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Summary Of: Moorish

Elizabethan painting of the Moorish Ambassador who visited Queen Elizabeth I of England from Barbary in 1600 to propose an... Elizabethan painting of the Moorish Ambassador who visited Queen Elizabeth I of England from Barbary in 1600 to propose an... Elizabethan painting of the Moorish Ambassador who visited Queen Elizabeth I of England from... showing the Moorish kingdoms after the fall of Rome... showing the Moorish kingdoms after the fall of Rome... showing the Moorish kingdoms after the fall of... The Moorish state fell into... Reconstruction of costumes of Moorish nobility from a German book published in 1880... Reconstruction of costumes of Moorish nobility from a German book published in 1880... Reconstruction of costumes of Moorish nobility from a German book published in 1880... This second stage started an era of Moorish rulers guided by a version of Islam that left behind the tolerant practices of the... Moorish Iberia excelled in city planning...

Encyclodia Page On: Moorish

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A self-depiction by the Muslims in Iberia. Taken from the "Tale of Bayad and Riyad" | | Tale of Bayad and Riyad | The Almoravides dynasty, c. 1100 CE.  At the dynasty's greatest expanse of control, a succession of Moroccan-based states strongly affected culture from modern Senegal to Iberia. | | Almoravides | Muslim | Berber | Arab | North Africa | Iberian Peninsula | Al Andalus | Spain | Portugal | Berbers | Arabs | Muslim Iberians | Spanish language | Portuguese | moreno | tanned | dark or brown-skinned | brown | black | hair color | skin | eye color | Brunette | North Africa | late Medieval | Rashidun | Umayyad | Umayyad conquest of Hispania | Mauritania | Sahara | West African | Senegal River | Classical Romans | Mauritania | Algeria | Classical literature | Mauri | European | Hassaniya | Mauritania | Algeria | western Sahara | Morocco | Niger | Mali | Islamic Republic of Mauritania | colonial rule | Philippines | European languages | Morrocan ethnicity | pejorative | North Africa | citation needed | Elizabethan painting of the Moorish Ambassador who visited Queen Elizabeth I of England from Barbary in 1600 to propose an alliance against Spain. | | Barbary | Greek | Latin | Romance languages | Portuguese | Spanish | French | Italian | root | nominalization | Moreno | Cuba | Spanish-speaking countries | Portuguese speaking | Brazil | black person | mulatto | moros | Mindanao | Philippines | moriscos | Granada | citation needed | Milanese | Ludovico Il Moro | Almoravids | citation needed | Eastern Hemisphere in 476AD, showing the Moorish kingdoms after the fall of Rome. | | Rome | Numidian | 3rd century BC | Algeria | Strabo | Carthage | Phoenicians | Punic war | Rome | Numidian | Syphax | Masinissa | Zama | Jugurtha | Juba | Roman Empire | Mauretania Caesariensis | Mauretania Tingitana | Africa | Tertullian | St. Augustine | the fall of Rome | Germanic kingdom | Vandals | Byzantine | Arab | Kahina | lunar year | Hijra | Muslims | Al-Andalus | Progress of the Reconquista (790-1300). | | Reconquista | Visigothic | Christian | Hispania | general | Tariq ibn-Ziyad | Pyrenees | Frank | Charles Martel | Battle of Poitiers | civil conflict | Iberian peninsula | Asturias | Covadonga | Basque regions | native Iberian inhabitants converted to Islam | Catholicism | Reconquista | fiefdoms | taifas | Caliphate of Cordoba | Asturias | Navarre | Galicia | León | Portugal | Aragón | Catalonia | Marca Hispanica | Castile | Reconquista | Reconstruction of costumes of Moorish nobility from a German book published in 1880 | | Alfonso VIII of Castile | 1249 | Algarve | Arabic | Al-Gharb | Afonso III | King of Portugal and the Algarve | Granada | Alhambra | January 2 | 1492 | Spain | Ferdinand II of Aragon | Isabella I of Castile | Catholic Monarchs | Inquisition in Spain | marranos | moriscos | Aragon | Valencia | Andalusia | India | Malayan peninsula | Indonesia | Mindanao | archipelago | New World | Magellan | Las Islas de Filipinas | Philip II of Spain | kris | Moros | Muslims | Spanish language | Portuguese language | Reconquista | Maure | Richard A. Fletcher | Arabs | Berbers | Italian | Spanish | French | Portuguese | Romanian | Hassaniya | Mauritania | Algeria | western Sahara | Morocco | Niger | Mali | Azawagh | Spanish | Portuguese | Portuguese | Alentejo | Algarve | enchanted | Philippines | Muslim Filipino | Portuguese colonization | Sri Lanka | Portuguese Ceylon | Sri Lankan Moors | List of Berbers | List of Arab scientists and scholars | Aureus of Macrinus. Its elaborate symbolism celebrates the liberalitas ("prodigality") of Macrinus and his son. | | Aureus | liberalitas | Tariq ibn Ziyad, Berber general who conquered Hispania in 711. | | Tariq ibn Ziyad | conquered Hispania | Ibn Battuta, Berber explorer who travelled 73,000 miles across much of the Old World in the 14th century. | | Ibn Battuta | Old World | Lusius Quietus | Iudaea | Trajan | Parthian | Babylonia | Macrinus | Caracalla | Gildo | rebellion | Roman Empire | Tariq ibn Ziyad | Berber general | Visigoths | conquered Hispania | Al-Mansur | Caliph | Abbasid Caliphate | Abd ar-Rahman I | Umayyad | Córdoba | Caliphate of Córdoba | Islamic Spain | Abbas Ibn Firnas | Berber inventor | aviator | parachute | flight | hang glider | Maslamah Ibn Ahmad al-Majriti | Encyclopedia of the Brethren of Purity | Picatrix | Abu al-Qasim al-Zahrawi | Andalusian physician | surgery | Al-Tasrif | Constantine the African | Arabic-Latin translator | Greek | Islamic medicine | Christian Europe | Abū Ishāq Ibrāhīm al-Zarqālī | Andalusian astronomer | equitorium | astrolabe | almanac | Zij | Tables of Toledo | Ibn Bajjah | Andalusian physicist | polymath | reaction | classical mechanics | Ibn Zuhr | parasites | experimental | Muhammad al-Idrisi | Moorish geographer | Tabula Rogeriana | Ibn Tufail | Arabic writer | Hayy ibn Yaqdhan | philosophical novel | Ibn Rushd | classical Islamic philosopher | The Incoherence of the Incoherence | Aristotelian | Averroism | Ibn al-Baitar | Andalusian botanist | pharmacopoeia | Ibn Battuta | Old World | Ibn Khaldun | social sciences | sociology, historiography | economics | Muqaddimah | Abū al-Hasan ibn Alī al-Qalasādī | Moorish mathematician | algebraic symbolism | Othello | William Shakespeare | Estevanico | Caliphate of Córdoba | Jews | Almoravid dynasty | The arches of red and white stripes inside "La Mezquita" in Córdoba, Spain represent some of the pinnacles of Moorish architecture. | | Mezquita | Córdoba | Moorish architecture | Moorish architecture | Córdoba | Berbers#Genetic evidence | Shomarka Keita | Howard University | in situ | Sub-Saharan Africans | Y chromosome | E1b1b1b | North Africa | Neolithic | Near East | E1b1b | Adarga | Al-Andalus | Almohad dynasty | Almoravid dynasty | Arab | Arab diaspora | Barbary pirate | Berber people | Caliphate of Córdoba | Char Bouba war | History of Portugal | History of Spain | Moorish architecture | Moorish Revival | Morisco | Nasrid dynasty | North Africa | Orientalism | Ricote (Don Quixote) | Sahrawi | Slavery in modern Africa | Timeline of the Muslim presence in the Iberian peninsula | Mudejar | Morisco | ISBN 1-90380981-9 | Al-Andalus | ISBN 978-0520084964 | ISBN 2-84670-078-8 | ISBN 0415280966 | ISBN 1-56000-581-5 | J.A. Rogers | Victoria and Albert Museum | Folger Shakespeare Library | Categories | Arab people | Arab groups | History of North Africa | History of Spain | History of Portugal | Al-Andalus | Muslim communities | Berber people | Islamic history | Indigenous peoples of North Africa | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since October 2008 | Articles with unsourced statements since August 2008 |
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