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Chronology of the Reconquista

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Reconquista
Part of the Crusades

La rendición de Granada by Francisco Pradilla Ortiz. Muhammad XII surrenders to Ferdinand and Isabella.
Date711–1492
Location
Iberia, Northern Africa
Result Moors expelled from Western Europe
Territorial
changes
Iberia reclaimed by Christians
Belligerents
Visigoths
Roderic
Egilona
Theudemia
Pelagius[a]
France
Odo the Great
Lampegia
Charles Martel
Pepin the Short
Charlemagne
Asturias
Pelagius of Asturias[b]
Favila of Asturias
Alfonso I the Catholic
Fruela I the Cruel
Aurelius of Asturias
Silo of Asturias
Mauregatus the Usurper
Bermudo I the Monk
Alfonso II the Chaste
Nepotian of Asturias
Ramiro I of Asturias
Ordoño I of Asturias
Alfonso III the Great[c]
Fruela II of Asturias
Alfonso Fróilaz[d]
Galicia
Ordoño II of León[e]
Sancho Ordóñez[f]
Garcia II of Galicia[g]
Pamplona
Íñigo Arista[h]
García Íñiguez
Fortún Garcés
Sancho I of Pamplona
Jimeno Garcés
García Sánchez I[i]
Sancho II of Pamplona
García Sánchez II
Sancho III the Great
García Sánchez III
Sancho Garcés IV[j]
Navarre
García Ramírez[k]
Sancho VI the Wise
Sancho VII the Strong
Theobald I the Troubadour
Theobald II of Navarre
Henry I the Fat
Joan I of Navarre[l]
Aragon
Ramiro I of Aragon[m]
Sancho Ramirez V[n]
Peter I of Aragon
Alfonso I the Battler[o]
Ramiro II the Monk
Petronilla of Aragon
Alfonso II the Troubadour
Peter II the Catholic
James I the Conqueror
Peter III of Aragon
Alfonso III the Liberal
James II the Just
Alfonso IV the Kind
Peter IV the Ceremonious
John I the Hunter
Martin the Humane
Ferdinand I of Aragon
Alfonso V el Magnànim
John II the Great
Ferdinand II of Aragon[p]
León
Alfonso IV the Monk[q]
Ramiro II of León
Ordoño III of León
Sancho I the Fat
Ordoño IV the Wicked
Ramiro III of León
Bermudo II the Gouty
Alfonso V the Noble
Bermudo III of León
Ferdinand I the Great[r]
Ferdinand II of León[s]
Alfonso IX of León
Sancha of León
Dulce of León[t]
Castile
Sancho II the Strong[u]
Alfonso VI the Brave[v]
Urraca of Castile[w]
Alfonso VII the Emperor[x]
Sancho III the Desired
Alfonso VIII the Noble
Henry I of Castile
Berengaria the Great
Ferdinand III the Saint[y]
Alfonso X the Wise
Sancho IV the Brave
Ferdinand IV of Castile
Alfonso XI the Avenger
Peter the Cruel
Constance of Castile[z]
John of Gaunt[aa]
Henry of Trastámara[ab]
John I of Castile
Henry III the Suffering
John II of Castile
Henry IV the Impotent
Isabella I of Castile[ac]
Ferdinand V(II) of Castile[ad]
Umayyad Caliphate
al-Walid I[ae]
Sulayman ibn Abd al-Malik
Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz
Marwan II[af]
Al-Andalus
Musa ibn Nusayr[ag]
Abd al-Aziz ibn Musa
Al-Samh ibn al-Khawlani
Anbasa ibn Suhaym
Abd al-Malik ibn al-Fihri
Uqba ibn al-Hajjaj
Yusuf ibn al-Fihri[ah]
Emirate of Córdoba
Abd al-Rahman I[ai]
Hisham I of Córdoba
Al-Hakam I
Abd al-Rahman II
Muhammad I
Al-Mundhir of Córdoba
Abdullah of Córdoba[aj]
Caliphate of Córdoba
Abd al-Rahman III[ak]
Al-Hakam II
Hisham II of Córdoba
Muhammad II al-Mahdi
Sulayman ibn al-Hakam
Ali ibn Hammud al-Nasir
Al-Qasim al-Ma'mun
Almanzor[al]
Abd al-Malik al-Muzaffar
Hisham III of Córdoba[am]
Almoravids
Yusuf ibn Tashfin[an]
Ali ibn Yusuf
Tashfin ibn Ali
Ibrahim ibn Tashfin
Ishaq ibn Ali[ao]
Almohads
Ibn Tumart
Abd al-Mu'min[ap]
Abū Ya'qūb Yūsuf I
Yaqub al-Mansur
Muhammad al-Nasir
Abū Ya'qūb Yūsuf II
Abd al-Wahid I
Abdallah al-Adil
Yahya al-Mu'tasim
Idris al-Ma'mun
Abd al-Wahid II
Abu al-Hasan as-Said
Abu Hafs Umar al-Murtada
Idris al-Wathiq[aq]
Marinids
Abd al-Haqq I[ar]
Uthman I ibn Abd al-Haqq
Muhammad I
Abu Yahya
Abu Yusuf Yaqub
Abu Yaqub Yusuf an-Nasr
Abu Thabit 'Amir
Abu al-Rabi Sulayman
Abu Sa'id Uthman II
Abu al-Hasan Ali
