Coïmbre, Tolède, Lisbonne

At Coimbra, in 1064, as at Toledo, in 1095, and again at Lisbon, in 1147, the so-called "Reconquest" coming from the north of the peninsula, even from further afield, found on the spot groups of Arabized Christians, who are commonly refered to as "Mozarabs". But the fate of them...

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Main Author: Jean-Pierre Molénat
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Instituto de Estudos Medievais 2022-07-01
Series:Medievalista
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/5644
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author Jean-Pierre Molénat
author_facet Jean-Pierre Molénat
author_sort Jean-Pierre Molénat
collection DOAJ
description At Coimbra, in 1064, as at Toledo, in 1095, and again at Lisbon, in 1147, the so-called "Reconquest" coming from the north of the peninsula, even from further afield, found on the spot groups of Arabized Christians, who are commonly refered to as "Mozarabs". But the fate of them all turns out to be very different from case to case. While in Toledo the Mozarabs set the tone, at least linguistically, until the very end of the 13th century, the Mozarabism did fade out rapidly in the two Portuguese towns, disappearing as early as the course of the 12th century.This article is an effort to explain that difference and to find its cause.
format Article
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institution Kabale University
issn 1646-740X
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publisher Instituto de Estudos Medievais
record_format Article
series Medievalista
spelling doaj-art-7953f37974fb49609f7bf62dc011fc532025-01-30T10:52:57ZdeuInstituto de Estudos MedievaisMedievalista1646-740X2022-07-013210.4000/medievalista.5644Coïmbre, Tolède, LisbonneJean-Pierre MolénatAt Coimbra, in 1064, as at Toledo, in 1095, and again at Lisbon, in 1147, the so-called "Reconquest" coming from the north of the peninsula, even from further afield, found on the spot groups of Arabized Christians, who are commonly refered to as "Mozarabs". But the fate of them all turns out to be very different from case to case. While in Toledo the Mozarabs set the tone, at least linguistically, until the very end of the 13th century, the Mozarabism did fade out rapidly in the two Portuguese towns, disappearing as early as the course of the 12th century.This article is an effort to explain that difference and to find its cause.https://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/5644Al-AndalusMozarabsReconquestAlmohadsArabization
spellingShingle Jean-Pierre Molénat
Coïmbre, Tolède, Lisbonne
Medievalista
Al-Andalus
Mozarabs
Reconquest
Almohads
Arabization
title Coïmbre, Tolède, Lisbonne
title_full Coïmbre, Tolède, Lisbonne
title_fullStr Coïmbre, Tolède, Lisbonne
title_full_unstemmed Coïmbre, Tolède, Lisbonne
title_short Coïmbre, Tolède, Lisbonne
title_sort coimbre tolede lisbonne
topic Al-Andalus
Mozarabs
Reconquest
Almohads
Arabization
url https://journals.openedition.org/medievalista/5644
work_keys_str_mv AT jeanpierremolenat coimbretoledelisbonne