FLAGS OF PORTUGAL
Reconquest
Day is observed every year on January 2. This day commemorates the capture of
Spanish and Portuguese territories from the Moors by the Catholic kings of
Spain. A series of military campaigns, known as ‘Reconquista,’ occurred between
718 and 1492. The victory that marked the complete reconquest of Spain took
place in 1492 when Queen Isabella I and King Ferdinand V captured the city of
Granada from the Moors. Following this victory, the Moors were forced to
convert to Christianity and later expelled from the Iberian Peninsula.
History of
Reconquest Day
Reconquest
Day commemorates the reconquest of Spanish and Portuguese territories by Queen
Isabella I and King Ferdinand V from the Muslim Moors, who had occupied most of
those territories since the 8th century. Known as ‘Reconquista,’ a series of
military campaigns took place between 718 and 1492. The five Spanish states
involved were Aragon, Castile, Catalonia, León and Navarre, while Portugal
became an independent state from the 1140s. Before the 8th century, the Iberian
Peninsula had been under the control of the Visigoths, an early Germanic
people, before the arrival of the Moors from North Africa.
Though the
beginning of the Reconquista is linked to 718 or 722, with the Battle of
Covadonga, the first notable success in the campaign was the capture of Toledo
in 1085 by King Alfonso VI. During the reign of Alfonso I of Aragon, he offered
huge estates to the Knights Hospitaller and Knights Templar, which were
military orders of warrior-monks. In turn, both orders committed knights to the
cause. In addition, local military orders began forming in Spain during the
1100s. The Order of Calatrava was formed in 1158, the Order of Santiago in
1170, the Order of Mountjoy in Aragon in 1173, and that of Alcantara in 1176.
Another
decisive victory which dealt a major blow to the Moors occurred at Las Navas de
Tolosa in 1212 when a coalition of three Spanish kings won the battle.
Following this victory, more territories were captured, including Cordoba,
Valencia and Seville over the next 36 years. The final victory of the Christian
forces was the capture of the last stronghold of the Moors, Granada, by King
Ferdinand V and Queen Isabella I in 1492. Following this triumph, the Moors
were forced to convert to Christianity but were later expelled from the Iberian
Peninsula.
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