Abu Inan Faris
Muhammad II
Abu Faris Abd al-Aziz I
Muhammad III
Al-Mustansir
Musa ibn al-Mutawakkil
Abd al-Aziz II ibn Ahmad II
Abdallah ibn Ahmad II
Abu Said Uthman III
Abd al-Haqq II[as]
Emirate of Granada
Muhammad I[at]
Muhammad II
Muhammad III
Nasr of Granada
Ismail I of Granada
Muhammad IV
Yusuf I of Granada
Muhammad V
Ismail II of Granada
Muhammad VI
Muhammad VII
Muhammad VIII
Muhammad IX
Yusuf IV of Granada
Muhammad X
Yusuf V of Granada
Muhammad XI
Abu Nasr Sa'd
Abu'l-Hasan Ali
Muhammad XII
Muhammad XIII
______________________
Portugal
Henry of Portugal
Theresa of Portugal
Afonso I the Founder[au]
Sancho I the Populator
Afonso II the Fat
Sancho II the Pious
Afonso III the Boulonnais
Denis the Poet King
Afonso IV the Brave
Peter I the Just
Ferdinand I the Handsome
Beatrice of Portugal
John I of Aviz
Edward the Eloquent
Alfonso V the African
John II the Perfect Prince
Commanders and leaders
Christians
Ermesinda
Adosinda
William of Gellone
Bera of Barcelona
Velasco the Basque
Aznar Sánchez
García Íñiguez
Rodrigo of Castile
Gomelo II
Ramiro Garcés
García Fernández
Sancho Garcés II
Sancho García
García Gómez
Ermengol I of Urgell
Hugh I of Empúries
R. Borrell of Barcelona
Berenguer Ramón II
El Cid
Jimena Díaz
Ermengol IV of Urgell
Álvar Fáñez
Odo I of Burgundy
William the Carpenter
Gaston IV of Béarn
Rotrou III of Perche
Centule II of Bigorre
William IX of Aquitaine
Bernard Ato IV
William V of Montpellier
Sigurd the Crusader
Sancho Alfónsez
Martín Flaínez
Fernando Díaz
Diego Gelmírez
Gómez González
Pedro González de Lara
William X of Aquitaine
Rodrigo González de Lara
Ramon Berenguer III
Pedro Ansúrez
Guy of Lescar
Aimery II of Narbonne
Centule VI of Béarn
Bertrán de Risnel
Rodrigo Martínez
Muño Alfonso
Hervey de Glanvill
Arnout IV of Aarschot
Ramon Berenguer IV
Ramón de Bonifaz
Gerald the Fearless[av]
Gualdim Pais
Diego López II de Haro
P. Fernández de Castro
Peire de Montagut
Soeiro II of Lisbon
William I of Holland
William II of Béarn
Berenguer de Palou II
Nuño Sánchez
Peter I of Urgell
García F. de Villamayor
Goswin of Bossut
Alfonso de Molina
Álvaro Pérez de Castro
Bernat Guillem d'Entença
Pelayo Pérez Correa
Ramón de Bonifaz
Paio Peres Correia
Nuño González de Lara
Manuel of Castile
Fernando S. de Castro
Pedro Fernández de Híjar
Fernando de la Cerda
Sancho II de Aragon
Moors
Musa ibn Nusayr
Tariq ibn Ziyad
Ibn al-Ghafiqi
Umar I of Crete
Musa ibn al-Qasawi
Muhammad ibn Lubb
Galib ibn Abd al-Rahman
Wadih al-Siqlabi
Mujahid al-Amiri
Al-Mundhir
Ahmad al-Muqtadir
Abdallah ibn Buluggin
Yusuf al-Mu'taman
Yahya al-Qadir
Syr ibn Abi Bakr
Mazdali ibn Tilankan
Axataf
Ibn Mardanīš
Ibrahim ibn Hamusk
Yahya al-Mu'tasim
Abu Yahya
Ibn Hud[aw]
Zayd Abu Zayd
Zayyan ibn Mardanish[ax]
Abu Said Uthman I
Abu Zayyan I
Uthman ibn Abi al-Ula
Abu Malik Abd al-Wahid
Abu Tashufin I
Kaid Ridavan
______________________
Christians (continued)
Peter of Castile
Alfonso Fernández el Niño
Gonzalo Ruiz Girón
Roger of Lauria
Guzmán el Bueno
Ruy Pérez Ponce de León
Juan Núñez II de Lara
Alonso Pérez de Guzmán
Fernando Gutiérrez Tello
Garci López de Padilla
John of Castile
P. Fernández de Castro
James Douglas
James III of Majorca[ay]
Juan Manuel of Villena
Garci Lasso de la Vega II
Edward the Black Prince[az]
Bertrand du Guesclin[ba]
Diego García de Padilla
Enrique Enríquez el Mozo
J. Fernández de Heredia
João Afonso Telo
F. Sánchez de Tovar
Nuno Álvares Pereira
Pedro Álvares Pereira
Louis II de Bourbon
Pedro de Menezes
Álvaro de Luna
Henry of Aragon
Henry the Navigator
Philip the Good
Philip of Viana
Filippo Visconti
Biagio Assereto
Enrique Pérez de Guzmán
Ferdinand the Saint
Afonso of Braganza
Ferdinand of Viseu
Peter of Coimbra
John of Portugal
Juan Alonso de Guzmán
Alfonso of Asturias
Alonso de Arcos
Rodrigo de Arcos

