CREATING CHRISTIAN GRANADA PROVIDES A RICHLY DETAILED EXAMINATION OF A
CRITICAL AND TRANSITIONAL EPISODE IN SPAIN'S MARCH TO GLOBAL EMPIRE.
The city of Granada—Islam's final bastion on the Iberian
peninsula—surrendered to the control of Spain's "Catholic Monarchs"
Isabella and Ferdinand on January 2, 1492. Over the following century,
Spanish state and Church officials, along with tens of thousands of
Christian immigrant settlers, transformed the formerly Muslim city
into a Christian one.
With constant attention to situating the Granada case in the broader
comparative contexts of the medieval reconquista tradition on the one
hand and sixteenth-century Spanish imperialism in the Americas on the
other, Coleman carefully charts the changes in the conquered city's
social, political, religious, and physical landscapes. In the process,
he sheds light on the local factors contributing to the emergence of
tensions between the conquerors and Granada's formerly Muslim,
"native" morisco community in the decades leading up to the
crown-mandated expulsion of most of the city's moriscos in
1569–1570.
Despite the failure to assimilate the moriscos, Granada's status as a
frontier Christian community under construction fostered among much of
the immigrant community innovative religious reform ideas and programs
that shaped in direct ways a variety of church-wide reform movements
in the era of the ecumenical Council of Trent (1545–1563). Coleman
concludes that the process by which reforms of largely Granadan origin
contributed significantly to transformations in the Church as a whole
forces a reconsideration of traditional "top-down" conceptions of
sixteenth-century Catholic reform.
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Society and Religious Culture in an Old-World Frontier City, 1492–1600
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780801468766
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Cornell University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter