Emirate of Granada | |||||||||
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1232–1492 | |||||||||
Motto: Wala ghaliba illa Allah (Arabic: ولا غالب إلا الله, lit. 'There is no victor but God') | |||||||||
Status | Tributary state of the Crown of Castile (intermittent) | ||||||||
Capital | Granada | ||||||||
Common languages |
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Religion |
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Government | Hereditary monarchy | ||||||||
Sultan | |||||||||
• 1232–1273 | Muhammad I | ||||||||
• 1487–1492 | Muhammad XII | ||||||||
Historical era | Late Middle Ages | ||||||||
• Established | 1232 | ||||||||
1492 | |||||||||
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Today part of |
History of Al-Andalus |
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Muslim conquest (711–732) |
Umayyad state of Córdoba (756–1031) |
First Taifa period (1009–1110) |
Almoravid rule (1085–1145) |
Second Taifa period (1140–1203) |
Almohad rule (1147–1238) |
Third Taifa period (1232–1287) |
Emirate of Granada (1232–1492) |
Related articles |
The Emirate of Granada, also known as the Nasrid Kingdom of Granada, was an Islamic polity in the southern Iberian Peninsula during the Late Middle Ages, ruled by the Nasrid dynasty. It was the last independent Muslim state in Western Europe.[1]
Muslims had been present in the Iberian Peninsula, which they called Al-Andalus, since 711. By the late 12th century, following the expansion of Christian kingdoms in the north, the area of Muslim control had been reduced to the southern parts of the peninsula governed by the Almohad Caliphate. After Almohad control retreated in 1228, the ambitious Muhammad I Ibn al-Ahmar rose to power and established the Nasrid dynasty in control of a sizeable portion of this territory, roughly corresponding to the modern Spanish provinces of Granada, Almería, and Málaga.[2] By 1250, the Nasrid emirate was the last independent Muslim polity in the peninsula.
The emirate generally existed as a tributary state of the rising Crown of Castile, though it frequently warred with the latter and with other neighboring states over control of its frontier regions. Despite its precarious position, Granada enjoyed considerable cultural and economic prosperity for over two centuries and the Nasrids became one of the longest-lived Muslim dynasties in the Iberian Peninsula.[a] The famed Alhambra palace complex was built during this period. The population of the emirate, swollen by refugees from the north, was more homogenously Muslim and Arabic-speaking than in earlier Muslim states on the peninsula, with a Jewish minority also present.
The political and cultural apogee of Nasrid Granada was in the 14th century, particularly in the second reign of Muhammad V. After this period, internal dynastic conflicts escalated. After 1479, Granada faced a united Castile and Aragon under the Catholic Monarchs intent on conquering it. In 1491, after the decade-long Granada War, the emirate was forced to capitulate. Muhammad XII, the last Nasrid ruler, formally surrendered Granada in January 1492, marking the end of independent Muslim rule in the Iberian Peninsula.
Muslim kingdom in southern Spain, which was the longest lasting Muslim dynasty in the Iberian peninsula, ruled by the Nasrid dynasty from 1232 to 1492.
As the first of the Nasrid dynasty that ruled longer than the Umayyads, Almoravids, or Almohads, [...]
The victory in 138/756 of ʿAbd al Raḥmān I, the first of the dynasty's eight amīrs, marked the beginning of Umayyad sovereignty in al-Andalus, which would last until 422/1031, when the caliphate of Córdoba came to an end. This chronology makes the Umayyads' dynasty the longest uninterrupted governing dynasty on the Iberian Peninsula, ahead of the Naṣrids of Granada (260 years) and the House of Bourbon, currently ruling in Spain (261 years up to 2017, in four different periods).
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