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Title: When the Muslims Ruled in Europe – Documentary full
Duration: 01:42:02
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the year is 1492 Christopher Columbus is
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about to embark on his world shattering
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voyage to the Americas and on his way to
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the coast he stops off here at Granada
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[Music]
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he's the honored guest at a ceremony
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hosted by the king and queen of Spain
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Ferdinand and Isabella
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[Music]
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they are celebrating a grand victory up
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until this day Grenada had been ruled by
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Muslims but isabella has managed to
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wrestle control from them
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Ferdinand and Isabella's victory marks a
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turning point for Spain and for Europe
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the Middle Ages are over and the West is
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about to embark on a new epoch of power
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and discovery we tend to think of this
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as the beginning of an era in fact it's
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the climax of a forgotten chapter in
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European history the rise and fall of
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Islam in the West
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[Music]
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with Roger Kipling he rotates East is
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East and West is West and never the
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twain shall meet and it's a worldview
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that still has currency today Islam and
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Christianity seem to have become
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ideological monoliths Citadel's whose
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gates are firmly closed to one another
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[Music]
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but they haven't always lived such
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separate lives in the year 711 ad Muslim
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forces invaded Spain and created a
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society so rich and so powerful it was
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the envy of the known world this wasn't
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the rigid ferocious Islam of our
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imaginations but a progressive sensuous
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intellectually curious culture that for
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a number of spine-tingling years looks
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set to sweep through the whole of Europe
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it is an incredible story but one that
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has been systematically written out of
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history
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[Music]
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after the Catholic Monarchs took over
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the city of Granada they began to
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destroy all evidence that the Muslims
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had ever been in Spain in the following
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century the Spanish authorities
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persecuted and expelled 300,000 Muslims
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and burned as many as a million Arabic
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books
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[Music]
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this was an astonishing act of ethnic
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cleansing it put an end to a
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civilization which had flourished in
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Spain for seven hundred years these
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people have become known as the Moors
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[Music]
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propaganda sparked by the Crusades has
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given us an enduring image the
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diabolical more of dark-skinned savage
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alien enemy but this character is a
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complete invention and tells us nothing
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about who these people really were
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[Music]
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now archaeologists and historians are
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starting to piece together the real
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story of the Moors in Spain they're
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uncovering the remains of hidden cities
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discovering the role of Muslims in the
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revival of the classics and decoding the
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meaning of Islamic buildings a
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fascinating picture has emerged I'm
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gonna use this new research to explore
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what happened when East met West of
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Europe if there is one place which
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challenges the stereotype of the
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treacherous bloodthirsty more it's here
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the elaborate palace in Granada the
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alambre
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is one of the most complete medieval
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Islamic palaces in the whole world it
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was built by the Muslim kings of Granada
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in the 14th century at the height of
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their power its name means the red one
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because the dark surrounding soil has
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given its stones and earthly reddish hue
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the Marvel of the Alam Brown is its
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mystery not a single account of life
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here survives all its archives were
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incinerated in the fires of the
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Inquisition but the Catholics couldn't
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bring themselves to destroy this place
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the Alam breh is one of the wonders of
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the medieval world and by preserving it
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they've kept a box of Secrets that we
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can use to decode the civilization that
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built it inside the palace walls the
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architecture is breathtaking
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although the aesthetically courtyards
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quite coolly minimal now in its heyday
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it would have been not here to color
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Grenada was very famous for producing
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silks we've had such things billowing in
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the breeze and he sought cushioning he
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took rugs where people later to eat
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their dinner and to listen to music in
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fact it's only when you get down to rug
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level that you appreciate one of the
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bits of magic of the place as you dance
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here this pool acts like an infinity
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mirror and the whole of the Paris just
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looks as if it's suspended in water
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[Music]
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every detail of the palace decoration
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seems to be part of a scheme row upon
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row of intricate geometric patterns are
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carved into the woodwork of the walls
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and windows this is the throne room
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it was the symbolic center of the palace
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and here the Sultan had a kind of
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psychological advantage over his
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subjects whereas he'd had stood here and
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eerie silhouette they'd have been
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blinded by the light that came streaming
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in through these brightly colored
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stained glass windows
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[Music]
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the 19th century writer Washington
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Irving observed it's impossible to
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contemplate this abode of oriental
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manners without feeling the early
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association of Arabian romance one
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almost expects to see some dark eyes
