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Rebellion of the Alpujarras (1499–1501)

The First Rebellion of the Alpujarras (Arabic: ثورة البشرات الأولى; 1499–1501) were a series of uprisings by the Muslim population of the Kingdom of Granada, Crown of Castile (formerly, the Emirate of Granada) against their Catholic rulers. They began in 1499 in the city of Granada in response to mass forced conversions of the Muslim population to the Catholic faith, which were perceived as violations of the 1491 Treaty of Granada. The uprising in the city quickly died down, but it was followed by more serious revolts in the nearby mountainous area of the Alpujarras. The Catholic forces, on some occasions led personally by King Ferdinand, succeeded in suppressing the revolts and inflicted severe punishment on the Muslim population.

Rebellion of the Alpujarras (1499–1501)

The Kingdom of Granada in Castile
DateDecember 1499 – April 1501; 1 year and 4 months
Location
Result

Rebellion defeated

Belligerents
Castile-Aragon Union Muslims of Granada
Commanders and leaders

Ferdinand II of Aragon
Isabella I of Castile
Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros
Marquis de Tendilla

Alonso de Aguilar 
Unknown
Strength
80,000[1] Unknown

The Catholic rulers used these revolts as a justification to repudiate the Treaty of Granada and abrogate the rights of the Muslims guaranteed by the treaty. All Muslims of Granada were subsequently required to convert to Catholicism or be expelled, and in 1502 these forced conversions applied to all of Castile. However, they did not apply in the kingdoms of Valencia or Aragon.

Background edit

 
Forced conversions under Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros were considered violations of the Treaty of Granada and were the main trigger of the rebellion.[2][3][4]

Muslims had been present in the Iberian peninsula since the Umayyad conquest of Hispania in the 8th century. By the end of the 15th century, the Emirate of Granada was the last Muslim-ruled area in the peninsula. In January 1492, after a decade-long campaign, Muhammad XII of Granada (also known as "Boabdil") surrendered the Emirate to the Catholic forces led by the Catholic monarchs Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile. The Treaty of Granada, signed on November 1491, guaranteed a set of rights to the Muslims of Granada, including religious tolerance and fair treatment, in return for the capitulation.[citation needed]

At this point, the Muslim population in the former Emirate of Granada was estimated to be between 250,000 and 300,000, making up the majority in the former emirate, and constituting roughly half of the entire Muslim population in Spain.[5]

Initially, the Catholic rulers upheld the treaty. Despite pressure from the Spanish clergy, Ferdinand and the Archbishop of Granada Hernando de Talavera chose a laissez-faire policy towards the Muslims in the hope that interaction with Catholics would make them "understand the error" of their faith and abandon it. When Ferdinand and Isabella visited the city in the summer of 1499, they were greeted by enthusiastic crowds, including Muslims.[6]

In the summer of 1499, Francisco Jiménez de Cisneros, the archbishop of Toledo, arrived in Granada and began working alongside Talavera. Cisneros disliked Talavera's approach and began sending uncooperative Muslims, especially the noblemen, to prison, where they were treated harshly until they agreed to convert. Emboldened by the increase in conversions, Cisneros intensified the efforts and in December 1499 he told Pope Alexander VI that three thousand Muslims converted in a single day. Cisneros' own church council warned that these methods might be a breach of the Treaty, and sixteenth-century hagiographer Álvar Gómez de Castro described the approach as "methods that were not correct".[7]

Uprising in the Albayzín edit

The increasing forced conversions of Muslims triggered resistance, initially among the urban population of the Albayzín (also spelled Albaicín), the Muslim quarter of Granada.[8] The situation was exacerbated by the treatment of elches, former Christians who converted to Islam. Specific clauses in the Treaty of Granada forbade the conversion of the elches back to Christianity against their will, but the treaty allowed for questionings of such converts by Christian clerics, in the presence of Muslim religious authorities. Cisneros used this 'loophole' to summon elches and imprison those who refused to return to Christianity. These efforts were often focused on wives of Muslim men – an emphasis that angered the Muslim population who considered this a violation of their families.[8]

