The big idea: For almost 800 years, Christian kingdoms in the north of Spain slowly pushed south to take land from Muslim rulers. This long struggle is called the Reconquista — in English, the Reconquest — and it ended when the city of Granada fell in 1492.
In 711 CE a Muslim army crossed from North Africa and conquered most of Spain in just a few years. They called this land Al-Andalus, and for a time it was one of the richest, most learned places in Europe.
Only a strip of the far north stayed in Christian hands. From there, small kingdoms began to fight back, and over the centuries they grew into powerful states like Castile and Aragon.
You should picture the map slowly changing colour from Muslim south to Christian north, decade by decade.
Two dates that frame everything: 711 — Muslims conquer most of Spain and create Al-Andalus. 1492 — the last Muslim kingdom, Granada, falls to Christian rulers. Everything in this topic happens between these two dates.
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Historians ask why Christian rulers kept fighting for so long. The honest answer is that they had several motives at once, and these mixed together rather than acting alone.
Religion and the idea of a holy war
Many Christians believed they had a duty to win Spain back for their faith. From the eleventh century the Pope treated the fighting like a crusade, offering spiritual rewards to those who joined.
Religion gave the wars a powerful sense of purpose that helped rulers recruit soldiers and justify conquest.
Politics and power
Christian kings also fought to make their own kingdoms bigger and stronger. Taking a famous city like Toledo (captured in 1085) boosted a king's prestige and let him claim leadership over rival Christian rulers.
So the Reconquista was partly a competition between ambitious kings, not only a war between religions.
Land, wealth and reward
War in Spain could be very profitable. Conquered land brought farms, taxes and rich cities, and kings rewarded nobles and knights with these prizes.
Many Muslim states were also forced to pay tribute, which made the Christian kingdoms wealthier without any fighting at all.
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Driven by faith, prestige and ambition all at once, the Christian kingdoms slowly turned those motives into conquest over almost 800 years.
Here is how the Reconquest actually unfolded, from the first fightback to the fall of Granada.
How the motives combined: the fall of Granada: By the 1200s only one Muslim state was left — the Nasrid Emirate of Granada, founded in 1238. It survived for over 200 years by paying tribute and staying out of Christian quarrels.
Then in 1469 Queen Isabella I of Castile married King Ferdinand II of Aragon, uniting Spain's two strongest kingdoms. Driven by faith, prestige and ambition together, they launched a final war in 1482 and captured Granada on 2 January 1492.
| Year | Event | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| 711 | Muslim conquest of Spain | Al-Andalus is created; Christians hold only the far north |
| 1085 | Castile captures Toledo | A major Christian advance and a prestige victory |
| 1212 | Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa | A huge Christian win that breaks Muslim power in the south |
| 1238 | Emirate of Granada founded | Becomes the last Muslim state in Spain |
| 1469 | Marriage of Isabella and Ferdinand | Unites Castile and Aragon for the final push |
| 1492 | Fall of Granada | The Reconquista ends after almost 800 years |
How Christian Spain came together for the final blow
Small northern kingdoms
After 711, tiny Christian states survive in the north and slowly begin pushing south.
Decisive victories
Wins like Toledo (1085) and Las Navas de Tolosa (1212) shift the balance to the Christians.
Only Granada left
By the mid-1200s the Nasrid Emirate of Granada is the last Muslim state, surviving by paying tribute.
Castile and Aragon unite
The 1469 marriage of Isabella and Ferdinand joins Spain's strongest kingdoms.
Granada falls, 1492
A ten-year war ends with the surrender of Granada on 2 January 1492.
Divided kingdoms → key victories → one Muslim state left → royal marriage → Granada falls.
Parias, vassalage and Granada's hidden financial crisis
"Paying tribute" sounds simple, but examiners expect the precise system behind it. Granada's payments to Castile were called parias, and they came with a political price too: vassalage.
A vassal state like Nasrid Granada did not just hand over money — its emirs formally recognised the King of Castile as overlord, sometimes even swearing loyalty in person or sending troops to help him. This is why historians treat Granada's survival after 1238 as conditional independence, not true freedom.
The hidden cost: taxing Granada's own Muslim population: To raise the parias, Nasrid sultans could not simply ask Castile for a discount — the money had to come from somewhere inside Granada itself. In practice, this meant heavy extra taxation of their own Muslim subjects, on top of the taxes already needed to run the kingdom and defend its border.
This matters directly for the 'financial issues in the fall of Granada' angle: the tribute system did not just weaken Granada financially from the outside (by draining money to Castile) — it also created internal economic strain and resentment, as farmers, merchants and townspeople carried the burden of both ordinary taxes and the extra levies needed for parias.
- Parias — the tribute payments Granada sent to Castile to avoid invasion, paid almost continuously from the 1200s onward.
- Vassalage — the political submission that came with parias: Nasrid emirs accepted Castilian overlordship, not just a cash deal.
- Over-taxation at home — sultans raised the parias money by taxing their own Muslim population more heavily, deepening economic decline inside Granada.
- Long-term effect — decades of this double burden (tribute outward, over-taxation inward) left Granada financially weaker and more divided by the time war resumed in 1482.
How this is tested (Paper 1): Paper 1 is source-based, so you will meet a described source and be asked to judge how useful it is. The 4-mark question wants you to weigh a source's value and its limitation using its origin, purpose and content.
A source is a letter written in 1492 by Queen Isabella I to the Pope, celebrating the capture of Granada as a triumph for the Christian faith. With reference to its origin, purpose and content, suggest one value and one limitation of this source for a historian studying the motives behind the Reconquest.
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Common mistakes: Do not just retell what the source says. Marks come from explaining why its origin and purpose make it useful or unreliable for the exact question asked.