in the History of Spain that began in the 5th Century following the Fall of the Western Roman Empire and ended with the beginning of the Early modern period in 1492 The history of Spain is marked by waves of conquerors who brought their distinct cultures to the peninsula After the migration of the Vandals and Alans down the Mediterranean coast of Hispania from 408 the history of medieval Spain begins with the Iberian kingdom of the Arianist Visigoths 507 711 who were converted to Catholicism along with their king Reccared in 587 Visigothic culture in Spain can be seen as a phenomenon of Late Antiquity as much as part of the Age of Migrations From Northern Africa in 711 the Muslim Umayyad Caliphate crossed into Spain at the invitation of a Visigothic clan to assist it in rising against King Roderic Over the period 711 788 the Umayyads conquered most of the lands of the Visigothic kingdom of Hispania and established the territory known as Al Andalus A revolt during the conquest established the Christian Kingdom of Asturias in the north of Spain Much of the period is marked by conflict between the Muslim and Christian states of Spain referred to as the Reconquista or the Reconquest i e The Christians reconquering their lands as a religious crusade The border between Muslim and Christian lands wavered southward through 700 years of war which marked the peninsula as a militarily contested space The medieval centuries also witnessed episodes of warfare between Spain s Christian states and between the Muslim taifas successor states of the Caliphate of Cordoba Wars between the Crown of Aragon and the Crown of Castile were sparked by dynastic rivalries or disagreements over tracts of land conquered or to be conquered from the Muslim south The Middle Ages in Spain are often said to end in 1492 with the final acts of the Reconquista in the capitulation of the Nasrid Emirate of Granada and the Alhambra decree ordering the expulsion of the Jews Early Modern Spain was first united as an institution in the reign of Charles V Holy Roman Emperor as Charles I of Spain Contents 1 Early medieval Spain 2 Medieval Islamic Spain 3 Medieval Christian Spain 3 1 The 3 Reconquest 3 2 Unification of Spain 4 Culture 5 Main cities 6 See also 7 References 8 Further readingEarly medieval Spain EditSee also History of Spain Gothic Hispania 5th 8th centuries Further information Visigothic Kingdom Suebic Kingdom of Galicia and Spania When the Germanic tribes invaded the provinces of the Roman Empire the hordes urged forward by the pressure of the Huns in their rear hurled themselves for the first time upon the Pyrenean Peninsula the Alani a people of Scythian or Tatar race the Vandals and Suebians Germanic races The Alani were for the most part quickly brought into subjection The Vandals after establishing themselves in Baetica to which they gave the name of Vandalusia Andalusia passed on into Africa while the Visigoths hemmed in the Suebi in Galicia until the latter were completely brought under control These Visigoths or Western Goths after sacking Rome under the leadership of Alaric 410 turned towards the Iberian Peninsula with Athaulf for their leader and occupied the northeastern portion Wallia extended his rule over most of the peninsula keeping the Suebians shut up in Galicia Theodoric I took part with the Romans and Franks in the Battle of the Catalaunian Plains where Attila was routed 1 Euric 466 who put an end to the last remnants of Roman power in the peninsula may be considered the first monarch of Spain though the Suebians still maintained their independence in Galicia Euric was also the first king to give written laws to the Visigoths In the following reigns the Catholic kings of France assumed the role of protectors of the Hispano Roman Catholics against the Arianism of the Visigoths and in the wars which ensued Alaric II and Amalaric lost their lives 1 Visigothic church of Santa Comba de Bande Ourense Galicia Spain Athanagild having risen against King Agila called in the Byzantine Greeks and in payment for the succour they gave him ceded to them the maritime places of the southeast 554 Liuvigild restored the political unity of the peninsula subduing the Suebians but the religious divisions of the country reaching even the royal family brought on a civil war St Hermengild the king s son putting himself at the head of the Catholics was defeated and taken prisoner and suffered martyrdom for rejecting communion with the Arians Reccared son of Liuvigild and brother of St Hermengild added religious unity to the political unity