 
A 2010 panorama of the Albayzín, where the initial uprising took place

On 18 December 1499, as part of this effort, constable Velasco de Barrionuevo and an assistant were taking a female elche from the Albayzín for such questioning. When they passed through a square, she shouted that she was being forced to become Christian. The officials were then surrounded by a hostile crowd, the constable was killed and the assistant managed to escape after being sheltered by a local Muslim woman.[4]

This incident escalated into an open revolt. The residents of the Albayzín barricaded the streets and armed themselves. An angry crowd marched to Cisneros' house, apparently for an assault. This crowd later dispersed, but over the following days the revolt become more organized. The population of the Albayzín elected their own officials and leaders. In the standoff that ensued, the archbishop Hernando de Talavera and the Captain-General Marquis de Tendilla attempted to defuse the situation through negotiations and gestures of good-will. After ten days, the uprising ended as the Muslims handed in their weapons and handed over the constable's killers, who were promptly executed.[9]

Subsequently, Cisneros was summoned to the court in Seville to account for his actions, facing a furious Ferdinand. Cisneros however argued that it was the Muslims, not him, who breached the Treaty by engaging in armed rebellion. He convinced Ferdinand and Isabella to declare a collective pardon to the rebels, on condition that they convert to Christianity. Cisneros returned to Granada, which now nominally became a fully Christian city.[10]

Uprising in the Alpujarra edit

 
Capileira, an Alpujarran village, in 2000, which retains many features from the time of Muslim inhabitants. The uprisings took place in such villages.

Although the uprising in the Albayzín appeared to be put down and Granada was nominally transformed to a Christian city, the rebellion spread to the countryside. The leaders of the Albayzín uprising fled to the Alpujarra mountains.[1] The inhabitants of the mountains, almost exclusively Muslims, had only accepted Christian rule reluctantly.[1] They quickly rose up in revolts against what they regarded as the violation of the terms of the Treaty of Granada, and because they feared they would suffer the same forced conversions as the residents of the Albayzín.[11] By February 1500, 80,000 Christian troops were mobilized to put down the rebellion.[1] By March, King Ferdinand arrived to personally direct the operations.[12]

The rebels were often tactically well led and made use of the mountainous terrain to conduct guerrilla warfare. However, they lacked a central leadership and coherent strategy.[11] This was partly caused by the previous Castilian policy of encouraging and facilitating the Granadan upper class to leave the country or convert and be absorbed into the Christian upper class.[11] The rebels' lack of strategic command allowed the Christian forces to proceed by defeating the rebels in one area separately, then moving on to the next.[11]

The rebelling towns and villages in the Alpujarra were gradually defeated. Ferdinand personally led the assault on Lanjarón.[13] Rebels who surrendered were generally required to be baptized in order to keep their lives.[1] Towns and villages which had to be taken by assault were treated harshly. One of the most violent episodes occurred in Laujar de Andarax, where the Catholic forces under Louis de Beaumont took 3,000 Muslims prisoner and then slaughtered them.[12] Between two and six hundred women and children who took refuge in a local mosque were blown up with gunpowder.[14][1][12] During the capture of Velefique, all the men were killed and the women enslaved.[14] At Nijar and Güéjar Sierra, the whole population was enslaved except children who were kidnapped in order to be brought up as Christians.[15][16]

On 14 January 1501, Ferdinand ordered his army to stand down because the uprising seemed to be suppressed.[16] However, further unrest occurred in Sierra Bermeja.[16] An army under Alonso de Aguilar, one of the most distinguished captains of Spain, marched to put down this rebellion.[16] On 16 March, the army's undisciplined troops, eager for pillage, charged the rebels.[17] However, this was met by a fierce counterattack. The result was a catastrophe for the Catholic army; Aguilar himself was killed in battle and the army was nearly annihilated.[18][17]

