Global Information Lookup Global Information

Portugal in the Reconquista information


18th century painting of the Battle of Ourique.

Portuguese participation in the Reconquista occurred from when the County of Portugal was founded in 868 and continued for 381 years until the last cities still in Muslim control in the Algarve were captured in 1249. Portugal was created during this prolonged process and largely owes its geographic form to it.

The Portuguese Reconquista involved the participation of north European crusaders passing through Portuguese coasts en route to the Holy Land, such as Englishmen, French, Flemings, Normans and Germans, most notably at the conquest of Lisbon in 1147, but also in 1142, 1154, 1189, 1191 and 1217. Many settled in Portugal at the invitation of king Afonso I or his son and successor Sancho I.[1]

While the initial stages of the Portuguese Reconquista were marked by the participation of the upper aristocracy, as the frontier was steadily pushed further south initiative was yielded to minor nobles, town militiamen and peasant knights willing to go on lengthy campaigns. The final stages of Portuguese military effort in the south were mostly undertaken by the military Orders, most notably the Knights of Santiago and the Templars, but also the Order of Calatrava and Hospitallers to a lesser degree. The threat of Muslim raids also prompted the creation of the Portuguese Navy, the oldest in the world still in operation.

While the Count of Portugal was a major vassal of León, at the time of independence, the economy of Portugal was relatively underdeveloped, and there was no mint in the country.[2] The capture of spoils or extraction of tribute provided momentary income but it was largely unreliable.[2] Defensive needs motivated the settlement and economic development of the territory and this in turn provided the means for further expansion. Religious Orders such as the Cistercians led the way in agricultural development through a system of granges worked by lay brothers who enabled them to maintain agricultural and cattle enterprises of a sophistication and scale previously unheard of in Portugal.[2] The military Orders later adopted similar economies and scale and introduced notably sophisticated methods of production, irrigation and fortification.[3] As Islam receded, Portuguese cities became steadily more prosperous and larger, with signs of an international Portuguese maritime trade appearing by the thirteenth century.[3][4]

The expansion of Portugal was vital to the legitimization of Afonso I as an independent sovereign, with the Papal decree Manifestis Probatum acknowledging Afonsos efforts in the reconquest of territory back to Christendom as "manifestly proven" and his claims to the title of king as worthy of recognition.[5]

  1. ^ Disney, volume I, 2009, p. 83.
  2. ^ a b c Disney, 2009, p. 85.
  3. ^ a b Anthony Disney: A History of Portugal and the Portuguese Empire, volume I, Cambridge University Press, 2009, p. 86.
  4. ^ António Henriques: "The Reconquista and Its Legacy, 1000-1348" in Dulce Freire, Pedro Lains: An Agrarian History of Portugal, 1000-2000: Economic Development on the European Frontier, Brill, 2016, pp. 34-35. "In 1194, a Portuguese ship loaded with wine, honey and wood sank off Nieuwpoor, in Flanders. A Flemish text from the same period informs us that "the realm of Portugal provides honey, leather, wax, rawhides, grain, grease, oil, figs, raisings, and whale products. In the 13th and 14th centuries, England, Flanders and Normandy imported wine, olive oil, honey, salt, figs, raisings, wax and fruit from Portugal."
  5. ^ Rosamond McKitterick, David Abulafia, C. T. Allmand: The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 4, C.1024-c.1198, Part 2, Cambridge University Press, 1995, p. 499.

and 22 Related for: Portugal in the Reconquista information

Request time (Page generated in 1.0333 seconds.)

Portugal in the Reconquista

Last Update:

Portuguese participation in the Reconquista occurred from when the County of Portugal was founded in 868 and continued for 381 years until the last cities...

Word Count : 9843

Reconquista

Last Update:

The Reconquista (Spanish and Portuguese for "reconquest") or the reconquest of al-Andalus was the successful series of military campaigns that European...

Word Count : 15087

Knights Templar in Portugal

Last Update:

during the Portuguese Reconquista by taking, settling or defending the territory from the Muslims, the Order was an influential organisation in Portugal and...