This chronology presents the timeline of the Reconquista, a series of military and political actions taken following the Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula that began in 711. These Crusades began a decade later with dated to the Battle of Covadonga and its culmination came in 1492 with the Fall of Granada to Isabella I of Castile and Ferdinand II of Aragon. The evolution of the various Iberian kingdoms (including Aragon, León and Castile) to the unified kingdoms of Spain and Portugal was key to the conquest of al-Andalus from the Moors.[1]

Chronologies of the Reconquista

[edit]

Numerous chronologies of the Crusades have been published and include the following.

  • A Chronology of the Crusades, covering the crusades from 1055 to 1456, by Timothy Venning.[2]
  • Chronology and Maps, covering 1095–1789, in The Oxford History of the Crusades, edited by Jonathan Riley-Smith.[3]
  • A Chronological Outline of the Crusades: Background, Military Expeditions, and Crusader States, covering 160–1798, in The Routledge Companion to the Crusades, by Peter Lock.[4]
  • A Narrative Outline of the Crusades, covering 1096–1488, ibid.[5]
  • The Crusades: A Chronology, covering 1096–1444, in The Crusades—An Encyclopedia, edited by Alan V. Murray.[6]
  • Important Dates and Events, 1049–1571, in History of the Crusades, Volume III, edited by Kenneth M. Setton (1975).[7]
  • Historical Dictionary of the Crusades, by Corliss K. Slack. Chronology from 1009 to 1330.[8]
  • Oxford Reference Timelines: Crusades, 1095–1303;[9] Spain.[10]

