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The southwestern corner of Europe, presently comprising Spain and Portugal. Iberian history and culture is a complex weave of Celtiberian, Phoenician, Roman, Gothic, and Berber influences. This page delineates the Classical and Christian states of Iberia. For the Muslim states, see al-Andalus. Contains: Algarve, Ampurias, Andorra, Aragon, Asturias, the Azores, Barcelona, Besalu, Biscay, Cadiz, Castile, Cerdana, Coimbra, Galicia, Gerona, Leon, Navarre, Oporto, Pallars, Pamplona, Portugal, Sobrarbre, Spain (general survey), Tartessos, Toledo (Archbishops), and Urgel.
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To the Caliphate.................................711/6-755 To Cordoba.........................................755-c. 880 Mozarab rebellion - no names of leaders.........c. 880-912/32 Mozarabs were people speaking Arabic but Christian in faith, using Visigothic rites - see also Bobastro, Regio, and Ronda. To Cordoba......................................912/32-1009 To Badajoz........................................1009-1100 To Morocco........................................1100-1145 To Badajoz........................................1145-1150 To Morocco........................................1150-1228/50 To Portugal....................................1228/50- Until the Napoleonic era, Algarve was locally autonomous under it's own governor, with a seperate legal and taxation system. It comprised, in fact, a kind of conjoined regality in personal union with Portugal, as reflected by the Portuguese sovereign's titular style: "King of Portugal and the Algarves".
ARAGÓN
The
eastern coast of Spain, as well as the upland valleys and reaches of the
eastern Pyrenees. It comprises the Catalan speaking portion of the nation.
CASTILE
Most
of the central Spanish plateau. The Gonzalez succession were Counts of
Castile; previous rulers were purely local castellans in nominal subsurvience
to Asturias or Leon.
LEON
Freed from Muslim control in 855, it emerged as a separate division of
Asturias in 910. It held a sporadic existence until its final absorption
into Castile in the 13th century.
NAVARRE
The
region of Navarre is a pocket Kingdom lying alongside the western Pyrenees.
Isolated at an early stage from direct contact with Muslim Spain, it has
been thereby less involved with the process of the
reconquista,
and more open to other influences, particularly those of France, and those
of the native Euskeran (Basque) folk.
PORTUGALA
vitally important state in western Iberia, facing the Atlantic. The Portuguese
owe a considerable debt for their culture to Celtic influences; and Europe
owes much to the Portuguese for their extraordinary feats of navigation
and exploration in the 15th and 16th centuries.