
Below you’ll find a few trivia questions and brief
and imperfect summary of over 2500 years of Spain’s
roller coaster ride through the history of Europe, North Africa,
the Pacific and the Americas.
- Who where the two Roman emperors born in Spain?
- Why are Hercules and Julius Caesar considered the founders
of Sevilla?
- What was the Moors first and last Spanish capital?
- How did the great medieval hero El Cid get this Spanish
Arabian name?
- Why was Columbus finally given the money to sail the ocean
blue?
- How much of the territory of the USA was first taken by
Spain?
- Why did King Felipe II have the world’s largest
monastery palace built?
- What tradition promoted by the Greeks is still common
in the south of Spain?
Always a cultural crossroads of history, all major Mediterranean
civilizations have spent time in on the Iberian Peninsula
due to the great mineral and agricultural riches. The Roman
had the greatest influence controlling Roman Hispania for
some 600 years and exporting olive oil, wine wheat and garum,
a fish sauce and leaving behind cultural values, bridges,
temples, aqueducts and four surviving Latin languages including
Spanish and Portuguese. Pompey and Julius Caesar also fought
their epic battle here in Spain but couldn't prevent the arrival
of the Germanic Visigoths 450 years later after the fall of
Rome.
Arriving
from North Africa, Persia and Arabia, the so-called Moors
established control of Iberia in some 10 years easily defeating
the oppressive Visigoths who had made too many enemies among
the proud Iberians. For the Moors, Spain and Portugal was
called Al Andaluz. The Moorish period included periods of
cultural, academic and economic brilliance while most of Europe
lurched through the dark ages. The exotic culinary influences
of certain fruits, vegetables, nuts and spices is still notable
here in Spain.
in Toledo, Cordoba and Seville translating
ancient Greek masterpieces into Arabic, Hebrew and Latin.
Despite this prosperous situation in the 9th and 10th centuries
Moorish Spain fractured into many small kingdoms called Taifas.
This opened the door for Catholic Spanish from Northern Spain
with some Moslem help and figures like the great warrior El
Cid who fought for sultans, kings and finally himself( check
out the Academy award winning movie, EL CID with Charlton
Heston and a young Sophia Loren) . After over 4 centuries
of battles, the Catholic kingdoms of Castilla and Aragon finally
conquered the peninsula in 1492.
In 1492 after the Moorish surrender, the Catholic Kings, Ferdinand
and Isabella, ordered the expulsion all Jews and Moors who
wouldn’t convert, thus ending the largest and most distinguished
Jewish settlement in Europe just at the time that they would
have benefited greatly from some good financial management.
Columbus, Magellan and the Conquistadores sailed the ocean
blue from Sevilla. Spain then became a colonial superpower
and Europe’s richest country thanks mostly to the gold
,silver, tobacco, rum and other New World “exports”
These financial resources were spent on incredible palaces,
churches, monasteries, castles and art. The rest was largely
wasted by Spanish Hapsburg kings financing mercenary armies
in the 100 years war. During this time the Spanish crown and
the Vatican’s Holy Office of the Inquisition persecuted
many supposed heretics holding public 'autos-da-fe' until
the 18th century in Spain and her world-wide colonies.
the rest of Europe was embracing
science and development which in Spain was rejected by the
nobility and the clergy, who were still swimming in old money.
One curious result of this was very proud largely illiterate
peasants in the late 19th century still living an almost medieval
lifestyle. This set the stage for numerous civil conflict
often along class and regional lines culminating in the bloody
Spanish Civil War and an alliance between the Army and the
Catholic church. The resulting victory led to the brutal dictatorship
of El Generalisimo Franco who ruled from Madrid until his
death in 1975 which opened the doors to a democratic transitioned
at the hand of the present King Juan Carlos de Borbon. |