by Matthew Carr
and Granada pragmática
jornada to Aragon
Morisco revolt and War of the Alpujarras
wars with Protestant Europe
Philip III, King
character
Council of State
death
and the expulsion
and Morisquillos
panegyrics
pre-expulsion policies/preparations
Philip IV,
Philip the Fair
Phillips, Melanie
Pipes, Daniel
piracy. See corsairs
Pius IV, Pope
Piyale Pasha
Placencia, Ramiro de
Poe, Edgar Allan
Poem of the Cid
Poitiers battles (732)
Ponce de León, Don Manuel
Ponce de León, Don Rodrigo
Population Reference Bureau (U.S.)
Portugal
expulsion of Muslims
and Jewish diaspora
Prada, Andrés de
Pradilla y Ortiz, Francisco
Prado, Blas de
Priego, Count of
Primera crónica general de España (First
General Chronicle of Spain)
(Ferdinand III of Castile)
The Prince (Machiavelli)
Privy Council (Britain)
Protestantism
Protocols of the Elders of Zion
Pseudo-Methodius
public bathing
Pulgar, Fernando de
qasida poems
Quesada, Hernando de
Quevedo, Francisco de
Ravaillac, François
realengo
Reapers’ War
Rebellion of the Moriscos in the Muela of Cortes (Mestre painting)
Reconquista conquest of Granada and Iberian tolerance
Refugiado de Tunis (Tunis Exile)
Reinoso, Jiménez de
Reminjo, Bray de
Requesens, Luis de
Ribera, Juan de
Ribera, Juan (sea captain)
Richelieu, Cardinal
Rincon, Juan del
Robert of Chester
Rocroi, battle of
Rodrigo (Visigothic king)
Rodríguez, Juan and María
Roe, Sir Thomas
Rouco Varela, Cardinal Antonio María
Royal Chapel Congregation
Rubens, Peter Paul
Rufo y Gutiérez, Juan
al-Rundi, Abu al-Baqa
Rushdie, Salman
Saavedra, Eduardo
Sacromonte discoveries
Saint Bartholomew’s Day massacre
Salazar, Antonio de
Salazar, Cristóbal de
Salazar, Juan de
Salazar, the Count of (Bernardino de Velasco)
Saleh Reis, the beylerbey of Algiers
Salinas, Count of
Salinas, Count of (Diego de Silva y Mendoza)
Salvatierra, Martín de, the bishop of Segorbe
sambenito (penitential tunic)
San Germán, Marquis of ( Juan de Mendoza)
Sanchez-Albornoz, Claudio
Sánchez-Blanco, Benítez
Sancho IV of Castile
Sandoval, Bernardo Rojas de
Santa Cruz, Alonso de
Santiago, Doctor
Santiago Mataindios (the Indian slayer)
Saqaliba (Slavic “slave soldiers”)
Sarkozy, Nicolas
Schengen Agreement
Sea Beggars (Dutch privateers)
Sebastián, Francisca
Sebastian, King of Portugal
Segorbe, Duke of
Selim II
Sen, Amartya
Senior, Abraham
Sentencia Estatuto (Judgment Statute)
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks
Sepúlveda, Juan Ginés de
Servetus, Miguel
Seville
Castilian conquest of (1248)
and Converso crisis
sexuality
Shakespeare, William
Sierra Bermeja
Siete Partidas (Seven-Part Code)
Siguenza, Fray José de
Siliceo, Cardinal, archbishop of Toledo
Sixtus IV, Pope
Sobrino, Antonio
Solaya (Morisco bandit)
Sotomayor, Alonso de
Spain, contemporary
The Spaniards: An Introduction to their History (Castro)
Spanish Civil War (1936–1939)
Spes, Guerau de
Spuche, Juan de
Steyn, Mark
Suleiman the Magnificent
The Swindler (Quevedo)
Switzerland, contemporary
Table Talk (Luther)
Tagarinos (Moriscos of Aragon)
taifa (“party” states)
Talavera, Hernando de
Taller, Thomas
Tangiers, Morocco
taqiyya (“precaution”)
Tariq ibn Ziyad
Tassoni, Alessandro
Taybili, Ibrahim
Tendilla, Marquis of
Theodemir, the Visigothic ruler of Murcia
Thirteen (Valencia council)
Thirty Years War
Toledo
church councils (1322–1323)
city council and Sentencia Estatuto
Converso crisis and Spanish Inquisition
Inquisition
Visigothic capital
Toledo, Pedro de
Topografia e historia general de Argel (Topography and General History of Algiers) (Haedo)
Toro, Luis de
Torquemada, Cardinal Tomás de
Toulouse, papal Inquisition in
Tower of the Winds
Townsend, Joseph
Tratado acerca de los moriscos de España (Treatise on the Moriscos of Spain) (de Valencia)
Treaty of Munster
True History of Don Rodrigo
Tunisia, Morisco exiles in
Turixi, Vicente
Turkenkrieg (war against the Turks)
Turkenschriften (Turkish writings)
Umayyad dynasty
UN Alliance of Civilizations
University of Alcalá de Henares
University of Granada
University of Salamanca
Uthman Dey
Valdés, Doña Catalina de
Valdés, Fernando de
Valencia
assimilation and conversions
as city
conversions and popular rebellions,
expulsion
Germanías revolt
Inquisition
Muslim population in al-Andalus,
Philip II and conversions
Reconquista
Valencia, Pedro de
Valladolid church councils (1322–1323),
Valor, Fernando de (el Zaguer)
van Gogh, Theo
vassals
Velasco, Doña Isabel de
Vendramino, Francisco
Venegas, Yuce
Verdú, Blas
Vesga, Pedro de
Viciano, Martín de
Vilagrut, Joan de
Villars, Marquis de
Villarubia de los Ojos, town of
Visigothic Spain
Vlaams Belang party (Belgium)
al-Walid, Khalid Ibn
al-Wansharishi (mufti of Oran)
War of Granada
War of the Alpujarras
and Aben Aboo
and Aben Humeya
battle of Alcazarquivir
and deportations
Don John’s forces
and women
War of the Spanish Succession
“War on Terror,”
Weiditz, Christoph
Weigel, George
While Europe Slept (Bawer)
William of Orange
women
in al-Andalus
and almalafa (veil)
/> and deportations
and expulsion
herbalists and curanderos
and the Inquisition
intermarriage
Moorish dancing
and War of the Alpujarras
Xenix, Gonzalo el
Yacub, Ibrahim ben
Yeor, Bat
Young Man of Arévalo
Zacarias, Francisco
Zafra, Hernando de
el Zaguer (Fernando de Valor)
Zambarel, Juan
zambra (Muslim dance)
Zamorana, María
Zapata, Simeon
Zapatero, José Luis
Zarcamodonia
Zauzala family
al-Zawahiri, Ayman
Zegrí Azaator (Gonzalo Fernandez Zegrí)
Zweig, Stefan
© 2009 by Matthew Carr
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form, without written permission from the publisher.
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Permissions Department, The New Press, 38 Greene Street, New York, NY 10013.
First published in the United States by The New Press, New York, 2009
This paperback edition published by The New Press, 2011
Distributed by Perseus Distribution
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Carr, Matthew, 1955–
Blood and faith : the purging of Muslim Spain / Matthew Carr. p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
eISBN : 978-1-595-58524-0
1. Muslims—Spain—History—17th century. 2. Forced migration—Spain—
History—17th century. 3. Spain—History—Philip III, 1598–1621. 4. Spain—Ethnic relations—History—17th century. 5. Spain—Church history—17th century. I. Title.
DP53.M87C37 2009
946’.04—dc22
2009008604
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