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sparkling through the lattice
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[Music]
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the abode of beauty is here as if it had
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been inhabited but yesterday
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[Music]
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but this is far more than just a
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beautiful building there's a specific
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reason why it feels so harmonious the
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men who built it had a knowledge of
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complex geometry which had originated in
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the ancient world the first man to set
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down these mathematical principles was
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the Greek philosopher Pythagoras
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Pythagoras saw numbers everywhere in the
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universe but his brilliance was to
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understand the importance of the ratio
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between them
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[Music]
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professor Antonio Fernandez Pettis has
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spent his life studying the Alam breh
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he's discovered that the whole of the
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building from the ground plant the wall
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decoration is based around one single
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ratio I think everything is so perfect
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because his average is under control of
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the proportional I am very very simple
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you notice that there is something magic
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about this building recently marvelous
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in the surroundings it's very very
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simple is the relation between the
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ground and the elevations of the
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buildings is a simple as that the king
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ordered a new palace he has a limited
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area to build the palace - west east and
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south he was limited then he did
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something genius ingenious and beautiful
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the king of Granada asked his architects
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to harmonize each and every space within
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the palace according to a single set of
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proportions a family of rectangles each
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related to the other if you want to get
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proportional rectangle you have the same
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base take the diagonal put it up yes and
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though you've got successive rectangle
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proportional rectangle
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the key to the Alam Burris design is
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this simple relationship between the
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side of a square and its diagonal if we
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use the diagonal to make a rectangle and
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then the diagonal from that rectangle to
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make another we get a progression of
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rectangles the fourth rectangle is
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double the size of the first and the
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diagonals in this sequence are in fact
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the square roots of two three four and
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five
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a magical sequence and are we doing all
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this just with two sets where's and a
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piece of string yes that's very clever
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yes every part of the intricate network
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of spaces all the courtyards hallways
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the placement of every column was
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designed using inspired variations of
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this proportional system proportion is
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also in the elevation
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you have the kiosk here you built I
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Square and with the diagonal you swing
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it up
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nothing violated this incredibly
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elaborate system the alambre is a
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triumph of mathematics as much as it is
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of aesthetics
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[Music]
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mathematical ingenuity is the root of
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its beauty
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[Music]
(00:11:23)
but no one talks about this everyone
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looks at the air Alondra just as an
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aesthetic experience when you go to a
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concert and you listen mosa you listen
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better than you listen worthy you don't
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know perhaps music but you notice that
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there is something magic yes it happens
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with that the same you feel it the
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lumber is so enchanting it's all too
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easy to view it as a fairytale palace
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isolated from history but that is
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romantic nonsense this palace was the
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product of a very real very gritty
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history the elaborate was built by a
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religious Empire which at the pinnacle
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of its power dominated land from China
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to Africa an empire which had the wealth
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and intellect to build such masterpieces
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an empire whose history goes back to the
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deserts of 7th century Arabia
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[Music]
(00:12:38)
the alam bruh was the creation of the
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richest most intellectually powerful
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civilization in the world the roots of
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this cultural and religious explosion
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lie not in Spain but in the deserts of
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Arabia
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[Music]
(00:13:00)
at the beginning of the seventh century
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in Saudi Arabia something happened which
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was to change the religious makeup of
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the world forever
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[Music]
(00:13:11)
a merchant called Mohammed asserted that
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he had been visited by the Archangel
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Gabriel who had revealed to him the true
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words of God these revelations which
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came to Mohammed throughout his life
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became known as the Quran and the
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religion was Islam this is a time when
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people were experimenting with all sorts
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of cults and religions many of which
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fell by the wayside but the Prophet
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Muhammad and his followers made an
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important move they traveled to a desert
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oasis where they founded a city called
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Medina with a foothold in Medina Islam
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was no longer just a nomadic desert cult
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it had an urban center with a social
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structure as the religion grew bigger so
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it grew more ambitious
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territorial expansion was a
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characteristic of nomadic Arabs well
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before the arrival of Mohammed tribal
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leaders would initiate rat Xia all raids
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on their neighbors and with the advent
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of Islam these gained some kind of
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spiritual significance this is what one
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commander was reported to have said in
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one of the earliest ever Arabic
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chronicles this land is your inheritance
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and the promise of your Lord you've been
