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AlÁndalus

Al-Andalus, also known as Muslim Iberia, refers to the parts of the Iberian Peninsula governed at various times by Muslim states from 711 to 1492. The conquest began when Tariq ibn Ziyad crossed the Strait of Gibraltar and defeated the Visigothic king Roderic at Guadalete in 711. For nearly two centuries, large portions of the peninsula were ruled by the Umayyad Emirate of Córdoba (later Caliphate). Abd al-Rahman I established independent rule in 756, and Abd al-Rahman III proclaimed the Caliphate of Córdoba in 929, marking the apex of political unity and cultural flourishing.

Córdoba became a major cultural, economic, and intellectual center, with notable architecture such as the Great

Following the decline of the Caliphate, the regime fragmented into independent taifa kingdoms after 1031. In

Granada remained under Nasrid rule until 1492, when the Catholic Monarchs captured the city, ending Muslim

Mosque
of
Córdoba
and
the
palace
complex
of
Madinat
al-Zahra.
The
period
saw
advances
in
science,
philosophy,
medicine,
and
arts,
as
well
as
the
translation
and
transmission
of
classical
texts
to
the
Latin
West.
the
later
11th
and
12th
centuries,
the
Iberian
peninsula
faced
incursions
by
the
North
African
Almoravids
and
later
the
Almohads,
while
Christian
kingdoms
in
the
north
began
the
long
reconquest.
The
battle
of
Las
Navas
de
Tolosa
(1212)
marked
a
turning
point
in
favor
of
the
Christians.
rule
in
the
peninsula.
The
era
left
a
lasting
architectural
and
cultural
legacy
in
Iberia
and
Europe,
including
irrigated
agriculture,
urban
architecture,
and
works
by
scholars
such
as
Ibn
Rushd
(Averroes)
and
others.
The
term
convivencia
is
used
to
describe,
with
debate,
interreligious
coexistence
during
this
period.