Las milicias andaluzas en la sublevación mudéjar de 1500 y 1501

Tax pressure, failure to keep agreements between the Crown and the Mudejar population, in addition to forced conversions, were some of the motives that led this Muslim group into revolt in various localities within the former Kingdom of Granada, between the end of 1499 and the first months of 1501....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Juan Manuel Bello León
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Sevilla 2010-12-01
Series:Historia. Instituciones. Documentos
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistascientificas.us.es/index.php/HID/article/download/4106/3554
Description
Summary:Tax pressure, failure to keep agreements between the Crown and the Mudejar population, in addition to forced conversions, were some of the motives that led this Muslim group into revolt in various localities within the former Kingdom of Granada, between the end of 1499 and the first months of 1501. Through the study of municipal and national sources, this work analyses the role of the armed militia from various cities and towns in Andalusia in suffocating the uprising. It also studies the systems of recruitment used, the places where the militia acted, the cost of maintenance, and the ever-increasing problems that arose from the failure of certain members of society to fulfill their military commitments.
ISSN:0210-7716
2253-8291