8th century

[edit]

705

After 707

710

[edit]

711

712

713

714

715

  • February. Ibn Nusayr and ibn Ziyar return to Damascus to find the caliph dead, succeeded by his brother Sulayman ibn Abd al-Malik.[25]
  • (Date unknown). Musa ibn Nusayr is assassinated on the orders of Sulayman.[26]

717

  • (Date unknown). Córdoba is established as the capital of al-Andalus.[27]

718

Al-Andalus at its greatest extent

719

720

[edit]

721

725

730

[edit]

731

732

Bataille de Poitiers en Octobre 732 by Charles de Steuben depicts Charles Martel defeating Abd Al Rahman Al Ghafiqi at the Battle of Tours.

735

737

  1. Martel destroys a Moorish garrison at the Siege of Avignon.[44]
  2. Following the destruction of Avignon, Martel fails in the first Siege of Narbonne.[45]
  3. After his failure at Narbonne, Martel defeats Yusuf ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Fihri at the Battle of the River Berre.[46]
  4. Martel continues his campaign with the successful Siege of Nîmes. He then returns to France.[47]

739

740

750

[edit]

752

754

756

757

759

760

761

768

774

777

[edit]

778

Roland at the Battle of Roncevaux Pass

781

[edit]

783

787

789

791

[edit]

793

794

795

9th century

[edit]

800

[edit]

801

Iberia in 814

808

816

824

[edit]

827

829

842

[edit]

843

The Battle of Clavijo by Corrado Giaquinto.

844

850

[edit]

851

852

859

865

[edit]
Miniature (c. 1118) from the archives of Oviedo Cathedral showing Alfonso III flanked by his wife Jimena and bishop Gomelo II.

866

870

878

[edit]

881

882

883

10th century

[edit]

901

[edit]

905

910

[edit]
The Kingdom of León in 910

912

917

920

[edit]

923

925

926

928

Emirate/Caliphate of Córdoba

929

930

[edit]

931

932

939

951

[edit]

956

958

961

[edit]

966

970

975

976

The campaigns of Almanzor, 977–1006

978

981

[edit]

982

984

985

987

994

[edit]

997

999

11th century

[edit]

1000

[edit]

1002

1003

1004

1008

1009

Caliphate of Córdoba in 1000

1010

[edit]

1012

1013

1015

1016

1018

1026

1028

[edit]

1031

The Iberian Peninsula in 1030, during the reign of Sancho the Great

1035

[edit]

1037

1043

[edit]
  • (Date unknown). Castilian hero El Cid is born Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar near Burgos.[158]

1049

1054

1063

[edit]

1064

1065

The Iberian peninsula in 1065.

1067

1068

1071

[edit]

1072

1076

1079

The Taifa of Sevilla in 1079

1081

[edit]

1082

1083

1084

1085

1086

1087

El Cid ordering the execution of Almoravid allies after his conquest of Valencia in 1094

1089

1094

[edit]

1096

1097

1099

12th century

[edit]

1100

[edit]

1102

Alfonso I, the Warrior-King, by Francisco Pradilla Ortiz

1104

1106

1107

1108

1109

1110

[edit]
Urraca's realm in 1118

1111

1114

1116

1117

1118

1119

1120

[edit]
Phases of the expansion of the Almohad Caliphate.

1121

1122

1123

1124

1125

1126

1127

1130

[edit]

1133

1134

1137

1138

The Miracle of Ourique by Domingos Sequeira (1793)

1139

1140

[edit]

1142

1143

The Iberian peninsula in 1144.

1144

1145

1146

1147

The Conquest of Lisbon by Alfredo Roque Gameiro (1917).

1148

1149

1150

[edit]

1153

1154

1157

1158

1164

[edit]

1165

1166

1169

1170

[edit]
  • (Date unknown). The Order of Santiago (Order of Saint James of Compostela) is founded to defend Christianity and expel the Moors from Iberia.[272]

1172

1174

1175

1177

1179

1184

[edit]

1185

1187

1188

1189

The Iberian Peninsula in 1195.

