Siege of Algeciras (1369)
The Siege of Algeciras (1369) was undertaken during the period of the Reconquest of Spain by Muhammed V, Sultan of Granada to reclaim the city of Al-Hadra Al-Yazirat, called Algeciras by the Christians, in the Kingdom of Castile. The siege lasted just three days, and the sultan was victorious. The Muslims thus regained a major city which had been in Castilian hands since Alfonso XI of Castile took it from the Moroccans after the long 1342-1344 siege. Ten years after the capture of the city, in 1379 the sultan of Granada decided to completely destroy the city to prevent it falling into Christian hands. It was impossible to defend the place at a time when the Muslim kings of the Iberian Peninsula had lost much of military power they enjoyed in earlier centuries.
Siege of Algeciras (1369) | |||||||
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Part of the Reconquista | |||||||
Bridge of access to Al-Yazirat Al-Hadra | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Emirate of Granada | Kingdom of Castile | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Muhammad V | Henry II | ||||||
Algeciras |
Background
The city of Al-Hadra Al-Yazirat was the first city founded by the Muslims under Tariq ibn Ziyad in the Iberian Peninsula on the ruins of the Roman city of Iulia Traducta.[1] During the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries it had been held by the rulers of Granada and of Morocco. In was conquered by Alfonso XI of Castile in the Siege of Algeciras (1342–1344).[2] Castilian control of the city of Algeciras was important in giving control of the Strait of Gibraltar to the Christian kingdoms.
However, the death of Alfonso XI during the siege of Gibraltar in 1350 resulted in a civil war between the two successors to the throne of Castile, Peter and Henry II of Castile. Muhammed V of Granada had embarked on a policy of friendship with Castile, supporting Peter as the legitimate heir to the throne.[3] Relations with Aragon however were not as friendly, and the Aragonese supported the proclamation of Muhammed VI as ruler of Granada between 1359 and 1362.[3]
The return of Muhammed V in 1362 and his support of Peter caused closer relations between Aragon and Henry. The end of the Spanish civil war after Peter died in 1369 convinced the Granadans of the need to secure their borders with Castile and regain control of the Strait of Gibraltar. The Moorish king now engaged with the king of Portugal, Fernando I, against Henry, who he felt was the usurper of the throne of Castile. Muhammed V would attack Algeciras while the Portuguese would attack various sites in Galicia.[4]
Siege
On 28 July 1369 Muhammed V appeared with a large army at the gates of the city of Algeciras.[5] The siege was established by erecting siege towers and deploying his soldiers around the perimeter of the city. Algeciras at this time consisted of two separate towns separated by the Río de la Miel. Each town had its own walls with strong towers and gateways. After the previous siege many of the city walls had been destroyed or severely weakened, so the Spaniards had to strengthen various sections.
The rushed rebuilding left much to be desired compared to the original fabric of the thirteenth century Moorish defenses. Thus the main gate of the city, the Puerta del Fonsario, which had suffered most of the attacks by trebuchets during the siege of Alfonso XI, was rebuilt in part with a weak wall of mortar. The combination of decreased physical defenses and a small garrison for the town after movement of troops to the north caused the Muslim siege to be devastating for the city.
The attacks focused at first on the Villa Nueva, the southern of the two towns. The soldiers of Muhammed V mounted numerous siege engines, used high ladders to scale the walls and assaulted the city. There were few defenders within the town and Villa Nueva, called al-Binya by the Moors, fell on 30 July. All its inhabitants were slaughtered.[6]
Capitulation
The terror caused by the fall of the southern town and the conviction that no reinforcements would arrive from Castile forced the decision to deliver the besieged city before suffering more casualties. The mayor of the Villa Vieja, Alonso Fernández Portocarrero, third Lord of Moguer,[7] asked the king of Granada to grant safe conduct to the inhabitants to leave the city with their most valuable possessions.[8] After just three days of siege in which the Nazarites siege weapons were used more as a threat than a real attempt to open a breach, the Spanish defenders of Algeciras surrendered their weapons.[9]
On 31 July Muhammed V's troops entered the Villa Vieja of the city, letting its occupants leave with the belongings they could carry. The Cathedral of Algeciras, the former Mosque, was returned to Islamic worship, and the king of Granada occupied the ancient fortress located in the Cerro de Matagorda.[10] The impact on morale of the people of Granada of the reconquest of Al-Hadra Al-Yazirat is evidenced in the many chronicles made in Granada praising the king's military operation.[11]
Nasrid control
After the capture of the city, Muhammed V rebuilt the defenses and installed a garrison. For ten years the city remained in the hands of Granada, but without achieving the importance it had in the past. The Kingdom of Granada was no longer an important military or economic power in the peninsula, so the main value of Algeciras as a port for entry of North African troops and trade was diminished. No notable events happened in connection with the city, which almost disappeared from written sources.