However, the Muslims soon sued for peace, and Ferdinand, aware of the weakness of the army and the difficulty of mountain warfare, declared that the rebels must choose between exile or baptism.[19] Only those who could pay ten gold doblas were given passage, and the majority who could not pay had to stay and be baptized.[19] The insurgents surrendered in waves, beginning from the middle of April, since some waited to see whether the first insurgents who surrendered were safe.[19] The emigrants were escorted under guards to the port of Estepona and given passage to North Africa.[19] The remaining were allowed to return home after converting, surrendering their arms, and forfeiting their property.[20][19]

Aftermath edit

 
A depiction of a Morisco family, by Christoph Weiditz, 1529

By the end of 1501, the rebellion was put down. The Muslims were no longer given their rights provided by the Treaty of Granada,[21] and were given the choice of: (1) remain and accept baptism, (2) reject baptism and be enslaved or killed, or (3) be exiled.[22] Given the expensive fee exacted for passage out of Spain, conversion was the only realistic option for them.[22][23] Therefore, only a decade after the fall of the Emirate of Granada, the entire Muslim population of Granada had nominally become Christian.[23]

A proclamation in 1502 extended these forced conversions to the rest of the lands of Castile, even though those outside Granada had nothing to do with the rebellion.[24][25] The newly converted Muslims were known as nuevos cristianos ("new Christians") or moriscos (lit. "Moorish"). Although they converted to Christianity, they maintained their existing customs, including their language, distinct names, food, dress and even some ceremonies.[26] Many secretly practiced Islam, even as they publicly professed and practiced Christianity.[27] In return, the Catholic rulers adopted increasingly intolerant and harsh policies in order to eradicate these characteristics.[23] This culminated in Philip II's Pragmatica of 1 January 1567 which ordered the Moriscos to abandon their customs, clothing and language. The pragmatica triggered the Morisco revolts in 1568–1571.[28]

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Carr 2009, p. 63.
  2. ^ Coleman 2003, p. 6.
  3. ^ Lea 1901, p. 33.
  4. ^ a b Carr 2009, p. 59.
  5. ^ Carr 2009, p. 40.
  6. ^ Carr 2009, pp. 51–57.
  7. ^ Carr 2009, pp. 57–58.
  8. ^ a b Carr 2009, pp. 58–59.
  9. ^ Carr 2009, pp. 59–60.
  10. ^ Carr 2009, pp. 60–61.
  11. ^ a b c d Harvey 2005, p. 35.
  12. ^ a b c Harvey 2005, p. 36.
  13. ^ Carr 2009, pp. 63–64.
  14. ^ a b Lea 1901, p. 38.
  15. ^ Carvajal 2015, pp. iv–xxvii.
  16. ^ a b c d Lea 1901, p. 39.
  17. ^ a b Lea 1901, pp. 39–40.
  18. ^ Carr 2009, pp. 64–65.
  19. ^ a b c d e Lea 1901, p. 40.
  20. ^ Carr 2009, p. 65.
  21. ^ Lea 1901, p. 35.
  22. ^ a b Harvey 2005, p. 48.
  23. ^ a b c Carr 2009, p. 74.
  24. ^ Edwards 2014, p. 99.
  25. ^ Harvey 2005, pp. 56–57.
  26. ^ Harvey 2005, pp. 53–55.
  27. ^ Harvey 2005, p. 49.
  28. ^ Lea 1901, p. 227.

Sources edit

  • Carr, Matthew (2009). Blood and Faith: The Purging of Muslim Spain. New Press. ISBN 978-1-59558-361-1.
  • Carvajal, Luis del Mármol (2015). Historia del Rebelión y Castigo de los Moriscos de Reino de Granada (in Spanish). Universidad de Granada. ISBN 978-8433857675. OCLC 922957928.
  • Coleman, David (2003). Creating Christian Granada: Society and Religious Culture in an Old-World Frontier City, 1492–1600. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-4111-0.
  • Edwards, John (2014). Ferdinand and Isabella. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-89345-5.
  • Harvey, L .P. (2005). Muslims in Spain, 1500 to 1614. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-31963-6.
  • Lea, Henry Charles (1901). The Moriscos of Spain: Their Conversion and Expulsion. Lea Brothers & Company.

