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Islam in Spain:
By the time 'Abd al-Rahman
reached Spain, the Arabs from North Africa were already entrenched
on the Iberian Peninsula and had begun to write one of the most
glorious chapters in Islamic history.
After their forays
into France were blunted by Charles Martel, the Muslims in Spain had
begun to focus their whole attention on what they called al-Andalus,
southern Spain (Andalusia), and to build there a civilization far
superior to anything Spain had ever known. Reigning with wisdom and
justice, they treated Christians and Jews with tolerance, with the
result that many embraced Islam. They also improved trade and
agriculture, patronized the arts, made valuable contributions to
science, and established Cordoba as the most sophisticated city in
Europe.
By the tenth
century, Cordoba could boast of a population of some 500,000,
compared to about 38,000 in Paris. According to the chronicles of
the day, the city had 700 mosques, some 60,000 palaces, and 70
libraries - one reportedly housing 500,000 manuscripts and employing
a staff of researchers, illuminators, and book binders. Cordoba also
had some 900 public baths, Europe's first street lights and, five
miles outside the city, the caliphal residence, Madinat al-Zahra. A
complex of marble, stucco, ivory, and onyx, Madinat al-Zahra took
forty years to build, cost close to one-third of Cordoba's revenue,
and was, until destroyed in the eleventh century, one of the wonders
of the age. Its restoration, begun in the early years of this
century, is still under way.
A forest of eight
hundred and fifty pillars
connected by Moorish
arches lines the great mosque of Cordoba.
By the eleventh
century, however, a small pocket of Christian resistance had begun
to grow, and under Alfonso VI Christian forces retook Toledo. It was
the beginning of the period the Christians called the Reconquest,
and it underlined a serious problem that marred this refined,
graceful, and charming era: the inability of the numerous rulers of
Islamic Spain to maintain their unity. This so weakened them that
when the various Christian kingdoms began to pose a serious threat,
the Muslim rulers in Spain had to ask the Almoravids, a North
African Berber dynasty, to come to their aid. The Almoravids came
and crushed the Christian uprising, but eventually seized control
themselves. In 1147, the Almoravids were in turn defeated by another
coalition of Berber tribes, the Almohads.
Although such
internal conflict was by no means uncommon- the Christian kingdoms
also warred incessantly among themselves- it did divert Muslim
strength at a time when the Christians were beginning to negotiate
strong alliances, form powerful armies, and launch the campaigns
that would later bring an end to Arab rule.
The Arabs did not
surrender easily; al-Andalus was their land too. But, bit by bit,
they had to retreat, first from northern Spain, then from central
Spain. By the thirteenth century their once extensive domains were
reduced to a few scattered kingdoms deep in the mountains of
Andalusia - where, for some two hundred years longer, they would not
only survive but flourish.
It is both odd and
poignant that it was then, in the last two centuries of their rule,
that the Arabs created that extravagantly lovely kingdom for which
they are most famous: Granada. It seems as if, in their slow retreat
to the south, they suddenly realized that they were, as Washington
Irving wrote, a people without a country, and set about building a
memorial: the Alhambra, the citadel above Granada that one writer
has called "the glory and the wonder of the civilized world."
The Alhambra was
begun in 1238 by Muhammad ibn al-Ahmar who, to buy safety for his
people when King Ferdinand of Aragon laid siege to Granada, once
rode to Ferdinand's tent and humbly offered to become the king's
vassal in return for peace.
Pool in the
Patio de los Arrayanes reflects
the grandeur
of the incomparable Alhambra.
It was a necessary
move, but also difficult - particularly when Ferdinand called on him
to implement the agreement by providing troops to help the
Christians against Muslims in the siege of Seville in 1248. True to
his pledge, Ibn al-Ahmar complied and Seville fell to the
Christians. But returning to Granada, where cheering crowds hailed
him as a victor, he disclosed his turmoil in that short, sad reply
that he inscribed over and over on the walls of the Alhambra: "There
is no victor but God."
Over the years, what
started as a fortress slowly evolved under Ibn al-Ahmar's successors
into a remarkable series of delicately lovely buildings, quiet
courtyards, limpid pools, and hidden gardens. Later, after Ibn al-Ahmar's
death, Granada itself was rebuilt and became, as one Arab visitor
wrote, "as a silver vase filled with emeralds."
Meanwhile, outside
Granada, the Christian kings waited. In relentless succession they
had retaken Toledo, Cordoba, and Seville. Only Granada survived.
Then, in 1482, in a trivial quarrel, the Muslim kingdom split into
two hostile factions and, simultaneously, two strong Christian
sovereigns, Ferdinand and Isabella, married and merged their
kingdoms. As a result, Granada fell ten years later. On January 2,
1492 - the year they sent Columbus to America - Ferdinand and
Isabella hoisted the banner of Christian Spain above the Alhambra
and Boabdil, the last Muslim king, rode weeping into exile with the
bitter envoi from his aged mother, "Weep like a woman for the city
you would not defend like a man!"
A
Moorish-built tower soars
above
Guadalquivir River in Seville.
In describing the
fate of Islam in Spain, Irving suggested that the Muslims were then
swiftly and thoroughly wiped out. Never, he wrote, was the
annihilation of a people more complete. In fact, by emigration to
North Africa and elsewhere, many Muslims carried remnants of the
Spanish era with them and were thus able to make important
contributions to the material and cultural life of their adopted
lands.
Much of the
emigration, however, came later. At first, most Muslims simply
stayed in Spain; cut off from their original roots by time and
distance they quite simply had no other place to go. Until the
Inquisition, furthermore, conditions in Spain were not intolerable.
The Christians permitted Muslims to work, serve in the army, own
land, and even practice their religion - all concessions to the
importance of Muslims in Spain's still prosperous economy. But then,
in the period of the Inquisition, all the rights of the Muslims were
withdrawn, their lives became difficult, and more began to emigrate.
Finally, in the early seventeenth century, most of the survivors
were forcibly expelled.

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