1190

[edit]

1191

1193

1194

1195

1196

1197

13th century

[edit]

1209

[edit]

1210

1211

The Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa by Francisco de Paula Van Halen (1864)

1212

1213

1214

1215

1217

The Iberian Peninsula in 1210

1219

1223

[edit]

1225

1228

Conquest of Majorca by James I of Aragon (1229)

1229

1230

[edit]

1231

1232

1233

1234

1236

The Battle of the Puig de Santa Maria by Andrés Marzal de Sas.

1237

1238

1239

1243

[edit]

1244

1246

A map of Southern Spain around the time of Muhammad I, including the Emirate of Granada which he was to found. Green/pale yellow: Granada.

1247

1248

1249

1252

[edit]

1253

1260

[edit]

1261

1264

  • (Date unknown). The Mudéjar revolt of the Muslim population of Castile begins, and is not put down until 1266.[341]
James I of Aragon entering the city after the Conquest of Murcia, February 1266.

1265

1266

1267

1269

1270

[edit]

1271

1272

1273

Granada and its neighbours in 1275.

1274

1275

1276

1277

1278

1279

1280

[edit]

1282

1283

1284

1285

1286

1287

1288

1291

[edit]

1292

1295

1299

14th century

[edit]

1300

[edit]
  • February. Boniface VIII announces first Jubilee Year in Rome, promotes a crusade.[381]

1302

1304

1305

1307

1308

  • 19 December. Castile and Aragon sign the Treaty of Alcalá de Henares, pledging to help each other to achieve a total conquest of Granada and split its territories between them.[387]

1309

1310

[edit]

1312

1314

1315

1316

1317

1319

1320

[edit]

1321

  • 21 June. Leper's plot, a conspiracy theory that lepers and Muslims were conspiring to poison water in France, results in lepers and Jews being burned at the stake.[405]

1322

1325

1327

1328

1330

[edit]

1333

1335

1336

1339

1340

[edit]
The Battle of Río Salado, 1340.

1342

1344

1349

1350

[edit]

1351

1354

1356

1357

1359

1360

[edit]
The Marinid Sultanate circa 1360.

1361

1362

1366

1367

1369

1375

[edit]
Catalan Atlas, by the sefardi Cresques Abraham

1377

1379

1381

[edit]

1382

1383

1384

1385

1386

1387

1390

[edit]

1391

1392

1396

1398

15th century

[edit]

1406

[edit]

1408

1409

1410

[edit]

1411

1412

1415

1416

1417

1418

1419

Henry the Navigator as shown in the Saint Vincent Panels by Nuno Gonçalves.[bf]

1420

[edit]

1427

1429

1430

[edit]

1431

1432

1433

1435

1436

1437

Detail from the Saint Vincent Panels by Nuno Gonçalves believed to be a portrait of Ferdinand the Saint Prince.

1438

1443

[edit]

1445

1448

1449

1450

[edit]

1452

1454

1455

Map of the Emirate of Granada and the surrounding regions
A map of Iberia ca. 1462

1458

1462

[edit]

1465

1466

1467

1468

Morocco in the late 15th and 16th centuries.

1469

1471

[edit]

1472

1474

1475

1476

1478

Ferdinand and Isabella with their subjects

1479

1481

[edit]

1482

Portrait of Muhammad XII of Granada, 17th century, private collection.

1483

1484

1487

1489

  • (Date unknown). Al-Zadal (Muhammad XIII of Granada) surrenders the city to Spain after the six-month Siege of Baza and is captured.[518]

1490

[edit]

1491

La rendición de Granada by Francisco Pradilla Ortiz. Muhammad XII surrenders to Ferdinand and Isabella.