achieved by his father accepting the Catholic faith in the Third Council of Toledo 589 1 Sisebut and Suintila completed the expulsion of the Byzantines from Spain Chindasuinth and Recceswinth laboured for legislative unity and legalized marriages hitherto prohibited between Goths and Latins In 711 North African Berber soldiers with some Arabs commanded by Tariq ibn Ziyad crossed the Strait of Gibraltar engaging a Visigothic force led by King Roderic at the Battle of Guadalete in a moment of serious in fighting and division across the Visigothic Kingdom Medieval Islamic Spain EditMain article Al Andalus For specific medieval Muslim dynasties and their rulers see Umayyad Dynasty in Spain Umayyad Emirate of Cordoba 756 912 929 Abd ar Rahman I 756 88 Hisham I 788 96 al Hakam I 796 822 Abd ar Rahman II 822 52 Muhammad I 852 86 al Mundhir 886 88 Abdallah ibn Muhammad 888 912 Abd ar Rahman III 912 29 Umayyad Caliphate of Cordoba 929 1031 Abd ar Rahman III as caliph 929 61 Al Hakam II 961 76 Hisham II 976 1008 Muhammad II 1008 09 Suleiman 1009 10 Hisham II restored 1010 12 Suleiman restored 1012 17 Abd ar Rahman IV 1021 22 Abd ar Rahman V 1022 23 Muhammad III 1023 24 Hisham III 1027 31 Taifa statesMedieval Christian Spain EditSee also Reconquista Northern Christian realmsFor Medieval Northern Christian Spain see individual kingdoms and polities such as Kingdom of Asturias Kingdom of Galicia Marca Hispanica Kingdom of Aragon Catalan counties Principality of Catalonia Kingdom of Pamplona Navarre Kingdom of Leon Kingdom of Castile Lordship of Biscay Kingdom of Valencia Kingdom of Majorca Principality of Tarragona Crown of Aragon or Crown of Castile The 3 Reconquest Edit Main article Reconquista The fugitive Goths found a retreat in those mountains where the Romans had never been able to effectively establish their authority only a few years after the Battle of Guadalete they gained a victory over Alqama in the Battle of Covadonga Don Pelayo or Pelagius the Gothic chieftain who was victor at Covadonga was acclaimed king and took up his residence at Cangas de Onis His son Favila was killed while hunting torn to pieces by a bear and was succeeded by Alfonso I son in law of Don Pelayo who expanded his kingdom as far as Galicia and Tierra de Campos the Gothic Fields or Campos Goticos 1 Fruela I 727 728 founded Oviedo He was assassinated and was succeeded by several kings Aurelius Silo Mauregato and Bermudo I the Deacon and at last Alfonso II the Chaste who set up his court at Oviedo recommenced the great expeditions against the Muslims and seems to have invited Charlemagne to come to Asturias thus occasioning the Frankish monarch s expedition which ended in the disaster of Roncevaux The Vikings invaded Galicia in 844 but were expelled by Ramiro I from A Coruna 70 Viking ships were captured and burned 2 Vikings returned to Galicia in 859 during the reign of Ordono I They were faced with an army led by Don Pedro who dispersed them and destroyed 38 of their ships Alfonso III the Great continued the forays as far as the Sierra Morena and founded Burgos the future capital of Castile His sons rebelled against him and he abdicated the crown dividing his dominions among them With him ended the Kingdom of Asturias the territory of which soon became subject to Leon 1 Another rallying point of the Reconquest was Aragon the other two Navarre and Catalonia were placed by the circumstances of their origin in peculiar relations with France The Basques on either side of the Western Pyrenees dissatisfied with Frankish rule rebelled on several occasions At Roncevaux they annihilated the forces of Charlemagne and in 824 another victory secured the independence of the Basques of Pamplona The names and dates of their kings or chieftains are very uncertain until we come to Sancho II Abarca He abdicated in favour of his son Garcia II the Trembler in whose time the Leonese and Navarrese together were routed at Valdejunquera 1 Sancho III the Great was one of the monarchs who most influenced Spanish history he was eventually King of Navarre Castile Aragon and Sobrarbe At his death 1035 he divided his kingdoms giving Navarre to his eldest son Garcia Castile with the title of King to Fernando Aragon to Ramiro and Sobrarbe to Gonzalo Unification of Spain Edit Several difficulties stood in the way to the union of the various states formed in Spain by the Reconquest Navarre and Catalonia were in particularly close contact with France and the marriage of Ramon Berenguer the Great with Dulcia heiress of Provence made the relations between the peoples