Word Count : 1471

County of Portugal

Last Update:

(1112/1128–1143) Portugal in the Middle Ages Portugal in the Reconquista Recognized as "Queen of Portugal" in 1116 by Pope Paschal II, but forced to renounce the claimed...

Word Count : 1466

Afonso II of Portugal

Last Update:

Constança Peres. Timeline of Portuguese history (First Dynasty) Portugal in the Middle Ages Portugal in the Reconquista Siege of Alcácer do Sal Carvalho...

Word Count : 823

Afonso I of Portugal

Last Update:

Templar Portugal in the Middle Ages Portugal in the Reconquista Vitória S.C. Or also Affonso (Archaic Portuguese-Galician) or Alphonso (Portuguese-Galician)...

Word Count : 3755

Sancho I of Portugal

Last Update:

history (First Dynasty) Portugal in the Middle Ages Portugal in the Reconquista The necrology of Santa Cruz de Coimbra records the death "VII Id Mar" of...

Word Count : 1929

Chronology of the Reconquista

Last Update:

chronology presents the timeline of the Reconquista, a series of military and political actions taken following the Muslim conquest of the Iberian Peninsula...

Word Count : 21679

Military history of Portugal

Last Update:

Reconquista started as an insurgency in Asturias in 722. Currently Historians and archaeologists generally agree that Northern Portugal, between the Minho...

Word Count : 4075

Afonso III of Portugal

Last Update:

Portuguese history (First Dynasty) Portugal in the Middle Ages Portugal in the Reconquista Ennes, Antonio (1876). Historia de Portugal (in Portuguese)...

Word Count : 924

Siege of Tomar

Last Update:

Order rejoined the Portuguese efforts at recapturing territory from the Muslims more actively. Portugal in the Reconquista Portuguese conquest of Lisbon...

Word Count : 622

Portugal

Last Update:

the Reconquista. Founded first as a county within the Kingdom of León in 868, the country officially gained independence as the Kingdom of Portugal with...

Word Count : 19596

Islam in Portugal

Last Update:

0.4% of the total population of the country. However, many centuries back Islam was a major religion in the territory of modern-day Portugal, beginning...

Word Count : 1367

Portugal in the Middle Ages

Last Update:

The Kingdom of Portugal was established from the county of Portugal in the 1130s, ruled by the Portuguese House of Burgundy. During most of the 12th and...

Word Count : 5203

Kingdom of Portugal

Last Update:

the Reconquista, by Vímara Peres, a vassal of the King of Asturias. The county became part of the Kingdom of León in 1097, and the Counts of Portugal...

Word Count : 1108

List of Portuguese monarchs

Last Update:

he turned the family from a comital house to a royal house which would rule Portugal for over two centuries. During the Reconquista, the Afonsine Dynasty...

Word Count : 1207

Sancho II of Portugal

Last Update:

was the Reconquista, the reconquest of the southern Iberian Peninsula from the Moors. From 1236 onwards, Sancho II conquered several cities in the Algarve...

Word Count : 467

Portuguese Empire

Last Update:

the Age of Discovery, and the power and influence of the Kingdom of Portugal would eventually expand across the globe. In the wake of the Reconquista...

Word Count : 14391

List of former mosques in Portugal

Last Update:

repeated in symmetrical arrays giving a beautiful artistic finish. Due to the shorter exposure to Islam and substantially quicker Portuguese Reconquista re-establishing...

Word Count : 655

Portuguese House of Burgundy

Last Update:

Count of Portugal, a grandson in the senior line of Robert I, Duke of Burgundy, had joined the Reconquista in the Iberian Peninsula in the late 11th...

Word Count : 579

Slavery in Portugal

Last Update:

the Portuguese during the Reconquista; 9.3 per cent of slaves in southern Portugal were Moors and many Moors were enslaved in 16th-century Portugal....

Word Count : 9985

Portuguese people

Last Update:

Moors occupied what is now Portugal from the 8th century until the Reconquista movement expelled them from the Algarve in 1249. Some of their population...

Word Count : 30061

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net