Preface
Abbreviations for Citations
HispaniaPART I: THE VISIGOTH ERA, 415-711
1. The Visigothic Kingdom
2. Visigothic Government
3. Visigothic Society and CulturePART II. THE ASCENDANCY OF ISLAM,
711-1031
4. The Emirate of Córdoba
5. The Caliphate of Córdoba
6. Government, Society, and Culture in al-Andalus, 711-1031
7. Government, Society, and Culture in Christian Spain,
711-1035PART III. A BALANCE OF POWER, FROM THE FALL OF THE
CALIPHATE TO LAS NAVAS DE TOLOSA, 1031-1212
8. Alfonso VI, the Taifas, and the Almoravids
9. Alfonso VII and the Leonese Empire
10. The Duel with the Almohads
11. Government, 1031-1212
12. Society and the Economy, 1031-1212
13. Religion and Culture, 1031-1212PART IV. THE GREAT RECONQUEST
AND THE BEGINNINGS OF OVERSEAS EXPANSION, 1212-1369
14. The Great Reconquest
15. Alfonso X and the Lure of Empire
16. The Overseas Expansion of the Crown of Aragon
17. The Straits, the Mediterranean, and Civil War
18. Government, 1212-1369
19. Society and the Economy, 1212-1369
20. Religion and Culture, 1212-1369PART V. THE STRUGGLE FOR
PENINSULAR UNION, 1369-1479
21. The Early Trastámaras
22. The Hegemony of the Trastámaras
23. Government, 1369-1479
24. Society and the Economy, 1369-1479
25. Religion and Culture, 1369-1479EPILOGUE
The Catholic Kings and the Perfect PrinceGENEALOGICAL CHARTS
1. Umayyad Emirs and Caliphs of Córdoba, 756-1031
2. Kings of Asturias-León to 1037
3. Rulers of Navarre, Aragon, and Barcelona to 1035
4. Rulers of Portugal, León, and Castile, 1035-1214
5. Rulers of Navarre, Aragon, Catalonia, and Provence,
1035-1214
6. Kings of Navarre, 1194-1512
7. Kings of León-Castile, 1214-1504
8. Kings of Portugal, 1211-1521
9. Kings of Aragon, 1213-1516
10. The Nasrid Kings of Granada, 1232-1492BIBLIOGRAPHY
Abbreviations
General Works
Part I: The Visigothic Era
Part II: The Ascendancy of Islam
Part III: A Balance of Power, from the Fall of the Caliphate to Las
Navas de Tolosa
Part IV: The Great Reconquest and the Beginnings of Overseas
Expansion
Part V: The Struggle for Peninsular Union
Epilogue: The Catholic Kings and the Perfect PrinceINDEX
Joseph F. O'Callaghan is Professor Emeritus of History at Fordham University. He is a past president of the American Catholic Historical Association and the Academy of American Historians of Medieval Spain.
Joseph F. O'Callaghan has met a major, long-felt need with a
clearly written, balanced, thorough survey that belongs in every
history collection. His Spain is the entire peninsula—Islamic,
Jewish, Christian, Portuguese, and Catalonian as well as Castilian.
A substantial political narrative is followed by chapters on
government, social and economic developments, and religion and
culture. The author even-handedly represents the major sides in
disputed issues, for his aim is to present the current state of
scholarship in a simple narrative form. He has succeeded
admirably.
*Library Journal*
Joseph O'Callaghan has now given us, for the first time, a solid
and in-depth survey in English on the peninsular kingdoms, drawing
together the myriad recent contributions, with the expertise of a
recognized scholar in the field and the practicality of a long-time
teacher of the topic.... Competence, thorough inclusiveness, clear
organization, and solidity are the qualifiers which best sum
O’Callaghan’s accomplishment.
*The History Teacher*
O'Callaghan's A History of Medieval Spain is indispensable to the
medievalist and to the Latin-Americanist alike. It is encyclopedic
in nature, making it a valuable reference tool.... On the whole, it
represents considerable familiarity with the sources of information
and learned condensation of that material. The chapters on society,
economy, and culture give the reader a wider view than a skeletal
political history of medieval Spain.
*Southeastern Latin Americanist*
There is no existing substitute for this volume in English for the
undergraduate or graduate student seeking a reliable orientation to
medieval peninsular history.
*Choice*
This book is a comprehensive narrative history based on an
impressively wide reading in the sources and secondary literature.
It should prove useful to teachers, students, and general readers
in European history.... Soundly traditional in its organization, it
gives primacy to political events without neglecting institutional,
social, and cultural matters.
*American Historical Review*
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