Caliphs and Kings

Caliphs and Kings

Author: Roger Collins

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2014-01-28

Total Pages: 340

ISBN-13: 1118730011

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CALIPHS AND KINGS: SPAIN, 796-1031 The last twenty-five years have seen a renaissance of research and writing on Spanish history. Caliphs and Kings offers a formidable synthesis of existing knowledge as well as an investigation into new historical thinking, perspectives, and methods. The nearly three-hundred-year rule of the Umayyad dynasty in Spain (756-1031) has been hailed by many as an era of unprecedented harmony and mutual tolerance between the three great religious faiths in the Iberian Peninsula – Christianity, Judaism, and Islam – the like of which has never been seen since. And yet, as this book demonstrates, historical reality defies the myth. Though the middle of the tenth century saw a flowering of artistic culture and sophistication in the Umayyad court and in the city of Córdoba, this period was all too shortlived and localized. Eventually, twenty years of civil war caused the implosion of the Umayyad regime. It is through the forces that divided – not united – the disparate elements in Spanish society that we may best glean its nature and its lessons. Caliphs and Kings is devoted to better understanding those circumstances, as historian Roger Collins takes a fresh look at certainties, both old and new, to strip ninth- and tenth-century Spain of its mythic narrative, revealing the more complex truth beneath.


The 'Mester De Clerecía'

The 'Mester De Clerecía'

Author: Julian Weiss

Publisher: Tamesis Books

Published: 2006

Total Pages: 280

ISBN-13:

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In the thirteenth century, profound changes in Spanish society drove the invention of fresh poetic forms by the new clerical class. This book attempts to historicize the category of the intellectual, as someone caught in the duality of the worlds of contingency and absolute values. It is of interest to medievalists.