Treaty of Granada (1491)

Not to be confused with the Treaty of Granada (1500) partitioning Naples between Louis XII of France and Ferdinand II of Aragon. For more information on that treaty, see Italian War of 1499–1504.
Treaty of Granada

The Capitulation of Granada by Francisco Pradilla Ortiz: Boabdil confronts Ferdinand and Isabella
Context The Reconquista and the Spanish annexation of the Emirate of Granada
Signed November 25, 1491
Signatories
Tratado de Granada at Wikisource

The Treaty of Granada was signed and ratified on November 25, 1491 between Boabdil, the sultan of Granada, and Ferdinand and Isabella, the King and Queen of Castile, León, Aragon and Sicily. It ended the Granada War which had started in 1482, culminating in the siege and battle of Granada beginning in spring 1491.

Also known as the Capitulation of Granada, the treaty provided a short truce, followed by the relinquishment in January 1492 of the sovereignty of the Moorish Emirate of Granada (founded five centuries earlier) to the Catholic monarchs of Spain.[1] The treaty guaranteed a set of rights to the Moors, including religious tolerance and fair treatment in return for their surrender and capitulation.

An uprising by the Moors in 1500 caused the Catholic side to consider that the Moors had violated the Treaty: this gave them a justification for revoking its provisions. See Morisco Revolt.

Treaty articles

The capitulation of 1492 contained sixty-seven articles among which were the following:

See also

Wikisource has original text related to this article:

Notes

  1. Early Modern Spain: A Documentary History, ed. Jon Cowans, (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003), 15.

References