In 1379 Henry II of Castile died and was succeeded by his son Juan I. The Christian kingdoms prepared for a new phase of the reconquest. In these circumstances, the Moorish kingdom considered consolidating its border with Castille.[12] In the Bay of Algeciras there were two port cities, Algeciras and Gibraltar. Despite the strength of Algeciras, Gibraltar was easier to defend because of the natural defenses. Algeciras on the other hand had more than 5,000 metres (16,000 ft) of walls, needing many more soldiers for defense.[12]
Destruction of the city
The choice was clear. The city of Al-Yazirat had to be abandoned so Granada could concentrate future defensive efforts on nearby Gibraltar. Abandonment of the city should be accompanied by the destruction of its fortifications to make them unusable if it were reoccupied by Castile.[12] Walls were dismantled, the port was blocked and the main buildings of Algeciras destroyed, including the palace and the fortress. The houses of the city were burned. The city remained in ruins until 1704, when the capture of Gibraltar by the British forced the original population of that city to take refuge in the ruins of the old Algeciras.[13]
References
Citations
- Montero 1860.
- Crónica de Alfonso Onceno.
- V.V.A.A. 1981, p. 464.
- López de Coca Castañer 2004.
- Viguera 2000.
- Torremocha Silva 1999, p. 316.
- González Gómez 1976.
- Torremocha Silva 1999, p. 317.
- Torremocha Silva 2002, p. 320.
- de Igartuburu 1847, p. 120.
- Martínez Enamorado 2009.
- Torremocha Silva 2002.
- Madoz 1849, p. 567.
Sources
- Colección de las crónicas y memórias de los reyes de Castilla: Crónica de D. Alfonso el Onceno. En la imprenta de A. de Sancha. 1787. Retrieved 6 May 2013.
- de Igartuburu, Luis (1847). Manual de la provincia de Cádiz: Trata de sus límites, su categoría, sus divisiones en lo Civil, Judicial, militar i eclesiástico para la Protección I Seguridad Pública. Imprenta de la revista médica.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- González Gómez, Antonio (1976). Moguer en la Baja Edad Media. Diputación Provincial de Huelva. ISBN 84-500-1614-2.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Lafuente y Alcántara, Emilio (1860). Inscripciones árabes de Granada: Precedidas de una reseña histórica y de la genealogía detallada de los Reyes Alahmares. Imprenta Nacional.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- López de Coca Castañer, José Enrique (2004). "El papel de Granada en las relaciones castellano-portuguesas (1369-1492)". U.N.E.D., Espacio, tiempo y forma. Serie III, historia medieval. 17.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Madoz, Pascual (1849). Diccionario geográfico-estadístico-histórico de España y sus posesiones de Ultramar. Imprenta del diccionario geográfico.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Martínez Enamorado, Virgilio (2009). "La espada de protocolo del sultán nazarí Muhammed V". www.alyamiah.com. Retrieved 14 January 2009.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Montero, Francisco María (1860). Historia de Gibraltar y de su campo. Imprenta de la Revista médica.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Torremocha Silva, Antonio (1999). Al-Binya, La Ciudad Palatina Meriní de Algeciras. Algeciras: Fundación municipal de cultura Jose Luis Cano. ISBN 978-84-89227-20-0.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Torremocha Silva, Antonio (2002). Congreso internacional la ciudad en Al-andalus y el Magreb. Excelentísimo Ayuntamiento de Algeciras, Fundación El Legado Andalusí, Consejería de Cultura (Junta de Andalucía). p. 454. ISBN 8493205176.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- Viguera, María Jesús; et al. (2000). El reino nazarí de Granada (1232-1492). Espasa-Calpe. ISBN 8423989151.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
- V.V.A.A. (1981). Los trastámara y la unidad española: 1369-1517. Ediciones Rialp. ISBN 8432121002.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)