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Chapter One. The Defeat Of The Crown Of Aragon
2010The anonymous continuator of the Chanson captured a poignant moment well. Dalmau had fled the battle, and, as King James would later recall, not just Dalmau but many others besides had fled, including from Catalonia, Hug de Mataplana, Guillem dHorta and Berenguer de Castellbisbal. The battle of Muret, as we have seen, was not just a minor incident, not
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Chapter Five. Inquisitions In The Crown Of Aragon
2010The institution which would, very much later, come to be mythologized as the Inquisition was first established in the Iberian Peninsula as a response to the heretics and the Waldensians who had first appeared in the lands of the crown of Aragon in the later twelfth century.
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Captivity and Diplomacy in the Late Medieval Crown of Aragon
2013This chapter examines the taking of captives between Muslims and Christians as more than just a politically disruptive and individually shattering event. It argues that captivity was instrumental to the foreign policy and diplomatic maneuvering of Aragonese kings because negotiations with their Muslim counterparts over captivity created a framework for
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Dominicans, Muslims and Jews in the Medieval Crown of Aragon
2009With their active apostolate of preaching and teaching, Dominican friars were important promoters of Latin Christianity in the borderlands of medieval Spain and North Africa. Historians have long assumed that their efforts to convert or persecute non-Christian populations played a major role in worsening relations between Christians, Muslims and Jews ...
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Private Banking and Financial Networks in the Crown of Aragon during the Fourteenth Century
Research in Economic History, 2021Albert Reixach Sala
exaly

