Mediterranean Southwest Europe (820 – 963 CE): …
Years: 820 - 963
Mediterranean Southwest Europe (820 – 963 CE): Umayyad Córdoba, Carolingian Marches, and Italian Maritime Beginnings
Geographic and Environmental Context
Mediterranean Southwest Europe includes Portugal’s Algarve and Alentejo; Spain’s Extremadura, Andalusia, Murcia, Valencia, Castile/La Mancha, southeastern Castile and León, Madrid, southeastern Rioja, southeastern Navarra, Aragon, Catalonia, and the Balearic Islands; Andorra; all of Italy including Venice, Sicily, and Sardinia; and Malta.
-
Anchors: the Guadalquivir Valley (Córdoba, Seville), Tagus/Guadiana frontiers (Alentejo, Extremadura), Ebro–Pyrenees corridor (Barcelona, Zaragoza, Andorra), Valencia/Murcia huertas, the Balearics, the Po Valley and Venetian lagoon, Rome–Naples axis, Sicily, Sardinia, and Malta.
Climate and Environmental Shifts
-
The early Medieval Warm Period lengthened growing seasons; vine–olive–grain regimes thrived from Andalusia to Apulia.
-
Transhumance intensified in Aragon, Castile/La Mancha, and the Apennines.
Societies and Political Developments
-
Al-Andalus under the Emirate of Córdoba (Caliphate from 929 under ʿAbd al-Raḥmān III) dominated Andalusia, Murcia, Valencia, and Extremadura.
-
Northern Iberia: Asturias/León, Navarre, Aragon, and Catalonia formed the Carolingian and Pyrenean march polities pushing a slow Reconquista.
-
Italy: post-Carolingian fragmentation; Venice, Amalfi, Genoa, Pisa (rising communes) cultivated Mediterranean trade; Sicily fell to the Aghlabids (from 827), forming an Islamic emirate.
-
Sardinia moved toward judicati autonomy; Malta oscillated under Muslim control.
Economy and Trade
-
Andalusian irrigation (qanats, acequias) sustained citrus, sugar, and rice; Venice, Amalfi, Genoa, Pisa shipped grain, salt, timber, and slaves; imported silks, spices, and ceramics.
-
Mediterranean cabotage linked Valencia, Barcelona, Genoa, Venice, Bari, Palermo, Cagliari, and the Balearics.
Subsistence and Technology
-
Andalusi water-management, Carolingian ploughlands north of the Ebro–Duero, and Italian communal port works (breakwaters, arsenali).
Movement and Interaction Corridors
-
Ebro–Pyrenees passes tied Aragon/Catalonia to Andorra and Languedoc; Po–Adriatic axis centered on Venice; Tyrrhenian routes knit Sardinia–Sicily–Malta to Italy and Iberia.
Belief and Symbolism
-
Islamic Córdoba (Great Mosque) embodied court culture; Latin monastic revival in Catalonia (Ripoll) and central Italy; Greek–Arab science circulated via Sicily and al-Andalus.
Long-Term Significance
By 963, a Latin–Islamic frontier spanned Iberia and Sicily, while Venice and Italian communes forged the maritime tools that would dominate later centuries.
Mediterranean Southwest Europe (with civilization) ©2024-25 Electric Prism, Inc. All rights reserved.
People
Groups
- Italian city-states
- Jews
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Friuli, (Lombard) duchy of
- Benevento, Lombard Duchy of
- Tridentum, (Lombard) duchy of
- Islam
- Naples, Duchy of
- Al-Garb Al-Andalus
- Venice, Duchy of
- Gaeta, Republic of
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- Córdoba, Umayyad Emirate of
- Italy, Carolingian Kingdom of
- Marca Hispanica
- Urgell, County of
- Ifriqiya, Aghlabid Emirate of
- Barcelona, County of
- Malta
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Phrygian or Armorian dynasty
- Sicily, Emirate of
- Amalfi, Republic of
- Salerno, Lombard Principality of
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Macedonian dynasty
- Capua, Lombard Principality of
- Capua-Benevento, Lombard Principality of
- Arborea, Giudicato of
- Logudoro, Giudicato of
- León, Kingdom of
- Córdoba, (Umayyad) Caliphate of
- Kalbids
- Amalfi, Duchy of
- Italy, Kingdom of (Holy Roman Empire)
Topics
Commodoties
- Glass
- Domestic animals
- Oils, gums, resins, and waxes
- Grains and produce
- Fibers
- Textiles
- Ceramics
- Strategic metals
- Slaves
- Sweeteners
- Beer, wine, and spirits
- Manufactured goods
- Aroma compounds
- Spices
Subjects
- Commerce
- Architecture
- Watercraft
- Painting and Drawing
- Decorative arts
- Conflict
- Faith
- Government
- Scholarship
- Custom and Law
- Theology
