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Conquest of Zaragoza (1118)

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Conquest of Zaragoza (1118)
Part of the Reconquista

Conquest of Zaragoza
Date1118
Location
Result Christian victory
Belligerents
Kingdom of Aragon
Kingdom of Navarre
Viscounty of Béarn
Almoravid dynasty
Commanders and leaders
Alfonso the Battler
Gaston IV
Centule II
Ali ibn Yusuf
Strength
Unknown Unknown

The Conquest of Zaragoza of 1118 was a military operation led by Alfonso I the Battler, king of Aragón and Pamplona, who It allowed him to take the city of Zaragoza from the Almoravids.

History

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The city, which had once been the capital of the Taifa of Zaragoza,[1] had about 25,000 inhabitants counting its periphery.[2] It had been previously besieged by Alfonso VI of León in 1086, by Sancho Ramírez in 1091,[1] and by Alfonso I of Aragon himself in 1110.[3] Within the attacking contingent there were, in addition to Aragonese, French, Castilian, Navarrese, and Catalan, beginning the siege in May 1118.[4] Together with the Aragonese king, who joined the siege once it had begun, nobles such as Gastón de Béarn fought or Centule II, Count of Bigorre.[5] The monk Pedro de Librana carried the indulgence papal,[6] granted by the pontiff Gelasius II in December 1118.[7]

The small defending Almoravid contingent, which lacked a leader after the death of Governor Ibn Tifilwit in 1116, received external support from troops commanded by the Granada governor Abd Allah. ibn Mazdali,[7] who died on November 16, demoralizing the defending troops.[8] These capitulated on December 11, 1118, and the Christian troops triumphantly entered the city on the 18th of that month.[4] Despite the abundant siege weapons arranged by the army of Alfonso I during the siege, the capitulation of the city must have been more due to the hunger suffered by the besieged.[9] The Christians also suffered from hunger, leaving part of the siege of the Frankish troops.[7]

After the conquest of Zaragoza, Alfonso I proceeded to continue the military campaign, with the conquest of Tudela and Tarazona the following year.[10] Also as a result of the taking of the city, the city of Jaca would lose political importance.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b Lafuente, 1998 p. 56
  2. ^ Ramírez, 2014 p. 19
  3. ^ Lafuente, 1998 pp. 57-58
  4. ^ a b Lafuente, 1998 p. 59
  5. ^ Mouton, 1980 p. 61
  6. ^ Arteta, 1957 p. 60
  7. ^ a b c Stalls, 1995 p. 39
  8. ^ Guichard, 2001 p. 96
  9. ^ Montserrat, 1958 pp.237-238
  10. ^ Corbera, 2005 p. 128
  11. ^ Mouton, 1980 p. 17

Bibliography

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  • Mouton, García (1980). "The French in Aragon" (PDF). Zaragoza: Archive of Aragonese philology. pp. 7–98. ISSN 0210-5624.
  • Montserrat, Grau (1958). "Contribution to the study of the cultural state of the Ebro valley in the 11th century and early 12th century". Barcelona: Bulletin of the Royal Academy of Good Letters of Barcelona. ISSN 2340-3241.
  • Guichard, Pierre (2001). Al-Andalus facing the Christian conquest: the Muslims of Valencia, centuries. Madrid and Valencia: New Library; University of Valencia. ISBN 84-7030-852-1.
  • Corbera, Laliena (2005). Frontier and feudal conquest in the Ebro valley from a local perspective (Tauste, Zaragoza, 1086-1200). Salamanca: Universidad de Salamanca. pp. 115–138. ISSN 0213-2060.
  • Stalls (1995). Possessing the Land: Aragon's Expansion Into Islam's Ebro Frontier Under Alfonso the Battler, 1104-1134. Leiden, New York and Cologne: The Medieval Mediterranean. ISBN 90-04-10367-8. ISSN 0928-5520.