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tasting it and eating from it you have
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been killing its people and taking them
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into captivity you are Arab chiefs and
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notables if you renounce this world and
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aspire to the Hereafter God will give
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you this world and the Hereafter they
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believed they were inspired by the power
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of God
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[Music]
(00:15:04)
within decades Islamic Arabs had reached
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as far as Persia in the East in the West
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they'd conquered Egypt Jordan and much
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of North Africa and were within spitting
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distance of Europe
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but Islam wasn't only interested in
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territorial expansion it was also a
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faith committed to the pursuit of
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learning among the prophets first
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revelations was the instruction seek
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knowledge this meant from the earliest
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days of Islam literacy and religious
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study went hand in hand whereas a number
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of other religions of the day preferred
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to keep literacy the privilege of a
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clerical elite islam actively encouraged
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it
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in the ancient muslim city affairs in
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morocco there are many examples of this
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unique integration of religion and
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education this is the korean mosque in
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phezzan it stole the heart of religious
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life here
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it was founded in 1959 by a woman both
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sister religious and as an educational
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establishment mosques were used for
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teaching grammar and literacy to
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ordinary people in time colleges known
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as madrassas were set up this is the
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madrasa bou inania
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its walls are covered with the rich
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rhyming prose of the quran was key if
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apathy then complain mosque is only part
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of the conflicts which contains both it
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and the madrasah we're in a log scale
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often when the Sultan Abu anon found any
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place he built a mosque alongside
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madrasah his most symbolic llama llama
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sketchy LD mosque built for prayer was
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also a place which encouraged education
(00:17:10)
and learning or fail Arsenio Moscone for
(00:17:14)
the value in your principle as you can
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see there is no separation
(00:17:19)
[Music]
(00:17:21)
okay look when the Quran was given to
(00:17:25)
the Prophet who was illiterate the angel
(00:17:27)
told him read these inscriptions carved
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onto the walls are verses of poetry
(00:17:38)
control total of the Levant can be found
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throughout the madrasa but i think the
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most important section is here it is
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what it says in Arabic is I am the
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apogee of knowledge come you Muslims
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come and learn because we've knowledge
(00:18:02)
you can become what you want to be in
(00:18:06)
the future
(00:18:08)
[Music]
(00:18:12)
Electric Nativa during the medieval
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period knowledge was high on the agenda
(00:18:17)
in the Islamic world Muslim societies
(00:18:20)
produced many books in the various
(00:18:23)
spheres of knowledge and these books
(00:18:25)
came to be known worldwide it wasn't
(00:18:32)
just an enlightened attitude to reading
(00:18:34)
which placed learning at the heart of
(00:18:35)
the Islamic world necessity was also the
(00:18:38)
mother of invention because the Arabs
(00:18:42)
were nomads and desert traders who often
(00:18:44)
had to travel in the cool of the night
(00:18:46)
they were well versed in using the Stars
(00:18:48)
as guiding devices this developed into a
(00:18:52)
very sophisticated study of astronomy
(00:18:54)
then the establishment of Islam that
(00:18:57)
knowledge was applied a new way whenever
(00:19:00)
a mosque was built the prairies had to
(00:19:02)
be orientated in direct relation to
(00:19:05)
Mecca and there are a number of
(00:19:06)
religious festivals that had to fall on
(00:19:08)
certain days in the lunar year these
(00:19:12)
were complex mathematical problems for
(00:19:14)
which the Muslims devised precise
(00:19:16)
solutions Islam became a culture which
(00:19:20)
naturally embraced scientific and
(00:19:22)
mathematical investigation this
(00:19:27)
uninhibited attitude towards learning
(00:19:29)
when when Muslims encountered the
(00:19:31)
teachings of other cultures they seized
(00:19:33)
upon them vigorously
(00:19:36)
[Applause]
(00:19:42)
in the very early days of Islam Muslims
(00:19:45)
came into contact with a body of
(00:19:47)
knowledge which had been ignored by most
(00:19:49)
of northern Europe for centuries the
(00:19:54)
works of the ancient Greeks it's once
(00:19:58)
you look at a globe that it becomes
(00:19:59)
particularly easy to understand why the
(00:20:02)
Arabs were such natural inheritors of
(00:20:04)
Greek learning from the Bronze Age
(00:20:07)
onwards
(00:20:07)
they'd been a constant exchange of
(00:20:10)
artifacts and information all across the
(00:20:12)
eastern Mediterranean and in effect a
(00:20:14)
number of Greek ideas stem from Eastern
(00:20:16)
and Egyptian influences the bulk of this
(00:20:20)
knowledge was preserved in the great
(00:20:21)
schools and library at Alexandria and
(00:20:24)
then in 641 ad the Arabs take over the
(00:20:28)
city and at a stroke have direct access
(00:20:32)
to this precious learning
(00:20:36)
many of these texts found their way to
(00:20:39)
face this is an Arabic translation of
(00:20:44)
Aristotle with an additional commentary
(00:20:46)
by the Muslim scholar
(00:20:48)
avaris translation is done in Iraq and
(00:20:51)
then a virus does this commentary in Al
(00:20:54)
Andalus portal there's even an early
(00:20:56)
Arabic translation of the Bible it's
(00:21:01)
extraordin isn't it Arabic the lingua
(00:21:03)
franca there everybody's writing in
(00:21:05)
Arabic even the Bible chuckles so early
(00:21:08)
and that ends the Gospel of Mark the
(00:21:10)
Apostle the contrast with Europe at this
(00:21:14)
time could not have been greater here
(00:21:18)
ancient Greek texts and the rational
(00:21:20)
investigation they contained often
(00:21:22)
feared as blasphemous when the Prophet
(00:21:25)
Muhammad was born Christianity had
(00:21:28)
already been battling with paganism for
(00:21:30)
600 years trying to persuade believers
(00:21:33)
to turn away from their old gods to the
(00:21:35)
one new God and because of that
(00:21:38)
Christians were often suspicious of
(00:21:41)
Greek and Roman pagan texts
(00:21:43)
[Music]
(00:21:44)
for instance in 529 ad the Christian
(00:21:49)
emperor justinian closed down the
(00:21:51)
athenian schools of philosophy set
(00:21:57)
against this vibrant Islamic culture
(00:21:59)
Europe can appear an introspective in an
(00:22:02)
intellectually cautious place it was
(00:22:05)
certainly a countenance in crisis after
(00:22:09)
the fall of Rome
(00:22:10)
there was a power vacuum in Europe with
(00:22:12)
rival tribes squabbling for territories
(00:22:15)
it was the start of what later Christian
(00:22:17)
scholars would describe as the Dark Ages
(00:22:22)
[Music]
(00:22:23)
while Europe lay unprotected and
(00:22:26)
vulnerable Islam was consolidating land
(00:22:29)
and power
(00:22:32)
by the beginning of the 8th century the
(00:22:35)
Arabs had converted the Berber tribes at
(00:22:37)
the very tip of North Africa and before
(00:22:41)
long troops were gathered on the coast
(00:22:43)
their eyes fixed on Europe
(00:22:53)
this little stretch of water between
(00:22:55)
Spain and Morocco is only 9 miles wide
(00:22:57)
but it's come to represent some kind of
(00:22:59)
cultural chasm between Europe and Africa
(00:23:03)
but in the 8th century when sea travel
(00:23:05)
was the way to get around that wasn't a
(00:23:08)
barrier it was a highway
(00:23:16)
[Music]
(00:23:19)
[Applause]
(00:23:23)
[Music]
(00:23:28)
in July 7-eleven 7000 Berber tribesmen
(00:23:32)
stormed across the Straits of Gibraltar
(00:23:34)
and invaded Europe
(00:23:37)
[Music]
(00:23:39)
the Muslims then began an incredible
(00:23:41)
process of expansion
(00:23:45)
in just four years
(00:23:47)
they'd colonized almost the whole of
(00:23:49)
Spain but cross the Pyrenees and were
(00:23:51)
only halted at pottier in France were it
(00:23:57)
not for this reverse an army which had
(00:23:59)
swept across two continents might easily
(00:24:01)
have crossed the English Channel and
(00:24:03)
occupied Britain the Muslims called the
(00:24:07)
country they came to al-andalus the land
(00:24:11)
of the vandals this refers to the
(00:24:13)
Germanic tribe who ruled Spain at the
(00:24:15)
time the Visigoths Spanish historians
(00:24:21)
have traditionally seen the Muslim
(00:24:22)
invasion of Spain as a terrible and
(00:24:24)
violent attack an assault on Christian
(00:24:27)
Europe in fact here in the Visigothic
(00:24:38)
science of rock operas near Madrid
(00:24:40)
archaeologists have found evidence which
(00:24:42)
offers a rather different explanation
(00:24:45)
the city of Raqqa police in fact a was
(00:24:49)
the Royal City founded by the Visigoths
(00:24:52)
in order to demonstrate the power of the
(00:24:55)
new state dimension were a spectacular
(00:25:00)
for this period and this complex is the
(00:25:04)
the most important discovery in Western
(00:25:07)
Europe what was it at the time that the
(00:25:10)
the Muslims were invading but what was
(00:25:13)
the state of the city then they found it
(00:25:15)
not only here in this part of Iberia
(00:25:17)
