Editor’s note: The following account is excerpted and adapted from the author’s new book, Sword and Scimitar: Fourteen Centuries of War between Islam and the West.
Exactly 1,300 years ago, in the year 718, a little remembered kingdom was born in and led to the liberation of Spain from Islamic occupation.
To appreciate its significance, we must travel back seven years earlier, to 711, when Arabs and Africans, both under the banner of Islam, “godlessly invaded Spain to destroy it,” to quote from the Chronicle of 754. Once on European soil, they “ruined beautiful cities, burning them with fire; condemned lords and powerful men to the cross; and butchered youths and infants with the sword.”
After meeting and beating Spain’s Visigothic nobles at the pivotal Battle of Guadalete — “never was there in the West a more bloody battle than this,” wrote the Muslim chronicler al-Hakam, “for the Muslims did not withdraw their scimitars from them [Christians] for three days” — the invaders continued to penetrate northward into Spain, “not passing a place without reducing it, and getting possession of its wealth, for Allah Almighty had struck with terror the hearts of the infidels.”
Such terrorism was intentionally cultivated, in keeping with the Koran (3:151, 8:12, etc.). For instance, the invaders slaughtered, cooked, and pretended to eat Christian captives, while releasing others who, horrified, fled and “informed the people of Andalus [Spain] that the Muslims feed on human flesh,” thereby “contributing in no small degree to increase the panic of the infidels,” wrote al-Maqqari, another Muslim chronicler.
Contrary to the claim that Spain capitulated easily, that it reasoned that Muslim rule was no worse and possibly more lenient than that of the Visigoths, even Muslim chroniclers note how “the Christians defended themselves with the utmost vigor and resolution, and great was the havoc that they made in the ranks of the faithful.” In Córdoba, for example, a number of leading Visigoths and their people holed themselves up in a church. Although “the besieged had no hopes of deliverance, they were so obstinate that when safety was offered to them on condition either of embracing Islam, or paying jizya, they refused to surrender, and the church being set on fire, they all perished in the flames,” wrote al-Maqqari, adding that the ruins of this church became a place of “great veneration” for later generations of Spaniards because “of the courage and endurance displayed in the cause of their religion by the people who died in it.”
In the end, native Spaniards had two choices: acquiesce to Muslim rule or “flee to the mountains, where they risked hunger and various forms of death,” according to an early Christian chronicler.
Pelagius, better known as Pelayo (685–737), a relative of and “sword-bearer” to King Roderick, who survived Guadalete, followed both strategies. After the battle, he retreated north, where Muslim rule was still tenuous, but eventually consented to become a vassal of Munnuza, a local Muslim chief. Through some “stratagem,” Munnuza “married” Pelayo’s sister — a matter that the sword-bearer “by no means consented to,” according to the Chronicle of Alfonso III. Having expressed displeasure at the seizure of his sister, and having ceased paying jizya (tribute), Muslims were sent “to apprehend him treacherously” and bring him back “bound in chains.” Unable to fight the oncoming throng of Arabs and Africans “because they were so numerous,” Pelayo “climbed a mountain” and “joined himself to as many people as he found hastening to assemble.”
There, in the deepest recesses of the Asturian mountains — the only free spot left in the Iberian Peninsula — the assembled Christian fugitives declared Pelayo to be their new king. Thus the Kingdom of Asturias was born in 718.
“Hearing this, the king [the Muslim governor of Córdoba], moved by an insane fury, ordered a very large army from all over Spain to go forth” and bring the infidel rebels to heel. The invaders — 180,000 of them, if the chroniclers are to be believed — surrounded Pelayo’s mountain. They sent Oppa, a bishop or nobleman who had acquiesced to Muslim rule, to reason with him at the mouth of a deep cavern: “If when the entire army of the Goths was assembled, it was unable to sustain the attack of the Ishmaelites [at Guadalete], how much better will you be able to defend yourself on this mountaintop? To me it seems difficult. Rather, heed my warning and recall your soul from this decision, so that you may take advantage of many good things and enjoy the partnership of the Chaldeans [Arabs].”
“I will not associate with the Arabs in friendship nor will I submit to their authority,” Pelayo responded. Then the rebel made a prophecy that would be fulfilled over the course of nearly eight centuries: “Have you not read in the divine scriptures [e.g., Mark 4:30-21] that the church of God is compared to a mustard seed and that it will be raised up again through divine mercy?”
