The site of modern-day Madrid has been …

Years: 1086 - 1086

The site of modern-day Madrid has been occupied since prehistoric times, and there are archaeological remains of Carpetani settlement, Roman villas, a Visigoth basilica near the church of Santa María de la Almudena and three Visigoth necropolises near Casa de Campo, Tetúan and Vicálvaro.

However, the first historical document about the existence of an established settlement in Madrid dates from the Muslim age.

At the second half of the ninth century, Emir Muhammad I of Córdoba built a fortress on a headland near the river Manzanares, a small tributary of the Tagus, as one of the many fortress he ordered to be built on the border between Al-Andalus and the kingdoms of León and Castile, with the objective of protecting Toledo from the Christian invasions and also as a starting point for Muslim offensives.

After the disintegration of the Caliphate of Córdoba, Madrid, as Majrit, had been integrated in the Taifa of Toledo.

Alfonso VI now invites French knights to settle the central plateau of Spain.

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