Yusuf II of Granada
Yusuf II | |||||
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Sultan of Granada | |||||
Reign | 15 January 1391 – 5 October 1392 (10 Safar 793 – 16 Dhu al-Qa'da 794 AH) | ||||
Predecessor | Muhammad V | ||||
Successor | Muhammad VII | ||||
Born | c. 1356 | ||||
Died | 5 October 1392 (age about 36) Granada | ||||
Spouse | Several, names unknown; Khadija (possible) | ||||
Issue | Yusuf III Muhammad VII Ali Ahmad Ismail III (possible) Umm al-Fath (II) | ||||
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Dynasty | Nasrid | ||||
Father | Muhammad V | ||||
Religion | Islam |
![Colored map of the southern part of Spain, annotated with borders and cities](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/34/Emirate_of_Granada.svg/310px-Emirate_of_Granada.svg.png)
Abu al-Hajjaj Yusuf ibn Muhammad (
When Yusuf was about three years old, his father was dethroned and the family went into exile in Fez, the capital of the Marinid Sultanate of Morocco. His father regained the throne in 1362 and the young Yusuf was given command of the Volunteers of the Faith, a corps of North African soldiers available to fight for the emirate. He became sultan after his father's death in 1391. Yusuf's government was initially dominated by his minister, Khalid, until Khalid was suspected of conspiring against the sultan and executed. Yusuf then took control of his government and appointed the poet Ibn Zamrak, his father's vizier (whom he had imprisoned), as his vizier in July 1392.
Yusuf continued his father's peace treaty with Granada's neighbour
Birth and family exile
Yusuf was the first son of Muhammad V of Granada (r. 1354–1359 and 1362–1391), and the only one born during the first of the sultan's two reigns. Although his date of birth is unknown, historian Francisco Vidal Castro estimated that he was born c. 757 AH or 1356 AD (a few years after his father's accession). Yusuf was about three years old when his father was dethroned on 23 August 1359; a group of men under Muhammad el Bermejo (later Muhammad VI) scaled the walls of the Alhambra that night and enthroned the sultan's half-brother, Ismail II. Yusuf was walking with his father in the Generalife gardens (Jannat al-‘Arīf) just outside the Alhambra complex; this allowed the sultan to escape to Guadix in the eastern part of the emirate before going into exile across the Mediterranean Sea to Fez, the capital of Morocco's Marinid Sultanate. Yusuf was left in Granada, but around 25 November the new sultan allowed him and his mother to join the dethroned sultan in Fez.[1]
Muhammad V returned to al-Andalus on August 1361, creating a rival court in the Marinid Andalusian outpost of Ronda and beginning a civil war against Muhammad VI, who had dethroned Ismail II a year before. Muhammad V, supported by Peter of Castile, gained the upper hand; Muhammad VI fled the Alhambra and sought asylum with Peter on 13 March 1362. Muhammad V entered the abandoned royal palace and retook the throne; Muhammad VI was murdered by Peter on 25 April, and his head was sent to Muhammad V.[2]
Return to al-Andalus
![Ornate gold coin](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2f/Muhammad_V_Nasrid_gold_coin.jpg/220px-Muhammad_V_Nasrid_gold_coin.jpg)
Yusuf was still in Fez during his father's second accession, and the recently enthroned Marinid Sultan Abu Zayyan Muhammad attempted to use him as a bargaining chip so Muhammad V would return Ronda to him. The Marinids yielded; Yusuf was allowed to return to Granada with his father's vizier, Ibn al-Khatib (who had also been in exile in Morocco), although Ronda remained under Granadan control. Yusuf's party arrived in Granada, the capital city, on 14 June 1362. His brothers, Abu Nasr Sa'd, Nasr (both probably born between 1362 and 1369) and Abu Abdullah Muhammad, were born afterwards.[1]
Yusuf was circumcised in 764 AH (approximately October 1362 to October 1363); this has helped historians determine his birth year, because boys were customarily circumcised at age seven.[1] Muhammad removed Yahya ibn Umar, shaykh al-ghuzat (chief) of the Volunteers of the Faith, from his post on 26 June 1363. The Volunteers were North African soldiers fighting for Granada, and their chief had always been a dissident prince related to the Berber Marinid dynasty; however, the sultan appointed the young Yusuf chief and Sa'd a commander.[1][3] Yusuf also received a tax-free estate by his father.[1]
Muhammad V presided over one of the dynasty's longest reigns. Around the time that Yusuf reached adulthood, he was detained and summoned to court on the suspicion of rebelling against his father; he was acquitted, however, after an investigation.[1] In 1390, when his father and John I of Castile (r. 1379–1390) signed a treaty that extended peace between their kingdoms, Yusuf and John's son Henry added their signatures.[4] Yusuf was about 35 years old when his father died in January 1391.[1]
Rule
![Colored map of the Iberian Peninsula and Western North Africa](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/6e/Spain_and_Western_North_Africa_1360.jpg/220px-Spain_and_Western_North_Africa_1360.jpg)
Yusuf II took the throne on 15 January 1391 (10
During the first year of his rule, Yusuf imprisoned the poet Ibn Zamrak (his father's vizier) in an Almerían dungeon. His reign was dominated by Khalid, his father's mawla,[a] who became his first minister (al-qaim bi-dawlati-hi, "the officer of his government"). Khalid imprisoned the sultan's three brothers; Yusuf did not hear about them again, and they died in captivity.[1][6] Yusuf received a report suspecting Khalid of a conspiracy with Yahya ibn al-Saigh, the Jewish royal physician, to poison him.[1] The sultan ordered them both executed; Khalid was bound and hacked to death with a sword in his presence, and Yahya was imprisoned and beheaded (or poisoned).[7][8]
Yusuf then took control of his government.