Oppa affirmed that it was so. The fugitive continued: “Christ is our hope that through this little mountain, which you see, the well-being of Spain and the army of the Gothic people will be restored. . . . Now, therefore, trusting in the mercy of Jesus Christ, I despise this multitude and am not afraid of it. As for the battle with which you threaten us, we have for ourselves an advocate in the presence of the Father, that is, the Lord Jesus Christ, who is capable of liberating us from these few.” (Here, in the Chronicle of Alfonso III, we have possibly the oldest record of the two sorts of Christians that developed under Muslim-occupied Spain: those who defied Islam and fled to the Asturian wilds, and those who accepted their lot and maneuvered within the system as subjugated dhimmis — and grumbled against their northern coreligionists for bringing Islam’s ire against them. The two will meet and compete again in centuries to come.)
There, at Covadonga — meaning “Cavern of the Lady” — battle commenced in the summer of 722. A shower of rocks rained down on the Muslims in the narrow passes, where their numbers counted for nothing and only caused confusion. Afterward, Pelayo and his band of rebels rushed forth from their caves and hiding places and made great slaughter among them; those who fled the carnage were tracked and mowed down by other, now emboldened, mountaineers. “A decisive blow was dealt at the Moorish power,” a 19th-century historian wrote. “The advancing tide of conquest was stemmed. The Spaniards gathered heart and hope in their darkest hour; and the dream of Moslem invincibility was broken.”
According to Reconquista historian Joseph O’Callaghan, “Covadonga became the symbol of Christian resistance to Islam and a source of inspiration to those who, in words attributed to Pelayo, would achieve the salus Spanie, the salvation of Spain.”
Several subsequent Muslim attempts, including three major campaigns, were made to conquer the Asturian kingdom, and the “Christians of the North scarcely knew the meaning of repose, security, or any of the amenities of life,” historian Louis Bertrand observed. Constant jihad raids created a wild frontier zone roughly along the Duero River; this became “a territory where one [a Muslim] fights for the faith,” one medieval Muslim wrote. As the great Ibn Khaldun affirmed, every Muslim ruler of Andalusia was obligated “to wage the jihad himself and with his armies at least once a year.”
The Muslims intentionally devastated the region — they later dubbed it “the Great Desert” — between them and Asturias. Bertrand elaborates:
To keep the [northern] Christians in their place it did not suffice to surround them with a zone of famine and destruction. It was necessary also to go and sow terror and massacre among them. Twice a year, in spring and autumn, an army sallied forth from Córdoba to go and raid the Christians, destroy their villages, their fortified posts, their monasteries and their churches, except when it was a question of expeditions of larger scope, involving sieges and pitched battles. In cases of simply punitive expeditions, the soldiers of the Caliph confined themselves to destroying harvests and cutting down trees. . . . If one bears in mind that this brigandage was almost continual, and that this fury of destruction and extermination was regarded as a work of piety — it was a holy war against infidels — it is not surprising that whole regions of Spain should have been made irremediably sterile. This was one of the capital causes of the deforestation from which the Peninsula still suffers. With what savage satisfaction and in what pious accents do the Arab annalists tell us of those at least biennial raids. A typical phrase for praising the devotion of a Caliph is this: “He penetrated into Christian territory, where he wrought devastation, devoted himself to pillage, and took prisoners.” . . . At the same time as they were devastated, whole regions were depopulated. . . . The prolonged presence of the Muslims, therefore, was a calamity for this unhappy country of Spain. By their system of continual raids they kept her for centuries in a condition of brigandage and devastation.
Even so, the mustard seed would not perish. “A vital spark was still alive,” Edward Gibbon wrote; “some invincible fugitives preferred a life of poverty and freedom in the Asturian valleys; the hardy mountaineers repulsed the slaves of the caliph.” Moreover, “all who were dissatisfied with Moorish dominion, all who clung to the hope of a Christian revival, all who detested Mahomet,” were drawn to the life of poverty and freedom, as 19th-century historian Henry Edward Watts put it. By the mid eighth century, the “vital spark” had spread to engulf the entire northwest of the Peninsula.
Over the next three centuries, a number of Christian kingdoms — Galicia, Leon, Castile, Navarre, Aragon, and Catalonia, whose significance and names morphed and changed with the vicissitudes of history — evolved from or alongside the Asturian mustard seed. They made slow but steady progress against the forces of Islam.
Finally, in 1085, and after nearly 400 years of Muslim occupation, the Christians recaptured the ancient Visigothic capital, Toledo. Over the next century, not one but two massive new invasions came from Africa, the first under the Almoravids, the second under the Almohads. Both were committed to the jihad (in ways that would make the Islamic State appear half-hearted). A tug of war between Christians and Muslims ensued until 1212, when the two forces met at the highly decisive battle of Las Navas de Tolosa. Victory went to the Christians: One by one, long-held Muslim cities were liberated by the victors: Córdoba, for centuries the capital of Muslim Spain, in 1236; Valencia in 1238; and Seville in 1248.
