Granada, the seizure of the sultanate

Granada
Granada

granada - the seizure of the sultanate

Author: Donald McGilvray
ISBN: 9781848767980
Publisher: Troubador Publishing
Date First Published: 16/02/2012

A fascinating history of this pivotal point in Spanish and European history, this is an important new look at the conquest of Granada The sultanate of Granada was the last bastion of Islamic rule in Western Europe.

Situated in the mountainous regions of Southern Spain, it survived and even prospered for over two and a half centuries and was then overwhelmed in less than a decade.

How did it resist the pressures of its Christian neighbours for so long? How was it then conquered so rapidly? These are the intriguing questions that Donald McGilvray has sought to answer in this carefully researched new look at the topic.

In doing so he has brought to light a host of related issues - then as now we come across the use of religion for political ends, religious fundamentalism, holy wars and attempts to create multicultural societies.

After a brief introduction to Muslim Spain and the Christian reconquest, the salient features which enabled Nasrid Granada to resist external pressures, despite internal weaknesses, are examined along with the circumstances that led to the final war.

THE STORY of granada

The core of the book describes the political and military aspects of that war and the religious, economic and social elements that contributed to it.

The drama of the surrender of Granada, enacted on the battlements of the Alhambra and outside the city walls, unfolds in the last chapters which also expose subsequent events.

The surrender terms had been generous to the local population and at first a genuine attempt was made to establish a society within which those of different faiths and cultures could live together in harmony.

Those efforts were frustrated by the intervention of radical clerics, events which were controversial at the time and remain so today.

About the Author

Born in 1970 in Chicago, Illinois, Andromeda Romano-Lax worked as a freelance journalist and travel writer before turning to fiction.

Among her nonfiction works are several guidebooks to Alaska and Mexico, as well as a travel narrative, Searching for Steinbeck's Sea of Cortez. Her hobbies include playing the cello.

She lives in Anchorage, Alaska with her husband and two children, and is at work on a second novel about Victorian-era archaeology, set in the Middle East.

 

Buy your copy of Granada, the seizure of the sultanate

Granada, the seizure of the sultanateGranada, the seizure of the sultanate

A fascinating history of this pivotal point in Spanish and European history, this is an important new look at the conquest of Granada The sultanate of Granada was the last bastion of Islamic rule in Western Europe. Situated in the mountainous regions of Southern Spain, it survived and even prospered for over two and a half centuries and was then overwhelmed in less than a decade

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Destinations

Living in Andalucia