`I recommend this study for those of us who have been confused by this enigmatic period; neither Dozy, nor Lévi-Provençal, nor Sánchez Albornoz has been able to clear it up satisfactorily. At last we have some help in this process'
T. B. Irving, Cedar Rapids, Iowa
`the author sets out to demonstrate posterity's misapprehension of the matter by confronting his readers with a mass of numismatic and genealogical evidence, to stunning effect'
Times Literary Supplement
'A product of extensive reading and critical scrutiny, the book offers arguments which, even when challengeable, are lucid and well sustained, and, ... it does tie up many hitherto loose strands of taifa history. Wasserstein has ... produced an indispensable resource for all serious students of Muslim Spain.'
J.D. Latham, Victoria University of Manchester, The International History Review, XVI, 3:August 1994
his work will be essential reading for future writers on the Taifa kingdoms or the coins of al-Andalus.
Early Medieval Europe
an important, and as it proves, highly welcome event for readers of this journal...admirable judicious study.
The Chesterton Review
David Wasserstein has been able to put to good use his knowledge of Iberian Islamic numismatics ... the use of numismatic evidence both to corroborate and refute statements from the primary written sources is a very welcome and much-needed innovation for historians of al-Andalus. David Wasserstein must be thanked for focusing this rather neglected area of Islamic historiography.
Journal of Semitic Studies
learned monograph.
Journal of Interdisciplinary History
it is a consistent and detailed piece of scholarship which deserves wide credit
Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, Vol. 59, No. 1 '96
This is an important book, and if Wasserstein's arguments are generally accepted (they certainly convince me), then we will come to look quite differently on the eleventh century ... an essential tool for the numismatist ... Of this historical study they are a necessary, but nevertheless odd, component.
L.P. Harvey, Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies, Bulletin of Hispanic Studies, LXXIII, No. 2 (April)