rebellion, alpujarras, 1499, 1501, first, rebellion, alpujarras, arabic, ثورة, البشرات, الأولى, 1499, 1501, were, series, uprisings, muslim, population, kingdom, granada, crown, castile, formerly, emirate, granada, against, their, catholic, rulers, they, began. The First Rebellion of the Alpujarras Arabic ثورة البشرات الأولى 1499 1501 were a series of uprisings by the Muslim population of the Kingdom of Granada Crown of Castile formerly the Emirate of Granada against their Catholic rulers They began in 1499 in the city of Granada in response to mass forced conversions of the Muslim population to the Catholic faith which were perceived as violations of the 1491 Treaty of Granada The uprising in the city quickly died down but it was followed by more serious revolts in the nearby mountainous area of the Alpujarras The Catholic forces on some occasions led personally by King Ferdinand succeeded in suppressing the revolts and inflicted severe punishment on the Muslim population Rebellion of the Alpujarras 1499 1501 The Kingdom of Granada in CastileDateDecember 1499 April 1501 1 year and 4 monthsLocationThe city of Granada and the Alpujarra Kingdom of Granada Crown of CastileResultRebellion defeated Mass forced conversions of all Muslims in Granada BelligerentsCastile Aragon UnionMuslims of GranadaCommanders and leadersFerdinand II of Aragon Isabella I of Castile Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros Marquis de Tendilla Alonso de Aguilar UnknownStrength80 000 1 Unknown The Catholic rulers used these revolts as a justification to repudiate the Treaty of Granada and abrogate the rights of the Muslims guaranteed by the treaty All Muslims of Granada were subsequently required to convert to Catholicism or be expelled and in 1502 these forced conversions applied to all of Castile However they did not apply in the kingdoms of Valencia or Aragon Contents 1 Background 2 Uprising in the Albayzin 3 Uprising in the Alpujarra 4 Aftermath 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 SourcesBackground editFurther information Granada War and Treaty of Granada nbsp Forced conversions under Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros were considered violations of the Treaty of Granada and were the main trigger of the rebellion 2 3 4 Muslims had been present in the Iberian peninsula since the Umayyad conquest of Hispania in the 8th century By the end of the 15th century the Emirate of Granada was the last Muslim ruled area in the peninsula In January 1492 after a decade long campaign Muhammad XII of Granada also known as Boabdil surrendered the Emirate to the Catholic forces led by the Catholic monarchs Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile The Treaty of Granada signed on November 1491 guaranteed a set of rights to the Muslims of Granada including religious tolerance and fair treatment in return for the capitulation citation needed At this point the Muslim population in the former Emirate of Granada was estimated to be between 250 000 and 300 000 making up the majority in the former emirate and constituting roughly half of the entire Muslim population in Spain 5 Initially the Catholic rulers upheld the treaty Despite pressure from the Spanish clergy Ferdinand and the Archbishop of Granada Hernando de Talavera chose a laissez faire policy towards the Muslims in the hope that interaction with Catholics would make them understand the error of their faith and abandon it When Ferdinand and Isabella visited the city in the summer of 1499 they were greeted by enthusiastic crowds including Muslims 6 In the summer of 1499 Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros the archbishop of Toledo arrived in Granada and began working alongside Talavera Cisneros disliked Talavera s approach and began sending uncooperative Muslims especially the noblemen to prison where they were treated harshly until they agreed to convert Emboldened by the increase in conversions Cisneros intensified the efforts and in December 1499 he told Pope Alexander VI that three thousand Muslims converted in a single day Cisneros own church council warned that these methods might be a breach of the Treaty and sixteenth century hagiographer Alvar Gomez de Castro described the approach as methods that were not correct 7 Uprising in the Albayzin editThe increasing forced conversions of Muslims triggered resistance initially among the urban population of the Albayzin