of the langue d oc so close that the subsequent development of Catalonia was connected rather with that of the South of France In Navarre when the dynasty of Sancho the Elder became extinct the Crown passed in succession to the houses of Blois 1234 of France and of Evreux 1349 1441 with the result that Navarre until the 15th century lived in much closer relations with the French monarchy than with the Spanish states On the other hand the feudal system introduced in the western kingdoms by the House of Navarre brought about repeated partitions of states Ferdinand I divided his kingdom into five parts Castile Leon Galicia Zamora and Toro though his son Sancho the Strong despoiled his brothers and restored the kingdom to unity But Alfonso VII separated Castile and Leon leaving the former to his son Sancho and the latter to Ferdinand I 1 Another result of feudal customs being introduced by the Burgundian princes was the separation of Portugal For Alfonso VI gave his daughters Urraca and Teresa in marriage to Raymond of Burgundy and Henry of Burgundy respectively who founded two dynasties that of Portugal and that of Castile and Leon which began with Alfonso VII The Kingdoms of Asturias Galicia Leon and Castile were united under Ferdinand III heir of Leon through his father Alfonso IX and of Castile through his mother Berengaria In the same way Catalonia and Aragon were united by the marriage of Ramon Berenguer with Dona Petronila daughter of Ramiro the Monk of Aragon 1 Aragonese Castle in Reggio Calabria ItalyThe kingdom formed by the union of Aragon and Catalonia was the first to complete the Reconquest in their regional area they then directed their strength eastward Peter II the Catholic sovereign of Aragon and Catalonia went to Rome to seek the annulment of his marriage with Maria of Montpellier and to have himself crowned by the pope The former purpose he failed to accomplish the latter occasioned him a great deal of trouble as the Aragonese nobles refused to recognize the position of vassalage to the Holy See in which Peter had placed his kingdom These nobles then forced for the first time the union which was the cause of such serious disturbances until Peter IV with his dagger cut in pieces the document which recorded it Peter II the Catholic fell in the Battle of Muret 1213 defending his Albigensian kinsmen against Simon de Montfort whom Innocent III had sent against them His son James I the Conqueror completed the Catalan Aragonese Reconquest winning Majorca 1228 and Valencia 1238 besides helping his son in law Alfonso X to complete the conquest of Murcia His son and successor gave new direction to Catalan Aragonese policy by enforcing the rights of his wife Constance to the kingdoms of Sicily and Naples Profiting by the rising of the Sicilian Vespers against the Angevins 1282 he gained Sicily and attacked Naples 1 This conquest however placed the kings of Aragon in a position of antagonism with the popes who defended the rights of the House of Anjou Martin IV having excommunicated Peter III led the Aragonese nobles to take advantage in extending their privileges at the expense of royal power The demands of the nobles increased in the reign of Alfonso III who was forced to confirm to them the famous Privilegio de la Union James II became reconciled with the Holy See accepting Corsica and Sardinia in lieu of Sicily Peter IV the Ceremonious defeated the nobles at Epila 1348 and used his dagger to cut in pieces the charter they had extorted from his predecessors In the meantime the Catalans and Aragonese who were left in Sicily offered themselves to Emperor Andronikos II Palaiologos to fight the Turks Having conquered them they turned their arms against the Greeks who treacherously slew their leaders but for this treachery the Spaniards under Bernard of Rocafort and Berenguer of Entenca exacted the terrible penalty which is celebrated in history as The Catalan Vengeance and moreover seized the Duchies of Athens and Neopatras 1313 The royal line of Aragon became extinct with Martin the Humane and the Compromise of Caspe gave the Crown to the dynasty of Castile thus preparing the final union Alfonso V the Magnanimous once more turned Aragonese policy to the direction of Italy where he possessed the Kingdom of Sicily and acquired that of Naples by having himself made adoptive son of Queen Joanna With these events began the Italian wars which were not to end until the 18th century 1 The Spanish kingdoms in 1360 Meanwhile the Reconquest languished in Castile at first because of the candidacy of Alfonso