1492

  • 2 January. Muhammad XII, the last emir of Granada, surrenders his city to the army of the Catholic Monarchs after a lengthy siege, ending the ten-year Granada War and the centuries-long Reconquista, and bringing an end to 780 years of Muslim control in Al-Andalus.[522]
  • 6 January. Ferdinand and Isabella enter Granada.[523]
  • 31 March. Ferdinand and Isabella sign the Alhambra Decree, expelling all Jews from Spain unless they convert to Christianity.[524]
  • 2 August. Ottoman sultan Bayezid II dispatches the Ottoman Navy to bring expelled Spanish Jews safely to Ottoman lands.[525]

Aftermath

[edit]

The Fall of Granada ended the Reconquista, but some residual events continued.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Pelagius (of Asturias) was a Visigoth nobleman who founded the Kingdom of Asturias in 718. He is credited with initiating the Reconquista.
  2. ^ Pelagius of Asturias was the first king of Asturias whose reign began in 714.
  3. ^ The Kingdom of Asturias merged with the Kingdom of León in 925 and Alfonso III the Great was succeeded by Fruela II in Asturias, Alfonso III in León and, in Galicia, by Ordoño II of León.
  4. ^ Alfonso Fróilaz the Hunchback was briefly the king of the unified kingdom of Asturias, Galicia and León in 925. He succeeded his father Fruela II of Asturias. Later that year, Asturias would become part of León. Galicia would reunite with León later, in 929
  5. ^ Ordoño II of León was king of Galicia from 910 and king of León from 914. In Galicia, he succeeded Alfonso III the Great.
  6. ^ Sancho Ordóñez was succeeded by Fruela II of Asturias in Galicia.
  7. ^ Garcia II of Galicia succeeded his father Ferdinand I the Great as king of Galicia in 1065 and was overthrown by his brothers Sancho II the Strong and Alfonso VI the Brave in 1071.
  8. ^ Íñigo Arista was the first king of Pamplona beginning in 824.
  9. ^ García Sánchez I was also the first King of Najera.
  10. ^ Sancho Garcés IV was succeeded by Sancho Ramirez V, the king of Aragon.
  11. ^ García Ramírez of Navarre, known as "the Restorer," succeeded Alfonso I the Battler as king of Navarre.
  12. ^ Joan I of Navarre married Philip IV of France and Kingdom of Navarre came under French control.
  13. ^ Ramiro I of Aragon was the first king of Aragon beginning in 1035.
  14. ^ Sancho Ramirez V and Peter I of Aragon were also successive kings of Pamplona, succeeding Sancho Garcés IV of Pamplona.
  15. ^ Alfonso I the Battler was also the first king of Navarre (formerly known as Pamplona), succeeding Peter I of Aragon and Pamplona. He was succeeded in Navarre by García Ramírez of Navarre.
  16. ^ Ferdinand II of Aragon married Isabella I of Castile and became Ferdinand V of Castile and León in 1475.
  17. ^ Alfonso IV the Monk succeeded Fruela II of Asturias as king of León after a brief interlude by Alfonso Fróilaz.
  18. ^ Ferdinand I the Great was succeeded by Alfonso VI the Brave as king of León and Garcia II of Galicia as king of Galicia.
  19. ^ Ferdinand II of León succeeded Alfonso VII the Emperor as king of León.
  20. ^ Sancha of León and her sister Dulce of León were the daughters of Alfonso IX of León who were succeeded by Ferdinand III of Castile after the union of Castile and León.
  21. ^ Sancho II of Castile and León, nicknamed "the Strong," was the first king of Castile, beginning in 1065.
  22. ^ Alfonso VI the Brave was king of León from 1065–1109, serving jointly with his brother Sancho II the Strong briefly in 1072.
  23. ^ Urraca of Castile was queen of León from 1109–1126.
  24. ^ Alfonso VII the Emperor was king of León from 1135–1157 and was succeeded there by his son Ferdinand II of León.
  25. ^ The Treaty of Benavente was signed on 11 December 1230, in which Sancha and Dulce, the heiresses of the Kingdom of León, renounced their throne to their brother, Ferdinand III of Castile, unifying the two kingdoms.
  26. ^ Constance of Castile, daughter of Peter the Cruel, claimed the throne during the Castilian succession crisis.
