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  • Spain Expels the Moriscos
  • Awake!—2014
  • Subheadings
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  • FORCED CONVERSIONS
  • “NEITHER GOOD CHRISTIANS NOR LOYAL SUBJECTS”
  • Table of Contents
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  • The Catholic Church in Spain—The Power and the Privilege
    Awake!—1990
  • Moorish Spain—A Remarkable Legacy
    Awake!—1988
  • The Catholic Church in Spain—The Abuse of Power
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Awake!—2014
g 9/14 pp. 14-15
The Moriscos being expelled from Spain

PORTRAITS FROM THE PAST

Spain Expels the Moriscos

It is said that almost every move made by the Spanish in this sad story was influenced by the church. It is a story worth reading.

THE Spanish monarchy wanted a Christian State under one set of laws. The Moriscos were considered infidels​—so the reasoning went—​and hence their presence constituted a grave offense in God’s sight. After many years, a decision was made. The solution? They should be expelled!a

FORCED CONVERSIONS

For hundreds of years, the Moors in Spain​—a Muslim minority, called Mudéjar—​lived in relative peace in areas under Catholic control. For a time, in certain areas they enjoyed a legal status that allowed them to retain their own laws and customs and to practice their own religion.

But in 1492, the Catholic monarchs Ferdinand II and Isabella conquered Granada, the last part of Iberia still under Muslim control. The terms of its surrender granted the Moorish population there rights similar to those of the Mudéjar. However, Catholic leaders soon increased their persecution and pressure on the Muslim minority within their domain to convert. The Moors protested this violation of prior accords, and in 1499, they revolted. Government troops put down the uprising, but thereafter Muslims in one area after another were made either to convert or to emigrate. Spaniards called those who converted and remained in Spain Moriscos.

“NEITHER GOOD CHRISTIANS NOR LOYAL SUBJECTS”

By 1526, Islam was banned throughout Spain, yet many Moriscos secretly continued to practice their religion. For the most part, as a people, they retained their cultural identity.

At first, the Moriscos’ lip service to Catholicism was tolerated. They did, after all, perform a vital function as artisans, craftsmen, laborers, and taxpayers. Still, the Moriscos’ general refusal to assimilate was resented, and they suffered discrimination from both the government and the common people. Such prejudice may have been fueled by the growing suspicions in the church regarding the sincerity of their conversion.

Soon, toleration was replaced by coercion. In 1567, the decision of King Philip II to forbid the Moriscos’ language, dress, customs, and traditions was published. This measure provoked new rebellion and bloodshed.

It is estimated that some 300,000 Moriscos were forced to flee Spain amid great suffering

Spain’s rulers, according to historians, became convinced that “Moriscos were neither good Christians nor loyal subjects.” For that reason, they were accused of conspiring with Spain’s enemies​—the Barbary pirates, the French Protestants, and the Turks​—to favor a foreign invasion. Both prejudice and fears that the Moriscos would eventually turn traitor contributed to the decision of Philip III to expel them in 1609.b In the years that followed, people suspected of being Moriscos were persecuted. By such ignoble means, Spain became fully Catholic.

a Moriscos means “Little Moors” in Spanish. Historians use the term in a nonderogatory way to refer to people of Muslim background who converted to Catholicism and stayed in the Iberian Peninsula after the fall of the last Muslim kingdom there in 1492.

b Historians also speculate that at least one of Spain’s rulers stood to profit greatly from confiscation of Morisco estates.

QUICK FACTS

  • In the early eighth century C.E., North African and Arab Muslims conquered most of the Iberian Peninsula, the lands now known as Spain and Portugal.

  • Catholic armies began a slow reconquest, completed in 1492, when they took the last Moorish enclave around Granada.

  • In 1492, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella expelled from their realm any Jews who would not convert to Catholicism. In the 1500’s, Muslims who converted, as well as their descendants, were persecuted and relocated. From 1609 to 1614, the Moriscos​—the “new Christians” of Muslim descent—​were expelled.

  • It is estimated that some 300,000 Moriscos were forced to flee Spain amid great suffering. It seems that at least 10,000 died resisting expulsion.

“Pure” Catholicism Throughout the Land!

Juan de Ribera, archbishop of Valencia, active in expelling the Moriscos

Juan de Ribera, archbishop of Valencia, fully supported the expulsion of the Moriscos

Spain undoubtedly suffered economically as a result of the loss of its Morisco workforce. Despite that, the country experienced a sense of euphoria after the exodus. For many Spaniards, say the history books, the very presence of Moriscos, whose religion was suspect, had been “a long-standing irritant, and a cause of national shame.” Now, that irritant had been banished. The leaders, the population in general, and the church rejoiced that “pure” Catholicism had at last been restored throughout the land.

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