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Taifas

Taifas, from the Arabic ta’ifa meaning faction or party, were independent Muslim-ruled principalities that emerged in the Iberian Peninsula during the 11th century after the collapse of the Umayyad Caliphate of Córdoba. The fragmentation created a mosaic of states bound by dynastic rivalries as well as shifting alliances with neighboring taifas and with Christian kingdoms to the north.

Each taifa was governed by its own ruler, often from Arab, Berber, or mixed lineages, who collected

From the late 11th century, external intervention by North African powers—first the Almoravids and later the

Culturally, the taifa period saw substantial artistic, literary, and scientific activity, with urban centers like Seville

taxes,
maintained
a
local
army,
and
patronized
culture
and
learning.
The
size
and
power
of
the
taifas
varied,
and
their
borders
were
fluid
as
fortunes
rose
and
fell.
The
era
was
marked
by
intense
internal
competition
and
periodic
cooperation
against
common
foes,
particularly
the
expanding
Christian
kingdoms
of
Castile,
Aragon,
and
León.
Almohads—helped
to
restore
a
measure
of
unity
and
control,
reshaping
the
political
landscape
of
al-Andalus.
Nevertheless,
the
taifas
continued
to
exist
in
diminished
form,
and
by
the
early
13th
century
most
had
been
absorbed
or
eclipsed
by
Christian
conquest.
The
last
major
Muslim
stronghold,
the
Kingdom
of
Granada,
endured
until
1492,
when
it
fell
to
Castile,
effectively
ending
Muslim
rule
in
Iberia.
and
Zaragoza
hosting
courts
that
patronized
poets,
scholars,
and
architects.
The
period
left
a
lasting
legacy
in
the
architectural
and
cultural
landscape
of
medieval
Iberia
and
is
commonly
cited
as
a
key
phase
in
the
broader
history
of
al-Andalus.