Taifa of Zaragoza

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Taifa of Zaragoza
1013–1110
Almoravids
1110
Currency
Dinar
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Caliphate of Córdoba
Almoravid dynasty
Today part ofSpain

The taifa of Zaragoza (

Arab[1][2][3] Muslim state in the east of Al-Andalus (present day Spain), which was established in 1018 as one of the taifa kingdoms, with its capital in Saraqusta (Zaragoza) city. Zaragoza's taifa emerged in the 11th century following the destruction of the Caliphate of Córdoba in the Moorish controlled Iberian Peninsula
.

During the first two decades of this period (1018–1038), the city was ruled by the Arab

Almoravids, who managed to bring the Taifas Emirates under their control. After the death of El Cid, his kingdom was conquered by the Almoravids, and by 1100 they had crossed the Ebro into Barbastro, which brought them into direct confrontation with Aragon
.

The Banu Hud stubbornly resisted the Almoravid dynasty and ruled until they were eventually defeated by the Almoravids in May 1110. The last sultan of the Banu Hud, Abd-al-Malik, and Imad ad-Dawla of Saraqusta, were forced to abandon the capital. Abd-al-Malik allied himself with the Christian Aragonese under

Alfonso I of Aragon
and from then on the Muslim soldiers of Saraqusta served in the Aragonese forces. Soon afterwards (1118) a good deal of the old taifa, including the city of Zaragoza, was conquered by the Christian kingdom of Aragon, and remained in Christian hands thereafter.

Between c. 1040 and c. 1105, the Taifa of Lérida was separate from that of Zaragoza.

List of Emirs

This list is taken from The Routledge Handbook of Muslim Iberia, edited by Maribel Fierro.[4]

Tujibid dynasty

  • Al-Mundhir ibn Yahya al-Tujibi
    : c. 1013–1021/2
  • Yahya ibn al-Mundhir
    : 1021/2–1036
  • Al-Mundhir ibn Yahya
    : 1036–1038/9
  • Abd Allah ibn al-Hakam al-Tujibi: 1038/9

Huddid dynasty

Almoravid dynasty

See also

References