In July 1292, Yusuf restored Ibn Zamrak as vizier. He signed a five-year peace treaty with Aragon on 14 August which was similar to previous treaties. The treaty seemed to favour Aragon's Muslim subjects (
Family
The sultan's mother and spouses are unknown. Yusuf's first son was Yusuf III, and Muhammad VII was born soon afterwards; Abu al-Hasan Ali and Abu al-Abbas Ahmad followed.[1][10] He also had a daughter, Umm al-Fath, wife of the future Muhammad IX.[1][11] Historian Bárbara Boloix Gallardo writes that Yusuf sired another sultan, Ismail III of Granada; according to Vidal Castro, however, Ismail's genealogy is unclear.[12][b] Not all his children were full siblings; Muhammad VII was a half-brother of Yusuf III and Umm al-Fath (full siblings, indicating that Yusuf II had more than one spouse).[1] According to Juan de Mata Carriazo's 16th-century History of the Royal House of Granada, "Muhammad Guadix" was the eleventh sultan of Granada and died in 1392. He married Khadija, the daughter of Sultan Abu al-Abbas Ahmad II (r. 1370–1394) of the Hafsid Ifriqiya; the marriage produced a son, Yusuf, who would also be sultan. Because Muhammad's death year coincides with Yusuf II's (the eleventh sultan), Boloix Gallardo writes that the Christian source misidentified Yusuf II as "Muhammad Guadix" (throwing light on the identity of one of his spouses and the mother of his son, Yusuf III).[13] A separate tradition recorded by José Antonio Conde states that Yusuf II married a daughter of the King of Fez.[14]
Death
Yusuf died on 5 October 1392 (16
Notes
- ^ A servant, client or freedman[1]
- ^ Ismail III does not always appear in the lists of Nasrid Sultans compiled by modern historians; it is absent from Harvey 1992, pp. 17–19 and Arié 1973, Appendix, Table 1.
Citations
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Vidal Castro: Yusuf II.
- ^ Fernández-Puertas 1997, p. 18.
- ^ Arié 1973, p. 118.
- ^ Arié 1973, p. 117, and note 3.
- ^ Arié 1973, p. 122.
- ^ Vidal Castro 2004, p. 354.
- ^ a b Arié 1973, p. 121.
- ^ a b Harvey 1992, p. 220.
- ^ Vidal Castro 2004, pp. 354–355.
- ^ Boloix Gallardo 2013, p. 85.
- ^ Boloix Gallardo 2015, p. 59.
- ^ Vidal Castro: Ismail III.
- ^ Boloix Gallardo 2013, p. 86.
- ^ Conde 1821, p. 166.
- ^ Harvey 1992, p. 221.
- ^ Vidal Castro 2004, p. 355, also note 10.
- ^ Vidal Castro 2004, pp. 356–357.
Bibliography
- OCLC 3207329.
- Boloix Gallardo, Bárbara (2013). Las sultanas de la Alhambra: las grandes desconocidas del reino nazarí de Granada (siglos XIII-XV) (in Spanish). Granada: Patronato de la Alhambra y del Generalife. ISBN 978-84-9045-045-1.
- Boloix Gallardo, Bárbara (2015). "El rostro femenino del poder. Influencia y función de la mujer nazarí en la política cortesana de la Alhambra (siglos XIII-XV)". Cuadernos del CEMyR (in Spanish). 23. Centro de Estudios Medievales y Renacentistas de la Universidad de La Laguna: 49–64.
- Conde, José Antonio (1821). Historia de la dominacion de los Arabes en España (in Spanish). Vol. 3. García. p. 166.
- Fernández-Puertas, Antonio (April 1997). "The Three Great Sultans of al-Dawla al-Ismā'īliyya al-Naṣriyya Who Built the Fourteenth-Century Alhambra: Ismā'īl I, Yūsuf I, Muḥammad V (713–793/1314–1391)". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. Third Series. 7 (1). London: S2CID 154717811.
- ISBN 978-0-226-31962-9.
- Vidal Castro, Francisco. "Yusuf II". Diccionario Biográfico electrónico (in Spanish). Real Academia de la Historia.
- Vidal Castro, Francisco. "Ismail III". Diccionario Biográfico electrónico (in Spanish). Real Academia de la Historia.
- Vidal Castro, Francisco (2004). "El asesinato político en al-Andalus: la muerte violenta del emir en la dinastía nazarí". In María Isabel Fierro (ed.). De muerte violenta: política, religión y violencia en Al-Andalus (in Spanish). Editorial CSIC - CSIC Press. pp. 349–398. ISBN 978-84-00-08268-0.