also spelled Albaicin the Muslim quarter of Granada 8 The situation was exacerbated by the treatment of elches former Christians who converted to Islam Specific clauses in the Treaty of Granada forbade the conversion of the elches back to Christianity against their will but the treaty allowed for questionings of such converts by Christian clerics in the presence of Muslim religious authorities Cisneros used this loophole to summon elches and imprison those who refused to return to Christianity These efforts were often focused on wives of Muslim men an emphasis that angered the Muslim population who considered this a violation of their families 8 nbsp A 2010 panorama of the Albayzin where the initial uprising took place On 18 December 1499 as part of this effort constable Velasco de Barrionuevo and an assistant were taking a female elche from the Albayzin for such questioning When they passed through a square she shouted that she was being forced to become Christian The officials were then surrounded by a hostile crowd the constable was killed and the assistant managed to escape after being sheltered by a local Muslim woman 4 This incident escalated into an open revolt The residents of the Albayzin barricaded the streets and armed themselves An angry crowd marched to Cisneros house apparently for an assault This crowd later dispersed but over the following days the revolt become more organized The population of the Albayzin elected their own officials and leaders In the standoff that ensued the archbishop Hernando de Talavera and the Captain General Marquis de Tendilla attempted to defuse the situation through negotiations and gestures of good will After ten days the uprising ended as the Muslims handed in their weapons and handed over the constable s killers who were promptly executed 9 Subsequently Cisneros was summoned to the court in Seville to account for his actions facing a furious Ferdinand Cisneros however argued that it was the Muslims not him who breached the Treaty by engaging in armed rebellion He convinced Ferdinand and Isabella to declare a collective pardon to the rebels on condition that they convert to Christianity Cisneros returned to Granada which now nominally became a fully Christian city 10 Uprising in the Alpujarra edit nbsp Capileira an Alpujarran village in 2000 which retains many features from the time of Muslim inhabitants The uprisings took place in such villages Although the uprising in the Albayzin appeared to be put down and Granada was nominally transformed to a Christian city the rebellion spread to the countryside The leaders of the Albayzin uprising fled to the Alpujarra mountains 1 The inhabitants of the mountains almost exclusively Muslims had only accepted Christian rule reluctantly 1 They quickly rose up in revolts against what they regarded as the violation of the terms of the Treaty of Granada and because they feared they would suffer the same forced conversions as the residents of the Albayzin 11 By February 1500 80 000 Christian troops were mobilized to put down the rebellion 1 By March King Ferdinand arrived to personally direct the operations 12 The rebels were often tactically well led and made use of the mountainous terrain to conduct guerrilla warfare However they lacked a central leadership and coherent strategy 11 This was partly caused by the previous Castilian policy of encouraging and facilitating the Granadan upper class to leave the country or convert and be absorbed into the Christian upper class 11 The rebels lack of strategic command allowed the Christian forces to proceed by defeating the rebels in one area separately then moving on to the next 11 The rebelling towns and villages in the Alpujarra were gradually defeated Ferdinand personally led the assault on Lanjaron 13 Rebels who surrendered were generally required to be baptized in order to keep their lives 1 Towns and villages which had to be taken by assault were treated harshly One of the most violent episodes occurred in Laujar de Andarax where the Catholic forces under Louis de Beaumont took 3 000 Muslims prisoner and then slaughtered them 12 Between two and six hundred women and children who took refuge in a local mosque were blown up with gunpowder 14 1 12 During the capture of Velefique all the men were killed and the women enslaved 14 At Nijar and Guejar Sierra the whole population was enslaved except children who were kidnapped in order to