Andalusia

Si regionem hodiernam quaeris, vide paginam de Vandalitia.
Aetas caliphatuum:      Muhammad, 622–632      Caliphatus Rashidun, 632–661      Caliphatus Omayadarum, 661–750
Provincia al-Andalus anno 750.
Interiores Meschitae–Cathedralis Cordubensis partes, olim Maximae Meschitae Cordubae. Primum meschita super locum basilicae Sancti Vincentii Visigothorum anni 600 anno 742 aedificatum est.
Corduba
Andalusia anno 910

Andalusia[1] (Hispanice Al-Ándalus; Arabice الأندلس al-ʼAndalus) fuit Paeninsula Iberica in dicione Musulmanorum. Hoc vocabulum prioribus civitatibus Islamicis in Iberia ab historicis hodiernis adhibetur.[2] Terrae huius regionis tempore maximi spatii geographici plurimam paeninsulae partem[3] et Septimaniam, partem Franciae meridianae hodiernae, saeculo octavo occupaverunt, ac paene uno saeculo (inter saecula nonum et decimum) dicionem a Fraxinet per transitus alpinos quae Italiam Europamque Occidentalem coniungebant extenderunt.[4][5]

Litterae, medicina, poesis, mathematica sub imperium calipharum et regum floruerunt.

Nexus interni

  1. Fons nominis Latini desideratur (addito fonte, hanc formulam remove)
  2. Camilo Gómez-Rivas (21 Novembris 2014). Law and the Islamization of Morocco under the Almoravids: The Fatwās of Ibn Rushd al-Jadd to the Far Maghrib. Brill. pp. 1, note 3. ISBN 978-90-04-27984-1 .
  3. Fernando Luis Corral (2009). "The Christian Frontier against al-Andalus (Muslim Spain): concept and politics during the reigns of King Fernando I of Castile and Leon and his successors until 1230". Walls, Ramparts, and Lines of Demarcation: Selected Studies from Antiquity to Modern Times. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 67. ISBN 978-3-8258-9478-8 ,
  4. Versteegh, Kees (1 Ianuarii 1990). "The Arab Presence in France and Switzerland in the 10Th Century". Arabica 37 (3): 359–388 .
  5. Wenner, Manfred W. (Augustus 1980). "The Arab/Muslim Presence in Medieval Central Europe". International Journal of Middle East Studies 12 (1): 59–79 .

Andalusia

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