that in everywhere of al-andalus
(00:25:20)
a they founded a cities in crisis social
(00:25:27)
crisis of urban crisis the traditional
(00:25:30)
explanation is this idea that when the
(00:25:33)
Arabs came the society collapses and the
(00:25:37)
city policy is not source is not third
(00:25:40)
the collapse of the city started
(00:25:43)
building the Visigothic period
(00:25:48)
if you read the Orthodox Spanish
(00:25:50)
histories then you'll learn that
(00:25:52)
predatory Muslim hordes forcibly
(00:25:55)
appropriated Visigothic Spain
(00:25:57)
unnecessarily were some invasion battles
(00:26:00)
but at many places like here a track up
(00:26:03)
lists it seems that the newcomers were
(00:26:05)
actually welcomed with open arms
(00:26:07)
we even have treaties where the
(00:26:09)
Visigoths soozee a Stickley hand over
(00:26:12)
their land in return for effective
(00:26:14)
muslim protection when you're excavating
(00:26:17)
did you find any evidence of violence at
(00:26:20)
the time of the Arab invasion we don't
(00:26:22)
have evidence of violence not not at all
(00:26:25)
in in this area was a peaceful and their
(00:26:28)
ecology in so in another landscape no
(00:26:31)
explanation the Muslims started to build
(00:26:38)
a new society
(00:26:43)
the enthusiasm for learning that the
(00:26:45)
Islamic world had spent years nurturing
(00:26:47)
was about to be transmitted to Europe we
(00:26:52)
went into Spain not to fight against the
(00:26:55)
people there but to save them from the
(00:26:58)
tyranny of the Latins and others that
(00:27:00)
govern them at the time al-andalus they
(00:27:06)
found a paradise on earth when the Arabs
(00:27:11)
changed location changed geography from
(00:27:14)
their inhospitable barren homeland and
(00:27:20)
move to a rich and fertile country this
(00:27:25)
was to transform the Arab mind this is
(00:27:32)
the secret of how such a great
(00:27:35)
civilization came to be born the
(00:27:40)
foundations of a new society had been
(00:27:42)
laid a self-confident progressive and
(00:27:45)
sophisticated civilization had arrived
(00:27:48)
among the failing states of Europe
(00:27:52)
and the continents history was about to
(00:27:54)
be transformed
(00:27:55)
[Music]
(00:28:02)
the Muslim invasion of Spain had been
(00:28:05)
swift and effective but it lacked a
(00:28:07)
strong leadership the first wave of
(00:28:10)
invaders were north african tribesmen
(00:28:12)
then he recently converted to islam and
(00:28:15)
without connections to the power base of
(00:28:17)
arabia but this was about to change in
(00:28:27)
the capital of the Muslim world a
(00:28:29)
political coup left all the members of
(00:28:31)
the ruling dynasty massacred all that is
(00:28:35)
except for one a prince called Abdul
(00:28:38)
Rahman
(00:28:40)
abdul rahman was in his late teens when
(00:28:43)
his family was massacred he managed to
(00:28:45)
escape the slaughter and fled to the
(00:28:47)
hills west of damascus
(00:28:49)
[Music]
(00:28:52)
his mother had been from North Africa
(00:28:55)
and abdur-rahman must have grown up
(00:28:58)
hearing tales of al-andalus
(00:29:01)
and so he made a dangerous journey
(00:29:05)
across the Nile and the deserts of Egypt
(00:29:09)
heading for those distant lands
(00:29:12)
[Music]
(00:29:21)
abdur-rahman brought culture and
(00:29:23)
learning from the center of Islamic
(00:29:25)
world straight to the heart of
(00:29:27)
al-andalus
(00:29:31)
when abdur-rahman arrived in Spain he
(00:29:33)
came here to Cordoba when a city was in
(00:29:36)
complete disarray that Roman bridge had
(00:29:39)
collapsed into the river but after
(00:29:42)
Rahman set to rebuilding the city you
(00:29:46)
have to remember that it's in this
(00:29:48)
context that the Arabs arrived
(00:29:49)
not as marauding destroyers but
(00:29:52)
sometimes the Savior's Abdul Rahman
(00:29:57)
brought cutting-edge technology for
(00:29:59)
irrigation to Spain almost immediately
(00:30:02)
the landscape was transformed
(00:30:05)
[Music]
(00:30:10)
[Applause]
(00:30:12)
palm trees lemon and orange groves
(00:30:16)
avocados artichokes and pomegranates
(00:30:19)
none of which had been seen in Europe
(00:30:22)
because of abdur-rahman sophisticated
(00:30:25)
trade network this new agriculture
(00:30:27)
created huge wealth and these riches
(00:30:34)
were used to build one of the greatest
(00:30:37)
cities in the world while the
(00:30:42)
inhabitants of London were still living
(00:30:43)
in wooden houses the people of Cordoba
(00:30:46)
had built a cosmopolitan city with a
(00:30:48)
population of over 100,000 the largest
(00:30:52)
settlement in Europe reports from
(00:30:57)
European visitors to Cordoba describe a
(00:30:59)
city with 70 libraries and over 300
(00:31:03)
public baths
(00:31:07)
the accounts tell of houses with running
(00:31:10)
water and roads illuminated by
(00:31:13)
streetlights you often have to take
(00:31:16)
medieval sources with a fairly
(00:31:18)
substantial pinch of salt because an
(00:31:20)
conifers were extremely fond of
(00:31:22)
exaggeration but in fact the new
(00:31:25)
excavations here at Cordoba are actually
(00:31:27)
revealing a city that was just as rich
(00:31:30)
as the one that they described these
(00:31:32)
monumental palace walls belonged to a
(00:31:34)
Muslim aristocrat and this channel over
(00:31:37)
here is part of the water system that
(00:31:39)
brought Cordoba its famously effective
(00:31:42)
sewage works as well as the fountains
(00:31:44)
and the baths that so impressed all
(00:31:46)
those European visitors Cordoba was
(00:31:53)
described by a 10th century German
(00:31:55)
visitor as the ornament of the world
(00:32:03)
one of the reasons it's been so
(00:32:05)
difficult to investigate Islamic Kolbert
(00:32:07)
is that the city's being built up on
(00:32:10)
itself like a kind of layer cake but
(00:32:13)
here the archaeologists have taken away
(00:32:14)
the modern level to reveal that Islamic
(00:32:17)
layer there and then down at the bottom
(00:32:19)
a Roman mosaic abdur-rahman built
(00:32:25)
cordova on top of what had been one of
(00:32:26)
the largest cities in rome in spain
(00:32:28)
outshining all that went before and his
(00:32:34)
greatest achievement was this the Great
(00:32:38)
Mosque of Cordoba
(00:32:43)
[Music]
(00:32:59)
[Music]
(00:33:07)
[Music]
(00:33:09)
with a floorspace the size of four
(00:33:12)
football pitches this is the largest
(00:33:15)
mosque in western Islam
(00:33:19)
the forest of 600 marble columns
(00:33:21)
disappear into the distance
(00:33:23)
creating a mesmeric infinity effect
(00:33:28)
on the columns arches balanced on top of
(00:33:31)
one another
(00:33:33)
it's shell-shaped brownish has an
(00:33:36)
extraordinary acoustic making any words
(00:33:38)
spoken inside audible to the entire
(00:33:41)
congregation
(00:33:43)
[Music]
(00:33:51)
[Music]
(00:33:58)
[Music]
(00:34:06)
when the mosque was first built these
(00:34:08)
archways would have been opened to allow
(00:34:10)
people and like to stream in and out and
(00:34:13)
this courtyard was a central part of the
(00:34:15)
complex people would come here to richly
(00:34:17)
purify themselves before they worships
(00:34:19)
or just to gossip and do business
(00:34:25)
abdur-rahman x' original mosque was only
(00:34:27)
a fraction of the size of the building
(00:34:29)
that stands today over a period of two
(00:34:32)
hundred years rulers would extend the
(00:34:34)
mosque three times it's been suggested
(00:34:38)
that the mosque was enlarged because
(00:34:39)
speech new ruler of the city wanted to
(00:34:41)
stamp his authority on the building but
(00:34:47)
there's also a more straightforward
(00:34:48)
explanation the Cordoba mosque had to
(00:34:53)
accommodate the burgeoning number of
(00:34:55)
worshippers the Muslim population of
(00:34:58)
Spain was growing fast
(00:35:03)
[Music]
(00:35:08)
modern Spain has been reluctant to
(00:35:10)
acknowledge that its indigenous
(00:35:11)
population converted to Islam in droves
(00:35:16)
standard history books present the
(00:35:18)
Muslim occupation of Spain is something
(00:35:20)
that was superficial just a surface
(00:35:24)
colonisation by an Arab elite not a
(00:35:27)
presence that had any kind of lasting
(00:35:29)
impact on the bulk of the population new
(00:35:34)
archaeological evidence is turning that
(00:35:37)
idea on his head
(00:35:41)
[Applause]
(00:35:42)
[Music]
(00:35:43)
all over Spain cities like Cordoba were
(00:35:46)
established even Madrid was founded by
(00:35:51)
Muslims the original Arab walls still
(00:35:54)
stand behind the royal palace Muslim
(00:35:58)
communities spread through Spain we see
(00:36:00)
remains dating from the time of
(00:36:02)
al-andalus almost everywhere not only in
(00:36:05)
the south of Spain but also in other
(00:36:06)
parts of a Spain they are emerging lots
(00:36:08)
of sites fortresses villages and cities
(00:36:11)
almost everywhere people were Arab eyes
(00:36:14)
loosing the form of Latin they were
(00:36:16)
speaking unto them and their way Islam
(00:36:18)
is in the sense that they dropped
(00:36:19)
Christianity aren't converted to Islam
(00:36:22)
in massive numbers were these forced
(00:36:26)
conversions or was the idea of Islam
(00:36:28)
particularly attractive it's always very
(00:36:30)
difficult to say why someone converts to
(00:36:33)
another religion said but I think
(00:36:36)
there's no evidence of any force or
(00:36:39)
force first conversion at all in a way
(00:36:41)
the Islamization internalization of
(00:36:44)
territories like London's is very
(00:36:47)
similar to what happened to the Roman
(00:36:49)
Empire when people wanted to convert to
(00:36:51)
the values and the control values to the
(00:36:54)
religious values and to the way of
(00:36:56)
living or what seemed to be a superior
(00:36:58)
civilization which have lots of
(00:37:01)
advantages I think it's very easy to
(00:37:03)
forget that at this moment in time
(00:37:05)
Islam is a culture of innovation isn't
(00:37:08)
it he said it's drawing in ideas from
(00:37:09)
these it's a culture of phenomena
(00:37:12)
innovation the opportunities of living
(00:37:15)
because of the markets because of the
(00:37:17)
trade relations and so on which were
(00:37:19)
much more interesting
(00:37:21)
[Music]
(00:37:26)
the Islamization of Spain did more than
(00:37:28)
change the name of the gold that people
(00:37:30)
worship people converted because this
(00:37:33)
was a religion which had something to
(00:37:34)
offer them it had wealth it had social
(00:37:36)
structure and it had intellectual power
(00:37:41)
the Arabs brought in one innovation that
(00:37:44)
did more than any other to change the
(00:37:46)
cultural makeup of Europe and it's this
(00:37:49)
paper the idea almost certainly came
(00:37:53)
from the Chinese via trade exchange and
(00:37:55)
it is revolutionary technology unlike
(00:37:59)
parchment and vellum it's cheap and it's
(00:38:01)
easy to mass-produce and when the Arabs
(00:38:04)
come to Spain they start to open paper
(00:38:06)
making factories paper allows me to do
(00:38:10)
three things very effectively you can
(00:38:13)
gather information you can analyze and
(00:38:17)
develop ideas in a very precise way and
(00:38:20)
then you can disseminate your newfound
(00:38:22)
knowledge to a wider world and in the
(00:38:25)
10th century that was a potent mix
(00:38:30)
cordobas love of books became legendary
(00:38:32)
whilst the Royal Library of France
(00:38:34)
contained 900 books in this period just
(00:38:38)
one of cordobas 70 libraries amassed
(00:38:40)
over half a million these books contain
(00:38:44)
some of the most sophisticated studies
(00:38:46)
of astronomy in the world in Northern
(00:38:49)
Europe at this time there is nothing but
(00:38:52)
there is nothing that can be considered
(00:38:55)
the result of sophisticated astronomy