be brought up as Christians 15 16 On 14 January 1501 Ferdinand ordered his army to stand down because the uprising seemed to be suppressed 16 However further unrest occurred in Sierra Bermeja 16 An army under Alonso de Aguilar one of the most distinguished captains of Spain marched to put down this rebellion 16 On 16 March the army s undisciplined troops eager for pillage charged the rebels 17 However this was met by a fierce counterattack The result was a catastrophe for the Catholic army Aguilar himself was killed in battle and the army was nearly annihilated 18 17 However the Muslims soon sued for peace and Ferdinand aware of the weakness of the army and the difficulty of mountain warfare declared that the rebels must choose between exile or baptism 19 Only those who could pay ten gold doblas were given passage and the majority who could not pay had to stay and be baptized 19 The insurgents surrendered in waves beginning from the middle of April since some waited to see whether the first insurgents who surrendered were safe 19 The emigrants were escorted under guards to the port of Estepona and given passage to North Africa 19 The remaining were allowed to return home after converting surrendering their arms and forfeiting their property 20 19 Aftermath editFurther information Forced conversions of Muslims in Spain Morisco and Morisco rebellions in Granada nbsp A depiction of a Morisco family by Christoph Weiditz 1529 By the end of 1501 the rebellion was put down The Muslims were no longer given their rights provided by the Treaty of Granada 21 and were given the choice of 1 remain and accept baptism 2 reject baptism and be enslaved or killed or 3 be exiled 22 Given the expensive fee exacted for passage out of Spain conversion was the only realistic option for them 22 23 Therefore only a decade after the fall of the Emirate of Granada the entire Muslim population of Granada had nominally become Christian 23 A proclamation in 1502 extended these forced conversions to the rest of the lands of Castile even though those outside Granada had nothing to do with the rebellion 24 25 The newly converted Muslims were known as nuevos cristianos new Christians or moriscos lit Moorish Although they converted to Christianity they maintained their existing customs including their language distinct names food dress and even some ceremonies 26 Many secretly practiced Islam even as they publicly professed and practiced Christianity 27 In return the Catholic rulers adopted increasingly intolerant and harsh policies in order to eradicate these characteristics 23 This culminated in Philip II s Pragmatica of 1 January 1567 which ordered the Moriscos to abandon their customs clothing and language The pragmatica triggered the Morisco revolts in 1568 1571 28 See also editExpulsion of the Moriscos Morisco rebellions in Granada Mudejar ReconquistaReferences editCitations edit a b c d e f Carr 2009 p 63 Coleman 2003 p 6 Lea 1901 p 33 a b Carr 2009 p 59 Carr 2009 p 40 Carr 2009 pp 51 57 Carr 2009 pp 57 58 a b Carr 2009 pp 58 59 Carr 2009 pp 59 60 Carr 2009 pp 60 61 a b c d Harvey 2005 p 35 a b c Harvey 2005 p 36 Carr 2009 pp 63 64 a b Lea 1901 p 38 Carvajal 2015 pp iv xxvii a b c d Lea 1901 p 39 a b Lea 1901 pp 39 40 Carr 2009 pp 64 65 a b c d e Lea 1901 p 40 Carr 2009 p 65 Lea 1901 p 35 a b Harvey 2005 p 48 a b c Carr 2009 p 74 Edwards 2014 p 99 Harvey 2005 pp 56 57 Harvey 2005 pp 53 55 Harvey 2005 p 49 Lea 1901 p 227 Sources edit Carr Matthew 2009 Blood and Faith The Purging of Muslim Spain New Press ISBN 978 1 59558 361 1 Carvajal Luis del Marmol 2015 Historia del Rebelion y Castigo de los Moriscos de Reino de Granada in Spanish Universidad de Granada ISBN 978 8433857675 OCLC 922957928 Coleman David 2003 Creating Christian Granada Society and Religious Culture in an Old World Frontier City 1492 1600 Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 4111 0 Edwards John 2014 Ferdinand and Isabella Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 89345 5 Harvey L P 2005 Muslims in Spain 1500 to 1614 University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 31963 6 Lea Henry Charles 1901 The Moriscos of Spain Their Conversion and Expulsion Lea Brothers amp Company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rebellion of the Alpujarras 1499 1501 amp oldid 1157718213, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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