Just as Muslims had for centuries “purified” captured Christian towns and churches “from the filth of idolatry and . . . from the stains of infidelity and polytheism,” so now, tit for tat, Christian conquerors and clergymen engaged in elaborate ceremonies whereby mosques and cities were “cleansed of the filthiness of Muhammad” — a ubiquitous phrase in the chronicles of the conquest of Muslim cities — even as Muslim accounts lamented over “dwellings emptied of Islam” and over “mosques . . . wherein only bells and crosses may [now] be found.”
Only the remote Muslim kingdom of Granada, at the very southern tip of the Peninsula, remained. Surrounded by mountainous terrain and with the sea behind it, Granada was well fortified, inaccessible, and isolated from the rest of Iberia. Moreover, Christian infighting habitually flared out, as Castile, Aragon, and Portugal increasingly jockeyed for power.
On Christmas Day in 1481, Granadan Muslims stormed a nearby Christian fortress and slaughtered all present. King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella declared war, so that “Christendom might be delivered from this continued threat at the gates,” as they explained, and “these infidels of the kingdom of Granada [might be] ejected and expelled from Spain” once and for all. After a decade of military campaigns and sieges, Granada finally surrendered, on January 2, 1492.
“After so much labor, expense, death, and shedding of blood,” sang the monarchs, “this kingdom of Granada, which was occupied for over seven hundred and eighty years by the infidels,” had been liberated. And it all came to pass thanks to Pelayo’s Asturian mustard seed, planted 1,300 years ago this year.
Dan Knight says
If only we had leaders like Peyalo … and the follower to follow him.
Erica Ling says
It could never happen now. Instead we must call convocations to discuss the human rights of the transgressor, his reasons for his antisocial actions, his childhood, rearing, external pressure, especially any actions of ours which may have adversely influenced him, lack of opportunity to improve himself, and how our every action proposed would infringe those rights and probably offend his sensibilities. Our representatives would then enjoy a good meal at public expense, jostle for pole position in an iconic group photo depicting their solidarity, and disperse.
Texas Patriot says
There is only one reason that Muslims make war on the rest of the world. They believe they will be damned by Allah for eternity if they don’t. Otherwise, they are wonderful people, no less gifted and full of potential for making great contributions to the future of the world than anyone else.
Erica Ling says
Now perhaps if you could convince Our Leaders and Elite that Islam itself ( or the interpretation ) is the root of the dissonance between our cultures, you would deserve an award worthier than the rather debased Nobel Peace Medal.
Texas Patriot says
The truth is apparent for all to see in the written ideology and history of Islamic jihad, and those writings may be found, in Arabic, in libraries throughout the Muslim world. If anyone deserves an award for bringing that truth to light today, it is Raymond Ibrahim, who can speak both English and Arabic fluently.
Erica Ling says
Respects to Mr. Ibrahim, but, Patriot, he would be the first to point out that you can take a horse to water but………. The truth about Israel is in the public domain, yet the lies, the libel, and deliberate distortion of truth persists regarding that state. Truth becomes irrelevant when it clashes with ideology, whether Islamic or liberal. I don’t know if you have this in America, but we have a website from our government, where I can follow and be alerted to chosen subjects under discussion in parliament or parliamentarians I want to keep an eye on, like my MP, or a particularly rabid anti Israel peer. Anyway, the ignorance displayed by some of them re. Islam or Israel is pretty appalling. You believe they don’t know or have access to the truth ? The truth is inconvenient or inconsistent with the policy / dogma.
Texas Patriot says
No worries. The truth always has a way of bubbling to the surface over time. Things will work out. Truth will prevail. And once again, a more rational approach to the realities of life will be found.
Erica Ling says
I admire your faith / optimism. Salud !
8ball says
Muslims are wonderful people who believe in an insane fantasy. Your sarcasm is compelling.
Texas Patriot says
No sarcasm intended. As Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and John Jay reported to Congress in 1786, Muslims who believe and practice their faith with honesty and integrity are not insane, but rather sincere followers of a belief system that requires them to make war on non-Muslims everywhere. To the Marxist/Nihilist/Materialist mindset now prevalent in so much of Western Civilization, all religion is a form of “mental illness”.
8ball says
I revise my opinion and put you down as completely incoherent. Thank you for clarifying.
Texas Patriot says
You’re welcome. And I thank you for clarifying your view of the world. As I stated before, to the Marxist/Nihilist/Materialist view of the world, all belief systems other than those based on observable and verifiable reality are “completely incoherent” and therefore an obvious form of mental illness. But to the true scientists such as Isaac Newton and Albert Einstein, the parts of reality that are observable and verifiable by us are only the tip of the iceberg, and the vast and far greater realms of reality, both at the micro and macro levels, are completely unknown and unknowable by us except as permitted by our instruments of observation and verification, which continue to evolve. Religion provides a way of responding to the unknown and uncertain parts of reality that are beyond human understanding, and different religions have different ways of doing that. Sorry if that’s too hard for you to understand.
