From Muslim to Christian Granada: Inventing a City's Past in Early Modern Spain

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JHU Press, 19 mar 2007 - 280 páginas

Honorable Mention, 2010 Best First Book, Association for Spanish and Portuguese Historical Studies

In 1492, Granada, the last independent Muslim city on the Iberian Peninsula, fell to the Catholic forces of Ferdinand and Isabella. A century later, in 1595, treasure hunters unearthed some curious lead tablets inscribed in Arabic. The tablets documented the evangelization of Granada in the first century A.D. by St. Cecilio, the city’s first bishop. Granadinos greeted these curious documents, known as the plomos, and the human remains accompanying them as proof that their city—best known as the last outpost of Spanish Islam—was in truth Iberia’s most ancient Christian settlement. Critics, however, pointed to the documents’ questionable doctrinal content and historical anachronisms. In 1682, the pope condemned the plomos as forgeries.

From Muslim to Christian Granada explores how the people of Granada created a new civic identity around these famous forgeries. Through an analysis of the sermons, ceremonies, histories, maps, and devotions that developed around the plomos, it examines the symbolic and mythological aspects of a new historical terrain upon which Granadinos located themselves and their city. Discussing the ways in which one local community’s collective identity was constructed and maintained, this work complements ongoing scholarship concerning the development of communal identities in modern Europe. Through its focus on the intersections of local religion and local identity, it offers new perspectives on the impact and implementation of Counter-Reformation Catholicism.

 

Índice

Granada in the Sixteenth Century
8
Granadino Historiography and the Sacromonte
47
Notes
159
Bibliography
207
Index
249
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Página 217 - Dialogos de las cosas notables de Granada, y lengua espanola, y algunas cosas curiosas; Francisco Bermudez de Pedraza, Antiguedad y excelencias de Granada, Madrid, 1628.
Página 213 - ... its presence in 1120. Leroux de Lincy, Essai historique et litteraire sur 1'abbaye de Fecamp ; Rouen, 1840, 8°. The agate chalice-shaped cup preserved at Valencia, in Spain, and sometimes seen in Spanish paintings, and associated with St. Laurence. J. Briz Martinez, Historia y antiguedades de San Juan de la Pena y de los Reyes de Sobrarve, Aragon y Navarra, Saragoga, 1620, p. 213, and Nota de las Reliquias existentes in esta santa iglesia metropolitana de Valencia, 1829, p. 8. The

Sobre el autor (2007)

A. Katie Harris is an assistant professor of history at the University of California, Davis.

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