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- Q685757 subject Q6434444.
- Q685757 subject Q7468596.
- Q685757 subject Q7690074.
- Q685757 subject Q8100626.
- Q685757 subject Q8100714.
- Q685757 subject Q8760979.
- Q685757 subject Q9535650.
- Q685757 abstract "The rebellion of the Alpujarras of 1568–71 was the second such revolt against the Castilian Crown in the mountainous Alpujarra region. The rebels were Moriscos, the nominally Catholic descendants of the Mudéjares (Muslims under Castilian rule) following the first rebellion of the Alpujarras (1499–1501).By the 15th century, the Reconquest of Spain by the Catholic powers had left only the Kingdom of Granada, part of Andalucia in southern Spain, in the hands of the Moors. In 1492 Granada city fell to the "Catholic Monarchs"—Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabel of Castile—and under the terms of capitulation the whole region came under Christian rule.However, the Muslim inhabitants of the city soon revolted against Christian rule in 1499, followed by the mountain villages: this revolt was suppressed fairly quickly, by 1501. The Muslims under Christian rule (until then known as Mudejares) were then obliged to convert to Christianity, becoming a nominally Catholic population known as "Moriscos").Discontent among the new "Moriscos" led to a second rebellion, led by a Morisco known as Aben Humeya, starting in December 1568 and lasting till March 1571. This violent conflict took place mainly in the mountainous Alpujarra region, on the southern slopes of the Sierra Nevada, between Granada city and the Mediterranean coast and is often known as the War of the Alpujarras.Most of the Morisco population was then expelled from the Kingdom of Granada and was dispersed throughout the Kingdom of Castille (modern day Castile, Extremadura and Andalusia). As this left many mountain villages in Granada almost empty, Catholic resettlers were brought in from other parts of the country.Between 1609 and 1614, the Spanish Crown undertook the expulsion of the Moriscos from all over Spain. Very few then were taken from the Kingdom of Granada, as most of them had been expelled already.".
- Q685757 thumbnail Rebelión_de_Las_Alpujarras.png?width=300.
- Q685757 wikiPageExternalLink moriscosofspaint00leahuoft.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q126851.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q157107.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q1796202.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q186851.
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- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q217196.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q22948744.
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- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q34417.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q554265.
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- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q5783.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q622783.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q6434444.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q661868.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q6772715.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q695536.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q7468596.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q7690074.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q79791.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q8100626.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q8100714.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q8760979.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q8810.
- Q685757 wikiPageWikiLink Q9535650.
- Q685757 comment "The rebellion of the Alpujarras of 1568–71 was the second such revolt against the Castilian Crown in the mountainous Alpujarra region. The rebels were Moriscos, the nominally Catholic descendants of the Mudéjares (Muslims under Castilian rule) following the first rebellion of the Alpujarras (1499–1501).By the 15th century, the Reconquest of Spain by the Catholic powers had left only the Kingdom of Granada, part of Andalucia in southern Spain, in the hands of the Moors.".
- Q685757 label "Rebellion of the Alpujarras (1568–71)".
- Q685757 depiction Rebelión_de_Las_Alpujarras.png.