A Short History of the Middle Ages Fourth Edition

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

The cultural “mix” went beyond architectural forms. Some Muslim men took


Christian wives, and religious practices seem to have melded a bit. In fact, the


Christians who lived in al-Andalus were called “Mozarabs”—“would-be Arabs”—by


Christians elsewhere. It used to be thought that an account of the martyrdom of 48


Christians at Córdoba between 850 and 859 was proof of implacable hostility


between Christians and Muslims there. But recent research suggests that the


account’s idiosyncratic author, Eulogius, exaggerated for effect. It is likely that


Christians and Muslims on the whole got along fairly well. Christians dressed like


Muslims, worked side-by-side with them in government posts, and used Arabic in


many aspects of their life. At the time of the supposed martyrdoms, there were in the


region of Córdoba alone at least four churches and nine monasteries.


Still, some Andalusian Christians were discontented—Eulogius was one—and


they were glad to have contact with the north. For to the north of al-Andalus, beyond


the Duero River, were tiny Christian principalities. Partaking in the general


demographic and economic growth of the period, they had begun to prosper a little.


One, Asturias, became a kingdom. A local chronicler lauded King Alfonso III (r.866–


910) for defeating the Muslims and imposing Christian rule: “He depopulated


Coimbra, which was held by the enemy, and afterward peopled it with Galicians. He


subjected many more fortresses to his rule. In his time the church grew and his


kingdom increased in size. The cities of Braga, Oporto, Orense, Eminio, Viseo, and


Lamego were populated with Christians.”^9


Alfonso and his successors built churches, encouraged monastic foundations,


collected relics, patronized literary efforts, and welcomed Mozarabs from the south.


As they did so, they looked to Christian models still farther north—to Francia, where


Charlemagne and his heirs ruled as kings “by grace of God.”


An Empire in Spite of Itself


Between Byzantium and the Islamic world was Francia. While the other two were


politically centralized, subject to sophisticated tax systems, and served by salaried


armies and officials, Francia inherited the centralizing traditions of the Roman Empire


without its order and efficiency. Francia’s kings could not collect a land tax, the


backbone of the old Roman and the more recent Byzantine and Islamic fiscal


systems. There were no salaried officials or soldiers in Francia. Yet the new dynasty


of kings there, the Carolingians, managed to muster armies, expand their kingdom,


encourage a revival of scholarship and learning, command the respect of emperors

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