(00:39:00)
why do you think Muslim scholars were
(00:39:02)
particularly interested in the heavens
(00:39:04)
and the revolution of the Stars I think
(00:39:07)
they were interested in science in
(00:39:09)
general terms for example calculating
(00:39:15)
the sacred direction if you have to say
(00:39:18)
your prayers you must have faced towards
(00:39:20)
Mecca calculating the direction of Mecca
(00:39:25)
from a given place is not so easy it is
(00:39:28)
a complicated mathematical problem for
(00:39:31)
which the Arabs had exact solutions from
(00:39:35)
the 9th century
(00:39:37)
one of the ways in which the Muslims
(00:39:39)
solved these problems was by developing
(00:39:41)
a Greek instrument called the astrolabe
(00:39:44)
this is a calculator foretelling the
(00:39:46)
time of night or day if it's lined up on
(00:39:50)
a star above the horizon the angle can
(00:39:52)
be registered with the movable needle
(00:39:56)
the measurement is then transferred to
(00:39:59)
the reverse side of the astrolabe where
(00:40:00)
a base plate represents the geographical
(00:40:03)
location and a star grid like a map of
(00:40:06)
the heavens shows the position of the
(00:40:08)
Stars
(00:40:09)
[Music]
(00:40:10)
by aligning the needle to the grid using
(00:40:13)
the measurements the time can be read
(00:40:15)
off the face of the astrolabe just like
(00:40:17)
a clock the astrolabe enables nighttime
(00:40:23)
navigation which helped to advance see
(00:40:25)
travel and this in turn set the stage of
(00:40:28)
the coming era of worldwide exploration
(00:40:31)
and discovery core turbine scientists
(00:40:37)
were streets ahead of the rest of Europe
(00:40:38)
especially when it came to Medicine this
(00:40:42)
account's comes from an Islamic
(00:40:44)
physician who encountered a Christian
(00:40:46)
doctor at work they brought me a knight
(00:40:48)
who had an abscess on his leg and a
(00:40:51)
woman suffering from consumption
(00:40:52)
I made a plaster for the night and the
(00:40:55)
swelling opened and improved for the
(00:40:57)
woman I prescribed a diet to revive her
(00:40:59)
consumption but then the Frankish doctor
(00:41:03)
arrived and objected bring me a strong
(00:41:07)
Knight with a well-sharpened battle ax
(00:41:09)
he said the knight struck a blow the
(00:41:12)
marrow of the legs spurted out and the
(00:41:14)
wounded man died on the spot
(00:41:22)
as for the woman their doctor affirmed
(00:41:25)
the devil must have entered her head
(00:41:28)
then he grasped a razor and cut an
(00:41:30)
incision in the shape of a cross
(00:41:32)
exposing the bone of the skull and
(00:41:34)
rubbing salt into the wound the woman
(00:41:37)
died in the instant I returned home
(00:41:40)
having learned much about the medicine
(00:41:43)
of the Christians
(00:41:45)
[Music]
(00:41:46)
the hospitals of Cordova were performing
(00:41:48)
operations which wouldn't be seen in the
(00:41:50)
rest of Europe for hundreds of years the
(00:41:54)
city's most famous surgeon was a man
(00:41:56)
called Abu cassis he spent 40 years
(00:41:59)
compiling a hugely influential medical
(00:42:02)
compendium chapter 30 dealt with surgery
(00:42:05)
and these are just some of the
(00:42:07)
instruments that were illustrated in
(00:42:09)
that chapter this is a specialist device
(00:42:16)
used by surgeons for the relief of
(00:42:19)
hypertension and these two over here
(00:42:24)
were employed to perform successful
(00:42:28)
tracheotomies and in fact the abou
(00:42:30)
cassis method was still popular well
(00:42:32)
into the 20th century
(00:42:34)
[Music]
(00:42:36)
as well as large scientific collections
(00:42:38)
more everyday documents have survived
(00:42:41)
from Islamic Cordoba these give a
(00:42:43)
detailed insight to the society that was
(00:42:45)
created here what kinds of things are
(00:42:48)
being recorded on these bits of paper
(00:42:49)
this document as it was written
(00:42:51)
everything absolutely everything so does
(00:42:54)
that mean the people in the lower
(00:42:56)
classes of society could read yes there
(00:42:58)
are poor people with a very good
(00:43:00)
education education is a way to be a
(00:43:04)
better Muslim so being a better Muslim
(00:43:06)
is this means that you know they could
(00:43:09)
earn and soon you know everything of the
(00:43:12)
law the law is not the King law it is
(00:43:16)
the god law divine law divine law have
(00:43:19)
you got any physical examples of
(00:43:21)
existence I have I have one whether it
(00:43:24)
is a contract about plowing the land for
(00:43:29)
two years we have to plant it with wit
(00:43:32)
and food and he gets from this this
(00:43:36)
proportion of the production the Muslim
(00:43:39)
give the new thing the land is mine I
(00:43:42)
ran to use the land and you give me a
(00:43:44)
part of the production
(00:43:50)
people are interested not in having
(00:43:53)
hunting lands like Lord or Squire in
(00:43:56)
England the landlord rent his land and
(00:44:01)
it's empowering as well because if
(00:44:03)
you're the lowest rung of society and
(00:44:04)
yet you have some rights your own land
(00:44:07)
and you can keep a lot of the produce
(00:44:08)
yes
(00:44:18)
[Music]
(00:44:20)
[Applause]
(00:44:21)
every piece of evidence from Cordoba
(00:44:23)
adds to the picture of a civilized and
(00:44:25)
highly sophisticated city
(00:44:27)
it had Medical Center's an organized
(00:44:29)
legal system and libraries full of
(00:44:32)
academics and scientists working on
(00:44:34)
ideas which were lightyears ahead of
(00:44:36)
anything else in Europe by the 10th
(00:44:39)
century Cordova had become the official
(00:44:41)
capitol of al-andalus people flocked
(00:44:48)
here to work either in the city's shops
(00:44:50)
and markets or on rented land outside
(00:44:56)
in the year 912 a new ruler came to
(00:45:00)
power he was to take Cordoba to even
(00:45:03)
greater heights abdur-rahman the third
(00:45:07)
was Sony 21 when he became ruler
(00:45:09)
recordable with a resounding statement
(00:45:14)
of self-confidence he declared himself
(00:45:16)
the Caliph the commander-in-chief of the
(00:45:20)
faithful with that title he claimed to
(00:45:23)
be the supreme leader of the Islamic
(00:45:25)
world at a stroke he repositioned Muslim
(00:45:30)
Spain so it was no longer a Western
(00:45:33)
outpost but instead a key power in Islam
(00:45:36)
and to complement his role as caliph
(00:45:40)
Abdul Rahman a third built himself one
(00:45:43)
of the biggest royal palaces in the
(00:45:46)
world
(00:45:47)
[Music]
(00:45:51)
while the English kings of the same
(00:45:53)
period were living in modest wooden
(00:45:55)
halls abdur-rahman the third needed
(00:45:59)
10,000 workmen to construct this
(00:46:01)
enormous Palace complex which was
(00:46:04)
decorated with African white marble
(00:46:15)
the alabaster palace surrounded by acres
(00:46:17)
of date-palms was described as a
(00:46:20)
concubine lying in the arms of a black
(00:46:22)
eunuch it was called Medina Al's aha
(00:46:27)
after the caliphs favorite archeologists
(00:46:33)
have reconstructed barely 10% of the
(00:46:35)
original side luckily they are they
(00:46:37)
don't meanie
(00:46:38)
the idea here is that the Calif
(00:46:40)
dominates what he's really doing with
(00:46:45)
the landscape is demonstrating that
(00:46:47)
Medina or Farah is the strongest
(00:46:49)
territory in the peninsula
(00:46:54)
lfyou light tile of Anwar via our
(00:46:56)
excavations reveal the city to be of the
(00:46:58)
cutting edge of technical architectural
(00:47:00)
unscientific develop now to do these on
(00:47:07)
such an enormous scale requires
(00:47:08)
incredible sophistication nothing like
(00:47:13)
this existed in the world at the center
(00:47:16)
of the complex lies Abdul Rahman throne
(00:47:19)
room what do you think drove Abdul
(00:47:23)
Rahman to build such an opulent place
(00:47:26)
what if he's hello to you are there
(00:47:28)
among these built during the last year
(00:47:31)
of his life it was a symbol of
(00:47:33)
consolidation of his economic and
(00:47:36)
political power
(00:47:39)
Hill Valley fascism - I existed on this
(00:47:41)
throne the Calif must have felt himself
(00:47:43)
master of all al-andalus his destiny
(00:47:50)
visitors from all over Europe were
(00:47:53)
received here a monk from Germany called
(00:47:55)
John of course left a record of his trip
(00:47:58)
he had to try and imagine the impression
(00:48:00)
in this place would have made on dawn of
(00:48:01)
course the balls were studded with tiles
(00:48:05)
made of silver and gold and on the roof
(00:48:07)
there was a lucrative representation of
(00:48:09)
the heavens mechanical liens broad in
(00:48:13)
the corridors and in the rafters there
(00:48:15)
were mechanical birds that twittered
(00:48:17)
away here in the center of the room
(00:48:19)
there were two bowls filled with mercury
(00:48:21)
that would catch the light and then send
(00:48:23)
it shattering back out to dazzle the
(00:48:25)
visitors
(00:48:27)
this is what was written about the
(00:48:29)
climax of his visit when John arrived at
(00:48:32)
the dais where the Caliph was seated
(00:48:34)
alone almost like a Godhead he saw
(00:48:37)
everything draped with rare and costly
(00:48:39)
coverings they do not use Thrones or
(00:48:42)
chairs as other people do but recline on
(00:48:45)
de vans or couches when conversing or
(00:48:47)
eating their legs crossed over one
(00:48:49)
another there is actually one detail at
(00:48:53)
this account misses out the Caliph did
(00:48:55)
have a throne and the Kanaka throne that
(00:48:57)
raised and then descended as if he was
(00:49:00)
levitating among his subjects a refined
(00:49:06)
court culture developed in the palace of
(00:49:08)
madinat al-zahra and this was to have an
(00:49:11)
unexpected influence on the rest of
(00:49:13)
Europe what would the soundscapes of the
(00:49:19)
palaces have been in the tenth century
(00:49:20)
perhaps the most basic level would be
(00:49:24)
the sounds of all the different
(00:49:25)
fountains and small running currents
(00:49:29)
artificial rivers running from room to
(00:49:31)
room
(00:49:35)
on top of that we could have heard layer
(00:49:38)
upon layer of different types of music
(00:49:41)
and singing a variety of different
(00:49:44)
professional instrumentalists we could
(00:49:47)
easily heard of duped players sitting in
(00:49:49)
a corner or in any of the various
(00:49:51)
different entry ways
(00:49:54)
[Music]
(00:49:57)
there would be a slightly more formal
(00:49:59)
presentation of a singing girl what were
(00:50:07)
these sing is expected to do were they
(00:50:09)
concubines as well well in some sense
(00:50:11)
we're doing an injustice by just
(00:50:14)
referring to them as singers these women
(00:50:17)
were entertainers at every level they
(00:50:20)
had to be able to converse they had to
(00:50:22)
be able to discuss intelligent subjects
(00:50:24)
they had to be able to compose poetry
(00:50:26)
recite poetry for Arabs poetry is the
(00:50:33)
single most important part of their
(00:50:35)
culture if we look at a picture of the
(00:50:38)
entire world there are only three
(00:50:41)
cultures that we know of that had
(00:50:43)
developed end rhyme by the seventh
(00:50:46)
century China India and the Arabs this
(00:50:52)
early Arabic love poetry directly
(00:50:54)
influenced the development of literature
(00:50:56)
in the rest of Europe
(00:51:00)
one of the primary characteristics of
(00:51:02)
this poetry is a constant focus on the
(00:51:05)
feelings of the lover the poet is always
(00:51:08)
complaining of the pangs of love and the
(00:51:10)
distance of the beloved and we quite
(00:51:12)
frankly almost never hear from the
(00:51:14)
beloved love is a welcomed malady those
(00:51:20)
who are free of it one not to be immune
(00:51:22)