St. Hahn says
Except that with all that ‘potential’, a quality all humans possess, they have not made great contributions and appear to excel in doing quite the opposite. This is due to many things but mostly due to their submission to Allah which is a form of self imposed stasis.
Texas Patriot says
As you say, all people everywhere are born with the potential of doing great things and making great contributions for the future benefit of themselves and others. Thereafter, it’s the choices we make that determine what kind of future we create. The future potential of mankind is basically unlimited. If our culture and belief systems are holding us back, we need to create a new culture and a new belief system, and there’s always room for improvement in that regard. The key is finding a good foundation to build on, and there has never been a better foundation for the future than Jesus Christ.
Dan Knight says
An excellent summation …
Texas Patriot says
Great story. Really forward to your book.
St. Hahn says
So many people today just don’t know the history, so for your work Raymond we are grateful. I was in Cordoba recently and did not even know to look for any historical references to these battles and sieges. I have pre-ordered the book in part so that next time I’ll will.
Don Pascucci says
Question for all commentators and Raymond:
Would it be accurate to say that the Ottoman Empire (being an extension of Islam and Mohamed’s initial conquests) has been the bloodiest, cruelest, most oppressive empire of all those that we have historical knowlege of?
I understand with our modern warfare we were able to kill more people in a short time, but that was a good vs evil situation and a war of necessity against totalitarianism in WW2 and 1 as well.
I realize that the East Asian regimes could be quite brutal also.
The Roman Empire brought the Pax Romana and rights to it’s citizens, even from the conquered countries who became citizens and they were allowed to worship their own gods and have rulers of their own peoples.
Welcome all comments, high school ed here.
Dan Knight says
A question has to be posed though: Bloodiest, cruelest, and most oppressive in what sense?
The Aztecs slaughtered tens of thousands of their neighbors to appease their gods, and their bloody, cruel, and oppressive rule was what ended their empire. But their Empire did not last long, and did not kill millions.
Then there’s the Emperor Chin who conquered China and established a bureaucracy over the nation – and burned most of the libraries in the country. While we have no real way of knowing how bloody or cruel he was – though we can guess since the ensuing economic depression lasted for a century or more – the oppression of the Chinese people continues uninterrupted to this day. One could even argue that Mao’s Cultural Revolution and Great Leap Forward were both nothing more than echoes of Chin’s Empire with a French commie panache to add a touch of Lefty class to the bloodshed.
Or what of the Soviet Union? The Communists spread slaughter and oppression the way Starbucks spreads overpriced lattes. Their work continues to this day as True Believers continue to base their decisions upon lies spawned by the Comintern. The Communists could be given credit for the mass slaughters of their puppets in SE Asia, and Africa, but in turn they too could be the successors of either the Tzars’ criminal Empire, or a continuation of the ‘revolution’ started by the Jacobins, or both.
Just sharin’
Don Pascucci says
Just saw this Dan. You’re definitlely more educated than I but not an answer that brings any clarity. It seems the absolute brutality of the Islamic conquests is worse and hasn’t mitigated over time. Understanding war in anciet times was itself unsanitized and brutal, with genocides as a common practice, gives me pause in thinking Islam as the worst. Perhaps no one can say for sure.
It’s enough to realize Islam is now a force to be reckoned with and be ready as a nation and culture.
Dan Knight says
Hi Don. No criticism intended, but I was not really answering the question.
Just wanted to explore the ways of interpreting it since I wasn’t sure which way to go with it. Many of us run into a wall – and whoever mans that wall is our Enemy. Sometimes it’s appropriate, and sometimes it’s not. One has to have a reference point to rank things or set priorities.
According to all of the archeology I’ve read, ancient warfare between early nations was little short of genocide.
Islam, though, takes this a step farther: It is a Borg-like ideology, which absorbs and replaces everything it does not destroy or kill.
I don’t think I can definitively answer your original question. Not sure who can. But I believe you’re right about Islam.
Islam surely is in many ways the most brutal political-economic-religious ideology known to Man – that has managed to become common enough to consume a substantial population.
Have a great week!
Dan Knight says
PS … I don’t know anything more about this topic than you do Don. I’ve got 3 degrees – but those are engineering and law – not history, comparative religion, or cultural anthropology. Don’t let anyone buffalo you with 25 dollar words. LOL.
Menseismal says
History repeats itself.
After nearly 800 years of rule in various parts of Spain, Isabella and Ferdinand eventually expelled the Moors in 1492. With welcoming so many unvetted ‘refugees’ into the country, will it happen again?
They are of course not the only Western country that has not learned from history.