The Moriscos, the Spanish descendants of Muslims …
Years: 1614 - 1614
The Moriscos, the Spanish descendants of Muslims who had converted to Christianity, had long been accused of collaboration with the Barbary Pirates to attack the coast Spanish coast.
They are unpopular among the ‘Old Christian’ people, especially in Valencia.
Habsburg monarch Philip III of Spain, on the advice of Juan de Ribera, Archbishop and Viceroy of Valencia, had in 1609 issued a decree for the expulsion of Moriscos from Spain.
To accomplish this, the Navy and thirty thousand soldiers have been mobilized with the mission of transporting the Muslims to Tunis or Morocco.
Approximately three hundfred thousand Moriscos have been expelled from the peninsula from 1609 to 1614.
While the royal treasury certainly benefits from the asset seizure of four percent of the population, the measure significantly damages the economies of the Kingdom of Valencia, Aragon, and Murcia.
The cheap labor and the number of rent paying owners in these areas decreases considerably, and the cultivation of sugar and rice has now to be substituted for white mulberry, vineyards, and wheat.
Locations
People
Groups
- Aragón, Kingdom of
- Valencia, Kingdom of
- Moriscos
- Ottoman Algeria
- Morocco, Sa'di Sharifate of
- Tunis, Ottoman eyalet of
- Spain, Habsburg Kingdom of