and those who are stricken one not to be
(00:51:27)
cured the pain of separation and
(00:51:33)
unrequited love are concepts that are
(00:51:35)
very familiar to us and there is a
(00:51:37)
direct connection to that early era
(00:51:39)
poetry in England some of our earliest
(00:51:48)
and most enduring stories are romantic
(00:51:50)
tales of knights and damsels a courtly
(00:51:53)
love tradition brought here by
(00:51:55)
travelling French poets called
(00:51:56)
troubadours
(00:51:58)
[Music]
(00:52:01)
and those troubadours were inspired by
(00:52:05)
their singing slave girls of al-andalus
(00:52:09)
the courtly love tradition has long been
(00:52:11)
seen as something European it came to
(00:52:16)
form the basis of the Western concepts
(00:52:18)
of romantic love but is cornerstone of
(00:52:21)
our culture originated in Islamic Spain
(00:52:26)
perhaps one of the most exciting moments
(00:52:29)
the transferor who will Arab music and
(00:52:31)
poetry from the south to the north
(00:52:33)
happens in the year 1064 in the city of
(00:52:36)
Barbra through neighboring French
(00:52:41)
Knights besieged the city which folds
(00:52:45)
it's booty includes hundreds of singing
(00:52:48)
girls who go to the second-in-command
(00:52:49)
William the eighth of Aquitaine he would
(00:52:54)
receive a large number of Moorish
(00:52:57)
singing girls which he then took back
(00:52:59)
with him to France he died at a fairly
(00:53:02)
young age and his heir William the ninth
(00:53:05)
inherited this household at age fifteen
(00:53:08)
and William the ninth is known to us in
(00:53:11)
literary history as the first troubadour
(00:53:15)
[Music]
(00:53:16)
so it's almost positive that William the
(00:53:20)
ninth would not only have grown up as a
(00:53:22)
child in a household in which there were
(00:53:25)
Arab singing girls at the age of fifteen
(00:53:27)
he actually became their master
(00:53:34)
it's one of the few moments where we can
(00:53:36)
say that there's a transfer of singing
(00:53:39)
the girls from this point to that point
(00:53:41)
and then the point of reception is
(00:53:43)
precisely where the first flourishing of
(00:53:46)
troubadour poetry emerges but the
(00:53:53)
glorious Court of Medina al-sakhra was
(00:53:56)
not last forever within the palace was
(00:54:00)
so in the very seeds of its destruction
(00:54:05)
[Music]
(00:54:07)
abdur-rahman 1/3 had invested much of
(00:54:09)
his money an interest in art and culture
(00:54:11)
and had paid very little attention to
(00:54:14)
the military there were no generals at
(00:54:17)
court and citizens didn't have to serve
(00:54:19)
in the army isn't that a more important
(00:54:22)
aboard this is important don't be mean
(00:54:23)
the mere fact that the army can't
(00:54:25)
recruit from its own citizens means that
(00:54:28)
it has to recruit more and more
(00:54:29)
foreigners effectively mercenaries
(00:54:32)
scenarios this is part of the reason for
(00:54:35)
the conflict which led to the ultimate
(00:54:37)
collapse of the country
(00:54:43)
when an ambitious courtier usurped the
(00:54:45)
Caliphate the court split into factions
(00:54:49)
once the 300 year old dynasty cracked it
(00:54:53)
didn't take long for the palace to come
(00:54:55)
under attack
(00:54:56)
[Applause]
(00:55:02)
Medina al-sakhra was quickly smashed and
(00:55:05)
plundered
(00:55:06)
[Music]
(00:55:11)
these are the tell-tale signs that the
(00:55:13)
palace was violently destroyed their
(00:55:16)
scorch marks on the marble made when the
(00:55:18)
molten LED that supported the joist in
(00:55:20)
the roof melted as the palace was burnt
(00:55:23)
to the ground
(00:55:25)
Victoria of course the history of Spain
(00:55:28)
would have been very different if Medina
(00:55:32)
Farah had continued to exist and if the
(00:55:35)
Caliphate not disappear
(00:55:42)
Rockman the Third's unique dynasty had
(00:55:45)
come to a terrible end and in the north
(00:55:49)
of the country another religious power
(00:55:51)
was eyeing up the rich lands of
(00:55:53)
al-andalus its name was christened 'm
(00:55:57)
[Music]
(00:56:09)
Ilan de luces Golden Age was over by the
(00:56:13)
beginning of the 11th century
(00:56:14)
abdur-rahman dynasty in Cordoba had
(00:56:16)
collapsed into chaos and disorder
(00:56:20)
but what happened next was even more
(00:56:23)
devastating
(00:56:24)
[Applause]
(00:56:26)
in 1095 pope urban ii made a call to
(00:56:29)
arms
(00:56:30)
he ordered a war to remove islam from
(00:56:33)
the holy lands pope urban speech is
(00:56:38)
agitprop at its finest when an armed
(00:56:42)
attack is made against an enemy let
(00:56:44)
there be one resounding cry from the
(00:56:46)
soldiers of god it is the will of god it
(00:56:49)
is the will of god the crusades had
(00:56:53)
begun it didn't take long for this
(00:56:56)
zealous warrior mentality to rouse the
(00:56:59)
christians of northern spain and what
(00:57:01)
followed was as treacherous as any of
(00:57:04)
the crusades in the holy lands the
(00:57:07)
Christians had always held onto the far
(00:57:09)
north of the country and now they were
(00:57:12)
gaining ground al-andalus had fragmented
(00:57:15)
into a hodgepodge of isolated
(00:57:17)
city-states
(00:57:21)
suddenly Muslim Spain found herself
(00:57:23)
under attack
(00:57:26)
her palaces were raided and her cities
(00:57:29)
laid to siege between the 11th and the
(00:57:33)
13th centuries an army of Christian
(00:57:35)
Kings took over the lands of al-andalus
(00:57:38)
[Music]
(00:57:42)
every year this conflict is reenacted in
(00:57:45)
towns across Spain Castillo knows this
(00:57:51)
the victors version of history
(00:57:53)
glamorizes what was actually a
(00:57:55)
dishonorable and genitive war comes they
(00:58:00)
break everything they come in summer
(00:58:04)
when the earth is almost dry they they
(00:58:09)
put it fine after that they cut the
(00:58:13)
trees the agriculture of al-andalus was
(00:58:20)
very sophisticated the more
(00:58:24)
sophisticated something the more fragile
(00:58:27)
is so the more easy is to break it
(00:58:32)
irrigation if you break the canal
(00:58:37)
there's no more water so for some years
(00:58:43)
people are starving so the scorched
(00:58:46)
earth listening
(00:58:47)
soon a brutal system of protection
(00:58:50)
rackets emerged there is an alternative
(00:58:54)
you pay me I don't destroy I don't burn
(00:58:59)
your house how could you give me I don't
(00:59:03)
cut your teeth how much do you give me
(00:59:05)
this one it is it is a way of the Mafia
(00:59:09)
in in Chicago for one century all the
(00:59:13)
different century all the Christian
(00:59:15)
Spain lives at expense of Muslim Spain
(00:59:22)
one by one the fragmented city-states of
(00:59:25)
al-andalus were terrorized
(00:59:31)
their solution was to fight fire with
(00:59:33)
fire
(00:59:34)
by bringing in troops from Morocco this
(00:59:41)
is the capital from the top of a column
(00:59:43)
in Cordoba
(00:59:43)
it's a buzzing little scene you've got
(00:59:45)
four musicians to her playing pipes and
(00:59:48)
to her playing lute but at some point
(00:59:53)
the faces of the musicians have been
(00:59:55)
smashed in this wasn't perpetrated by
(00:59:59)
Christian Raiders but by the new Muslim
(01:00:02)
Power who had come to help al-andalus
(01:00:10)
the troops who came as military support
(01:00:12)
were strict fundamentalists with a
(01:00:14)
fearsome fighting reputation they were
(01:00:17)
called the Almoravids the Almoravids
(01:00:21)
were a tribe of nomads from the sahara
(01:00:23)
they had black skin and wore veils that
(01:00:26)
covered everything apart from their eyes
(01:00:29)
when they entered a battle they wrote
(01:00:31)
light-footed versatile through horses
(01:00:33)
and took with them camels and elephants
(01:00:36)
but they were fiercest of all when it
(01:00:38)
came to religion they preached a return
(01:00:41)
to basic Muslim values and when they
(01:00:44)
came to al-andalus they were shocked by
(01:00:46)
what they found
(01:00:47)
there are people from the desert that is
(01:00:50)
people new born to the religion so they
(01:00:53)
have a hard feeling of it
(01:00:58)
evangelical Islam yeah absolutely
(01:01:00)
not accustomed to civilization yeah what
(01:01:03)
did they think had gone wrong with Islam
(01:01:05)
here they felt they had to purify things
(01:01:07)
they said this is people very accustomed
(01:01:11)
to civilization to science they are
(01:01:13)
talking with Christian with Jews this is
(01:01:15)
a mix that we don't like it we want
(01:01:17)
purified people with the barbaric
(01:01:24)
Christian Raiders on one side and these
(01:01:27)
new fundamentalist Muslims on the other
(01:01:29)
al Andaluz was crushed it descended into
(01:01:33)
corruption a Christian King would
(01:01:37)
provide military aid to a weak Muslim
(01:01:40)
king in return for a substantial payment
(01:01:42)
of gold coin
(01:01:47)
the whole of al-andalus was subjected to
(01:01:50)
this system of extortion the trouble is
(01:01:56)
modern Spain chooses to remember this
(01:01:58)
war rather differently the latter
(01:02:03)
Reconquista the reconquest is presented
(01:02:07)
as a valiant crusade in which Spain is
(01:02:09)
returned to its rightful Christian
(01:02:11)
owners this pantomime version of history
(01:02:15)
is personified in many of Spain's
(01:02:16)
national heroes the greatest of whom is
(01:02:19)
a night called Guzman el bueno
(01:02:24)
every town in Spain has a street named
(01:02:27)
after Guzman el bueno
(01:02:29)
he's one of the country's best loved
(01:02:31)
historical figures the story of when
(01:02:36)
Guzman defended the town of tarifa from
(01:02:38)
Muslim raids is well known in Spain
(01:02:42)
Guzman's descendants the Medina Sidonia
(01:02:44)
family became one of the richest
(01:02:46)
landowners in the country the Duchess of
(01:02:50)
Medina Sidonia
(01:02:51)
has discovered something remarkable
(01:02:53)
about her illustrious ancestor is the
(01:03:00)
first of the Griezmann family we know
(01:03:01)
about he is the founder of the family
(01:03:04)
gary venice turkish he came here and
(01:03:06)
lived in this very house
(01:03:14)
figuring this is our little family this
(01:03:17)
is a family archive although it's more
(01:03:19)
than that it is a rich source of
(01:03:22)
documents from the medieval period and
(01:03:25)
later was it right that one of your
(01:03:28)
ancestors was involved in the Spanish
(01:03:30)
Armada the 7th Duke was involved in that
(01:03:34)
campaign mr. window these document dates
(01:03:42)
from 1288 we know my ancestor was in
(01:03:48)
along the loose a year before because he
(01:03:51)
bought a farm and this document mentions
(01:03:55)
it's a permit for him to export 300
(01:03:58)
bushels of wheat they raised him up on
(01:04:01)
the field yesterday look you can see the
(01:04:03)
word wheat and what it says is that he
(01:04:08)
is allowed to take this overseas to
(01:04:10)
where he is from
(01:04:13)
so because of the grammar you can tell
(01:04:16)
that he comes from overseas not that he
(01:04:19)
was just visiting from overseas oh it
(01:04:21)
wasn't see but or lament yes probably
(01:04:25)
refers to a place which was part of
(01:04:27)
Morocco much larger than than now the
(01:04:30)
place we neither wheat know he could
(01:04:32)
grow neither
(01:04:34)
[Music]
(01:04:36)
the doctors have discovered that her
(01:04:39)
ancestor the great Christian Knight
(01:04:41)
Guzman albano was actually a Muslim
(01:04:52)
well this is really a piece of human
(01:04:55)
history it dates to 1297 the king refers
(01:04:59)
to Guzman as my bachelor because he is a
(01:05:02)
foreigner vassal if it wasn't written
(01:05:08)
here I wouldn't believe it
(01:05:11)
here are my frequent it was very common
(01:05:14)
for Muslims to ally themselves with
(01:05:15)
Christian fractions