  27. ^ John of Gaunt claimed the throne of Castile by virtue of his marriage to Constance of Castile.
  28. ^ Henry of Trastámara, known as Henry II the Fratricidal, killed his half-brother Peter the Cruel, ending the Castilian Civil War.
  29. ^ Isabella I is known as Isabella the Catholic. She and her husband Ferdinand V of Castile ruled over a unified Spain as the Catholic Monarchs.
  30. ^ Ferdinand II of Aragon married Isabella I of Castile in 1469 and became king of Castile and León as Ferdinand V of Castile shortly after the death of Isabella's brother Henry IV of Castile.
  31. ^ Al-Walid I ibn Abd al-Malik was the sixth Umayyad caliph beginning in 668.
  32. ^ Marwan ibn Muhammad ibn Marwan was the last caliph of the Umayyads. The Abbasid Caliphate took power on 25 January 750.
  33. ^ Musa ibn Nusayr was the first governor of al-Andalus beginning in 712.
  34. ^ The governor of al-Andalus, Yusuf ibn al-Fihri, was succeeded by Abd al-Rahman I as the first emir of Córdoba.
  35. ^ Abd al-Rahman I was the first emir of Córdoba, beginning in 756.
  36. ^ Abdullah of Córdoba was succeeded as emir of Córdoba by his grandson Abd al-Rahman III one day after his death on 15 October 912. On 16 January 929, Abd al-Rahman III would declare himself caliph.
  37. ^ Abd al-Rahman III was the first caliph of Córdoba, beginning in 929.
  38. ^ As the chancellor of the Caliphate of Córdoba and hajib for Hisham II, Almanzor was effectively ruler of Islamic Iberia.
  39. ^ After the caliphate fell with the overthrow of Hisham III in 1031, its land holdings devolved into a number of taifas.
  40. ^ Yusuf ibn Tashfin was emir of the Almoravids from 1061, succeeding the Sanhaja Berber tribal leader Abu Bakr ibn Umar who followed the spiritual authority of Abdallah ibn Yasin.
  41. ^ Ishaq ibn Ali served briefly in 1147 and was killed after the conquest of Marrakech by the Almohads.
  42. ^ Abd al-Mu'min became the first Almohad caliph in 1130, a caliphate based on the teachings of Ibn Tumart.
  43. ^ Idris al-Wathiq was executed in 1269 when forces of the Marinids overran Marrakech.
  44. ^ Abd al-Haqq I became the first leader of the Marinids in 1215. The Marinid Sultanate would be founded in 1269 by Abu Yusuf Yaqub.
  45. ^ In 1465, the last Marinid sultan Abd al-Haqq II was killed by a revolt in Fez, which led to the establishment of direct Wattasid rule over Morocco.
  46. ^ The Nasrid dynasty began ruling the Emirate of Granada in 1232 under Muhammad I of Granada, the first sultan of Granada.
  47. ^ Afonso Henriques was the first king of Portugal as Afonso I of Portugal beginning in 1139.
  48. ^ Gerald the Fearless is known as the Portuguese El Cid.
  49. ^ By 1228, Ibn Hud had seized power over much of al-Andalus. His defeat at the Battle of Jerez in 1231 led to the rise of Muhammad I of Granada.
  50. ^ In 1229, Zayyan ibn Mardanish became ruler of the Taifa of Valencia after dethroning Zayd Abu Zayd, the last Almohad governor of the province.
  51. ^ James III of Majorca was king of Majorca until 1344 when he was deposed by Peter IV of Aragon and Majorca annexed.
  52. ^ Edward the Black Prince, heir to the throne of England, supported Peter the Cruel in the Castilian Civil War.
  53. ^ Bertrand du Guesclin, later Constable of France, supported Henry of Trastámara in the Castilian Civil War and enabled the execution of Peter the Cruel by his half-brother Henry.
  54. ^ Some sources date the Battle of Covadonga to 722.
  55. ^ The execution of the Martyrs of Córdoba may have occurred as late as 859
  56. ^ The date of the beginning of the reign of Fortún Garcés of Pamplona varies between 870 and 882 in the sources.
  57. ^ Sancho III of Pamplona was first reported as king in 1004 but his father García Sánchez II of Pamplona was last reported in 1000.
  58. ^ This traditional image of Henry the Navigator presented in the Saint Vincent Panels remains under dispute.

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Bibliography

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