X for the crown of the Holy Roman Empire in which candidacy he had secured a majority of the electoral princes This was followed by a disputed succession to the throne the rival claimants being the Cerda heirs sons of Fernando the eldest son of Alfonso X and the second son of Sancho IV Later Ferdinand IV succeeded to the throne at the age of nine being under the tutelage of his mother Maria de Molina Alfonso XI was little more than one year old when his father died 1312 and though his reign was in many respects glorious and he overcame the Marinids in the Battle of Rio Salado 1340 still his relationship with Eleanor de Guzman by whom he had several children resulted in the wars of the following reign that of Pedro the Cruel who was at last slain by his bastard brother Henry of Trastamara and succeeded on the throne as Henry II John I who married Beatrice of Portugal 1383 sought to unite the two kingdoms on the death of Ferdinand the last King of Portugal of the Burgundian line The Portuguese however defeated John of Castile at the Battle of Aljubarrota 1385 and the Portuguese Crown went to the Master of Aviz who became John I of Portugal Henry III who married Catherine of Lancaster was the first to take the title of Prince of Asturias as heir to the Crown which he inherited during his minority as did his son John II 1 Culture EditIn the post Roman period before 711 the history of the Spanish language began with Old Spanish the other Latin derived Hispanic languages with a considerable body of literature are Catalan which had a relevant golden age of Valencian and to a lesser degree Aragonese Asturian Medieval Spanish Galician and Basque were primarily oral Alfonso X commissioned a translation of an Arabic work on chess dice and tables games called the Libro de los Juegos in 1283 3 4 The work contains information on the playing of chess with over 100 chess problems and chess variants 5 The king also co authored several works of music such as the Cantigas d escarnio e maldicer and the Cantigas de Santa Maria in Galician Portuguese The former contains more than 400 poems alongside musical notation and currently forms one of the largest collections of songs to have survived from the Middle Ages 6 Main cities EditMedieval Spain was as much as a network of cities as it was interconnected provinces Cities were cultural and administrative centers the seats of bishops and sometimes kings with markets and housing expanding from a central fortified stronghold Medieval Spanish history can easily be followed through these major cities Barcelona Bilbao Burgos Cordoba Granada Leon Malaga Murcia Oviedo Salamanca Santander Santiago de Compostela Seville Toledo Valencia Valladolid ZaragozaSee also EditSpanish chivalry Medieval Spanish literature Wikimedia Commons has media related to Medieval Iberia References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Spain Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Haywood John 8 October 2015 Northmen ISBN 9781781855225 Burns 1990 harvcoltxt error no target CITEREFBurns1990 help Musser Golladay 2007 31 harvcoltxt error no target CITEREFMusser Golladay2007 help Although Musser Golladay is not the first to assert that 1283 is the finish date of the Libro de Juegos the a quo information compiled in her dissertation consolidates the range of research concerning the initiation and completion dates of the Libro de Juegos Wollesen Jens T Sub specie ludi Text and Images in Alfonso El Sabio s Libro de Acedrex Dados e Tablas Zeitschrift fur Kunstgeschichte 53 3 1990 pp 277 308 Keller John E 2015 Daily life depicted in the Cantigas de Santa Maria Cash Annette Grant 1943 Lexington University Press of Kentucky p 31 ISBN 9780813159096 OCLC 900344519 Further reading EditThe Art of medieval Spain A D 500 1200 New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art 1993 ISBN 0870996851 Linehan Peter 1993 History and the Historians of Medieval Spain Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198219453 O Callaghan Joseph F 1975 A History of Medieval Spain Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801492648 Kennedy Hugh 1996 Muslim Spain and Portugal A Political History of al Andalus London Longman ISBN 0582495156 Hillgarth Jocelyn N 1976 1978 The Spanish Kingdoms 1250 1516 2 vols Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 0198225318 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date format link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spain in the Middle Ages amp oldid 1143761029, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.