(01:05:17)
especially when Christians were warring
(01:05:19)
with each other it must have been quite
(01:05:23)
a surprise to discover that your your
(01:05:24)
ancestor was a Muslim see yes a great
(01:05:28)
surprise this is because there had been
(01:05:30)
a chronicle which dated back to the
(01:05:33)
sixteenth century in which the Guzman
(01:05:36)
family had cleaned up its political and
(01:05:39)
ethnic past Whitman was said to have
(01:05:43)
been born in them they didn't just do
(01:05:48)
this with the Goodman family but with
(01:05:50)
all the families that had doubtful
(01:05:52)
ancestors ancestors of doubtful race
(01:05:55)
they cleaned it all up
(01:06:00)
voiceover and when I got so little
(01:06:03)
unisex younger we have a whole load of
(01:06:05)
documents here from the Spanish register
(01:06:08)
when they turn everything we know about
(01:06:11)
Spanish history upside down the Spanish
(01:06:17)
are simply imprinting history so kunafa
(01:06:20)
they have turned history into my face
(01:06:26)
the idea that the Christians and the
(01:06:28)
Muslims were fighting a holy war was
(01:06:31)
created in Spain long after the
(01:06:33)
reconquest actually took place
(01:06:37)
even Spain's most famous hero the swash
(01:06:40)
buckling El Cid is caught up in this
(01:06:43)
fantasy in films and books
(01:06:47)
El Cid is celebrated as a kind of
(01:06:49)
Christian pinup a crusader in the fight
(01:06:55)
against the terrible more but El Cid
(01:06:58)
spent his life like our bueno as a
(01:07:00)
mercenary fighting for whomsoever would
(01:07:04)
pay him the name seed means the master
(01:07:07)
in Arabic so else it's an Arabic name
(01:07:10)
yes in fact he was the king of Valencia
(01:07:13)
when Valencia was an Islamic city and he
(01:07:16)
didn't change anything there so he had
(01:07:18)
Muslim allies that's it that's not the
(01:07:21)
story you hear it no I think the history
(01:07:24)
is much more interesting that the
(01:07:27)
history you hear so he was a Christian
(01:07:29)
King but he didn't force the Muslims
(01:07:31)
that he controlled to convert no no it
(01:07:34)
was in fact we cannot see the Rican kiss
(01:07:38)
as a process of compassion this is a
(01:07:41)
process of trial and error of people
(01:07:44)
gaining lands and people gaining
(01:07:46)
prestige it's just real politic it's
(01:07:49)
it's all about that's it we are painting
(01:07:51)
now everything within religious ideology
(01:07:54)
but it's not it's a religions a kind of
(01:07:57)
convenient excuse rather than the
(01:07:58)
driving force
(01:07:59)
absolutely a religion it's always an
(01:08:02)
excuse el sidrón Guzman help when I went
(01:08:07)
simply Christian soldiers fighting a
(01:08:09)
Muslim enemy if anything this was a
(01:08:12)
civil war with both sides desperately
(01:08:15)
scrabbling for land and wealth the idea
(01:08:21)
that the reconquest was something cut
(01:08:23)
and dried black and white something that
(01:08:26)
cleaned up society is absurd I don't
(01:08:28)
know who came up with that idea
(01:08:30)
the Spanish historian palencia who said
(01:08:33)
that the Reconquista was nothing but a
(01:08:36)
civil war between Spaniards of two
(01:08:38)
different faiths
(01:08:42)
Spain is full of dazzling reminders of
(01:08:46)
how the righteous Christians won the
(01:08:48)
country back from the diabolical more
(01:08:51)
[Music]
(01:08:52)
the country's most popular saint is
(01:08:54)
called Santiago Matamoros son James the
(01:08:58)
more Slayer
(01:09:00)
but this romanticized version of history
(01:09:03)
distorts the true nature of this
(01:09:05)
conflict this was not a holy war
(01:09:12)
Al Andalus was destroyed in a dirty grab
(01:09:15)
for land which lasted for over 300 years
(01:09:23)
and in this conflict the more refined
(01:09:25)
society was the one least equipped for
(01:09:28)
war
(01:09:29)
[Music]
(01:09:37)
it was the Christians who had little to
(01:09:39)
lose and most to gain
(01:09:50)
and what happened when the Christians
(01:09:54)
began to take over exposes a curious
(01:09:57)
respect for Muslim culture when the
(01:10:02)
Christian King Peter took control of
(01:10:04)
Seville in 1248 this is what he had made
(01:10:08)
[Music]
(01:10:12)
it is a beautiful building it was built
(01:10:17)
for a Christian and yet in every way it
(01:10:20)
resembles an Islamic palace
(01:10:24)
[Music]
(01:10:29)
on the walls there are inscriptions from
(01:10:32)
the Koran and above the door
(01:10:34)
there are dedications to its owner
(01:10:35)
calling him caliph rather than King
(01:10:42)
the conqueror has been conquered by the
(01:10:45)
culture it's a tiny bit unexpected that
(01:10:53)
when this Christian king rebuilt this
(01:10:55)
palace he made it appear so Arabic it
(01:10:59)
feels as if we're in the Alhambra here
(01:11:01)
well this palace has many relations with
(01:11:04)
the lumber especially with the court of
(01:11:06)
Lyons both builders king mohammed v of
(01:11:10)
Granada and King Peter the first of
(01:11:13)
Castile were friends you have to
(01:11:17)
consider that in Europe at this time
(01:11:20)
there was not an architecture of such
(01:11:22)
splendor comparable to London and this
(01:11:26)
made a have very big attraction for the
(01:11:29)
Christians and this is why this
(01:11:31)
architecture was used by the Christian
(01:11:34)
to show you the nobility of the kingdom
(01:11:36)
the power the authority this room
(01:11:40)
covered with this marvelous dome
(01:11:46)
it symbolizes power because he's the the
(01:11:51)
heavens that turns around the king but
(01:11:59)
the legacy of al-andalus was to affect
(01:12:02)
more than the architecture of Europe
(01:12:06)
in the midst this terrible struggle
(01:12:08)
something incredible was to happen which
(01:12:11)
would fire the minds of Europeans and
(01:12:14)
expand our intellectual horizons at the
(01:12:27)
same time that it was being splintered
(01:12:28)
by Christian encroachments al-andalus
(01:12:31)
was at the center of one of the most
(01:12:32)
influential shifts and thinking that
(01:12:34)
Europe has ever seen
(01:12:37)
[Music]
(01:12:46)
between the Middle Ages and the modern
(01:12:47)
era Europe underwent a massive
(01:12:50)
intellectual and cultural revolution
(01:12:55)
this shift known as the Renaissance
(01:12:58)
transformed the human experience it
(01:13:00)
prompted the exploration of science and
(01:13:02)
the arts and changed the way that men
(01:13:04)
and women saw themselves in relation to
(01:13:06)
God the Renaissance and the Scientific
(01:13:09)
Revolution that followed were critical
(01:13:11)
stages in the development of Europe
(01:13:17)
the origins of the Renaissance are
(01:13:19)
generally believed to lie in Italy where
(01:13:22)
a renewed interest in the classics had a
(01:13:23)
huge impact on art and culture but the
(01:13:27)
foundation to the Renaissance were laid
(01:13:29)
much earlier and not in Italy but in a
(01:13:32)
town called Toledo in Islamic Spain
(01:13:41)
Toledo was one of Allen de luces
(01:13:43)
vulnerable city-states and in 1085 the
(01:13:46)
Christians seized control of it
(01:13:53)
unusually the handover went very
(01:13:55)
smoothly and as a result the Muslims
(01:13:57)
already living in Toledo were allowed to
(01:13:59)
remain as citizens and their mosques
(01:14:01)
were left untouched the city that
(01:14:05)
emerged accommodated both Muslim and
(01:14:08)
Christian Spain at this time is a
(01:14:12)
paradox on one hand tensions between
(01:14:15)
Muslims and Christians are becoming
(01:14:16)
unbearable and yet on the other there is
(01:14:19)
a hugely beneficial intellectual
(01:14:22)
evolution that is only possible because
(01:14:24)
Muslims and Christians are living
(01:14:26)
side-by-side
(01:14:31)
when Toledo fell to the Christians its
(01:14:34)
doors were opened to travelers and
(01:14:36)
intellectuals from all over Europe these
(01:14:39)
people mixed with the Muslims in the
(01:14:41)
city learning their language and reading
(01:14:43)
their books many of the adventurers came
(01:14:48)
from England in the late 1100s an
(01:14:52)
Englishman known as Dale of Morley
(01:14:54)
travelled to Europe to study that as his
(01:14:58)
autobiography reveals he was disgusted
(01:15:01)
with what he found there I stopped a
(01:15:04)
while in Paris and there I saw asses
(01:15:07)
rather than men's pretending to be very
(01:15:10)
important
(01:15:11)
they had desks in front of them heaving
(01:15:13)
under the weight of two or three
(01:15:14)
immutable tomes but because they did not
(01:15:17)
know anything there were no better than
(01:15:19)
marble statues I did not want to get
(01:15:22)
infected by a similar petrifaction but
(01:15:25)
when I heard that the doctrine of the
(01:15:27)
Arabs was in fashion in Toledo
(01:15:29)
I hurried there as quickly as I could so
(01:15:32)
that I could hear the wisest
(01:15:34)
philosophers in the world
(01:15:37)
just as the fall of Alexandria had made
(01:15:39)
a massive body of Greek knowledge
(01:15:41)
available to the Arabs
(01:15:42)
400 years previously now the Christian
(01:15:45)
conquest of Toledo past this storehouse
(01:15:48)
of knowledge onto Europeans who flocked
(01:15:50)
here in their hundreds at the backs of
(01:15:54)
shops and in courtyards groups of men
(01:15:56)
started to gather together Christians
(01:15:58)
Muslims and Jews to work contacts that
(01:16:01)
have been stored in the archives of
(01:16:03)
mosques and churches these were
(01:16:05)
extraordinary manuscripts translations
(01:16:09)
of Aristotle and Plato were nuclear as
(01:16:11)
well as original works by Arabic
(01:16:13)
mathematician and astronomers and
(01:16:14)
alchemists this was a resource like no
(01:16:18)
other in the rest of Europe it was
(01:16:20)
intellectual dynamite people came from
(01:16:26)
all over Europe all these works that
(01:16:29)
were lost in Europe could be found in
(01:16:31)
Toledo there was loss of wisdom here how
(01:16:35)
did the translators work together here
(01:16:36)
in Toledo in the first period there was
(01:16:39)
usually two people working together and
(01:16:42)
then a loud person who was learning in
(01:16:44)
Latin would write it down in Latin and
(01:16:46)
now that was I think the target of
(01:16:49)
working together and it was very clear I
(01:16:50)
think it really made it more accurate
(01:16:52)
because it was a Teel work
(01:16:56)
however these manuscripts being kept in
(01:16:59)
Toledo well most of the translations
(01:17:02)
were carried out in the 12th and 13th
(01:17:04)
century that means for almost 900 years
(01:17:08)
most of them in here we have the preface
(01:17:16)
in bread that's where we learn about the
(01:17:18)
process of translation in this case we
(01:17:21)
read this book was translated by Jer of
(01:17:24)
cremona it is a medical treatise by even
(01:17:28)
Cena back Avicenna and it was translated
(01:17:31)
up Arabica from arabic in latinum into
(01:17:35)
latin in it's a very rich document you
(01:17:40)
get a sense of how valued these things
(01:17:42)
were and there is all these little
(01:17:45)
glosses on the right-hand side
(01:17:47)
people have been adding comments or
(01:17:50)
explaining words that were not clear
(01:17:53)
[Music]
(01:18:01)
[Applause]
(01:18:01)
[Music]
(01:18:03)
[Applause]
(01:18:04)
[Music]
(01:18:08)
as I said looks like it's a workers
(01:18:11)
arrest of losers yeah this is the
(01:18:13)
rhetorica by aristotle rhetorica arrests
(01:18:16)
rottenness here we are is man's work
(01:18:18)
unit hermana Sally - yeah her manager
(01:18:21)
manager even Germans came all the way to
(01:18:24)
tell her to find all these texts in this
(01:18:27)
case it is a commentary by other Luis on
(01:18:31)
the text of Aristotle and both are
(01:18:34)
translated together so it's got added
(01:18:36)
