RodericRoderic (in Spanish Rodrigo), was the last king of the Visigoths (710 - 711). He deposed the previous king, Achila, and took control of Toledo. Roderic's rivals fled to Septa (Ceuta) on the African shore, the African Pillar of Hercules, which was where the Visigothic dispossessed foregathered, where Arians and Jews fled to avoid forced conversions at the hands of the Catholic bishops that controlled the Visigothic monarchy. The surrounding area of the maghreb had recently been conquered by Musa Ibn Nosseyr, who established his governor, Tariq ibn Ziyad, at Tangier with an Arab army of 1700 men. Julian, the lord of Septa, whom the Arabs called Ilyan, was Roderic's vassal but also on increasingly good terms with Tariq. The Egyptian historian of the Arab conquest, Ibn Abd-el-Hakem, related a century and a half later that Julian had sent one of his daughters to the Visigothic court at Toledo for education (and as a gauge for Julian's loyalty, no doubt) and that Roderic had made her pregnant. Later ballads and chronicles inflated this tale and attributed Julian's enmity to this, but personal power politics may have played a larger part. "He sent to Tariq, saying, 'I will bring thee to Andalus'" (the Arab name for the area the Visigoths still called by its Roman name Baetica). In the spring of 711, while Roderic was busy subduing rebellions in the far northern town of Pamplona, Tariq, briefed by Julian, whom he left behind among the merchants, crossed the Straits with a reconnaissance force of some 1700 men, sailing by night and keeping their force inconspicuous: "the people of Andalus did not observe them, thinking that the vessels crossing and recrossing were similar to the trading vessels which for their benefit plied backwards and forwards" Ibn Abd-el-Hakem reported. Tariq and his men marched up as far as Cartagena on the coast, then to Cordoba, where the local garrison despised his small band at first, but were soundly beaten and driven back to the city.
External link\n*Medieval Sourcebook: Ibn Abd-el-Hakem: The Islamic Conquest of Spain \n Category:Spanish people |
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