value because you've got new Arabic
(01:18:37)
thoughts coming into the classical yeah
(01:18:39)
they are adding they are supplementing
(01:18:41)
now they are completing what was
(01:18:44)
transmitted from the ancient world
(01:18:48)
knowledge really is power that at this
(01:18:50)
time in history is having a book of was
(01:18:52)
something very very valuable gia and
(01:18:55)
Jonas process the words slipped from one
(01:18:58)
language to another
(01:19:00)
absolutely academia that world came into
(01:19:03)
Western languages as chemistry but we
(01:19:07)
have another war alchemy that comes
(01:19:10)
originally from Greek through Arabic
(01:19:13)
they added the article in Arabic al
(01:19:16)
indulge a alchemy
(01:19:20)
English is full of words which came into
(01:19:22)
the language from Arabic in this way
(01:19:24)
[Music]
(01:19:30)
many of them describe mathematical
(01:19:33)
concepts which were completely new to
(01:19:36)
Europe algorithms are named after an
(01:19:42)
Arabic mathematician and the concept of
(01:19:45)
zero comes from the Arabic cifra which
(01:19:48)
means empty that's where we get our word
(01:19:50)
cipher from but of course the most
(01:19:53)
obvious and lasting impact is the use of
(01:19:56)
Arabic numerals and in this Spanish
(01:19:59)
Latin text which dates from around about
(01:20:01)
986 ad we have the first example of
(01:20:05)
Arabic numerals written in Europe here
(01:20:09)
they are
(01:20:09)
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 imagine trying to do
(01:20:20)
something like multiplication with Roman
(01:20:22)
numerals
(01:20:25)
once the numbers get above a certain
(01:20:27)
amount they are ridiculously unwieldy
(01:20:31)
[Music]
(01:20:33)
this new agile numerical system made
(01:20:37)
everyday things like bookkeeping and
(01:20:38)
accounting more accessible mathematics
(01:20:42)
develops and the construction of complex
(01:20:45)
architectural projects became much
(01:20:48)
easier
(01:20:49)
[Music]
(01:21:02)
recently archaeologists renovating the
(01:21:05)
roof Timbers of Salisbury Cathedral in
(01:21:07)
England made a discovery which clarifies
(01:21:10)
this story
(01:21:11)
[Music]
(01:21:20)
on some of the beams that support the
(01:21:23)
roof there are a series of numbers that
(01:21:25)
were carved around 1200 ad when the
(01:21:28)
cathedral was built that's of 3 and
(01:21:32)
obviously it's familiar to us today but
(01:21:36)
in its time it's a curious and
(01:21:38)
progressive symbol at this time everyone
(01:21:45)
in England was still using the clunky
(01:21:47)
old Roman numerals but here in the
(01:21:49)
rafters of one Cathedral a new trend
(01:21:52)
appears to have caught on these numbers
(01:21:57)
the numbers that we use today the fact
(01:22:00)
that they're here is proof that the
(01:22:02)
ordinary craftsmen who carved them
(01:22:03)
benefited from an explosion of knowledge
(01:22:06)
that started in arabia and spread
(01:22:08)
through Europe via Islamic Spain and the
(01:22:14)
travelers from Toledo brought more than
(01:22:16)
just practical knowledge back to England
(01:22:18)
after a number of years
(01:22:20)
Daniel Morley returned from Toledo his
(01:22:23)
cases crowned with documents and volumes
(01:22:27)
and when he arrived in England he made
(01:22:29)
an appointment to pan this precious
(01:22:31)
booty over to his patron who was a
(01:22:33)
bishop this benefactor was one of a team
(01:22:36)
of scholars who wanted to establish
(01:22:38)
their town as a center of learning and
(01:22:42)
the name of the town was Oxford
(01:22:44)
[Music]
(01:22:46)
the universities that were founded in
(01:22:48)
Paris belong you're an Oxford at this
(01:22:50)
time based their new curriculum on the
(01:22:52)
radical ideas which were pouring out of
(01:22:54)
Toledo one of Daniel at Molly's
(01:22:57)
compatriots the man called an lardo
(01:22:59)
baths published this volume just after
(01:23:02)
he got back from Toledo and it's a
(01:23:04)
collection of 76 very basic questions
(01:23:07)
like why is the sea salty why are there
(01:23:11)
tides how does the globe
(01:23:14)
hang in the air and do animals have
(01:23:16)
souls
(01:23:17)
the questions are seemingly simple but
(01:23:20)
they embody a new spirit of rational
(01:23:23)
inquiry where a blind faith in God is
(01:23:26)
challenged and a lardo bath admits his
(01:23:30)
debt to the Muslims in pursuing this
(01:23:32)
line of inquiry
(01:23:33)
he writes from the Arabs I have learnt
(01:23:35)
one thing to lead by reason I will
(01:23:40)
detract nothing from God
(01:23:41)
but very carefully listen to the limits
(01:23:44)
of human knowledge only where this
(01:23:47)
utterly breaks down should we refer
(01:23:50)
things to God
(01:23:53)
the Muslims developed a massive program
(01:23:56)
of translations in which they translated
(01:23:59)
from Greek into Arabic everything that
(01:24:03)
had reached them and this was something
(01:24:08)
that was promoted but the whole society
(01:24:11)
and the result of this is that they
(01:24:14)
translated practically all Greek
(01:24:17)
knowledge there is a first period in
(01:24:22)
which they translate and they learn they
(01:24:25)
assimilate later they had learned enough
(01:24:29)
and they began to produce original works
(01:24:33)
by themselves and to criticize great
(01:24:36)
science and of course one cannot say
(01:24:40)
that the Arabs were mere transmitters of
(01:24:42)
Greek science they were the people that
(01:24:46)
continued the work of Greek scientists
(01:24:49)
until they led all this research into a
(01:24:54)
final crisis and this final crisis with
(01:24:58)
the crisis that brought the Renaissance
(01:25:01)
and the Scientific Revolution
(01:25:06)
if they had not than this Renaissance
(01:25:10)
and Scientific Revolution would have
(01:25:12)
been impossible it would take time for
(01:25:15)
these groundbreaking ideas to become
(01:25:17)
assimilated into Christian Europe but
(01:25:19)
once they were Western intellect was
(01:25:22)
transformed the works of Aristotle were
(01:25:25)
taught in the new universities the
(01:25:29)
medical treatise of Avicenna were used
(01:25:31)
in hospitals and Arabic translations of
(01:25:34)
Greek geometry and and those new Arabic
(01:25:36)
numerals were passed on to craftsmen and
(01:25:39)
architects this was a critical stage in
(01:25:44)
the growth of Western thought we should
(01:25:49)
no longer see the Renaissance as a
(01:25:50)
rebirth but the continuation of an
(01:25:53)
intellectual movement which had been
(01:25:55)
nourished centuries earlier by Muslims
(01:26:01)
the Italian Renaissance is famous for
(01:26:04)
reviving classical learning but in fact
(01:26:06)
what's happening here 400 years earlier
(01:26:08)
seems to be just as vital do you think
(01:26:10)
that Muslim scholars aren't given to
(01:26:12)
credit for what they're doing in Islamic
(01:26:14)
Spain at this time it is not something
(01:26:15)
that you would learn about in school
(01:26:17)
probably even at the university it was a
(01:26:20)
pretty conscious process of neglect and
(01:26:24)
now we are still suffering from that
(01:26:27)
it's really selective history writing
(01:26:29)
that's right
(01:26:34)
it is due to the conflict that existed
(01:26:37)
between the two worlds these remarkable
(01:26:42)
ideas were leeching out of al-andalus at
(01:26:45)
precisely the same time that the
(01:26:47)
Christians were flooding in the frontier
(01:26:53)
which had started far north of Madrid
(01:26:54)
was gradually pushing southwards then in
(01:26:58)
1236 Cordoba fell followed by Valencia
(01:27:01)
and Seville until by twelve hundred and
(01:27:03)
fifty only the kingdom of Granada
(01:27:05)
remained Muslim from now on Spain would
(01:27:15)
concentrate on cleaning the Muslim
(01:27:17)
presence from its country the Islamic
(01:27:21)
influence on Europe has been quietly
(01:27:23)
laid down but when it came to the
(01:27:26)
physical expulsion of the Muslims from
(01:27:28)
Spain that would be an act that was
(01:27:30)
anything but subtle it was shocking and
(01:27:33)
absolute
(01:27:39)
[Music]
(01:27:46)
the history of Al Andalus was about to
(01:27:48)
take a new and sinister turn in the city
(01:27:52)
of Granada the Muslims were to fall
(01:27:54)
victim to one of the most shocking acts
(01:27:56)
of ethnic cleansing that Europe has ever
(01:27:57)
seen long after the rest of al-andalus
(01:28:01)
had fallen to the Christians Granada
(01:28:04)
remained defiantly Islamic protected by
(01:28:07)
mountains and those giant watchtowers
(01:28:09)
and forts 70,000 Muslims who lived here
(01:28:12)
managed to hold off attack for another
(01:28:14)
200 years but time was running out
(01:28:20)
while Granada occupied a small territory
(01:28:23)
in the south of Spain the rest of the
(01:28:25)
country was now divided between Castile
(01:28:28)
in the West and Aragon in the east
(01:28:31)
two very powerful kingdoms the king of
(01:28:34)
Castile was about to be forced to pass
(01:28:36)
his kingdom to his niece Isabella
(01:28:41)
Isabella was headstrong and passionate
(01:28:44)
but she also had an acute political mind
(01:28:47)
in 1469 at the age of 18 she married her
(01:28:51)
second cousin Ferdinand the dashing heir
(01:28:55)
to the throne of Aragon now the two most
(01:28:58)
powerful Catholic dynasties in Spain
(01:29:01)
were united and the reconquest was
(01:29:04)
edging ever closer to completion
(01:29:07)
[Music]
(01:29:09)
Granada was blocking Isabella's vision
(01:29:12)
of a unified Spain and so it had to be
(01:29:15)
reclaimed
(01:29:16)
[Music]
(01:29:18)
[Applause]
(01:29:21)
the city was laid to siege for a year
(01:29:23)
before it finally surrendered on the 1st
(01:29:30)
of January 1492 Ferdinand and Isabella
(01:29:33)
dressed in an elaborate Moorish outfits
(01:29:35)
which had had especially made with great
(01:29:39)
pomp and circumstance they entered the
(01:29:41)
palace of a Lambro and took the keys to
(01:29:44)
the city
(01:29:45)
as the Muslim ruler bo Abdul left in
(01:29:47)
tears it was said that his mother's
(01:29:49)
passed out at him do not weep like a
(01:29:52)
woman for that which you cannot defend
(01:29:55)
like a man
(01:30:00)
Isabella's victory in Grenada put an end
(01:30:02)
to an incredible Society in the seven
(01:30:07)
hundred years that they've been in
(01:30:08)
Europe the Muslims of al-andalus had
(01:30:10)
built a culture which was the very
(01:30:12)
pinnacle of civilized life influencing
(01:30:15)
Europe in ways that we're only just
(01:30:17)
beginning to understand
(01:30:21)
and Isabella would endeavor to ensure
(01:30:23)
that Islam in the West would never enjoy
(01:30:25)
such a relationship again a few years
(01:30:29)
after Ferdinand and Isabella came to
(01:30:31)
power they set up an organization that
(01:30:34)
affected the most extreme form of
(01:30:36)
religious control that Europe has ever
(01:30:38)
known
(01:30:40)
the Inquisition the purpose of the
(01:30:44)
Inquisition was to track down and
(01:30:46)
eliminate anyone he wasn't an orthodox
(01:30:48)
member of the Catholic Church
(01:30:52)
those found guilty of heresy were
(01:30:54)
subjected to a sinister public ceremony
(01:30:57)
called an auto-da-fe in this eerie
(01:31:01)
ritual vestiges of which are still
(01:31:03)
performed today guilty were forced to
(01:31:06)
repent their sins while their accusers
(01:31:08)
watched on hidden under hooded caps
(01:31:18)
the sinners were then detained some were
(01:31:22)
burnt at the stake most had their homes
(01:31:25)
and livelihoods taken from them
(01:31:29)
in 1526 the Spanish Inquisition came to
(01:31:33)
Granada to deal with the Muslim problem
(01:31:38)
Muslims were labeled heretics and given
(01:31:41)
a stark choice convert to Catholicism
(01:31:43)
leave the country or be punished
(01:31:52)
the Muslims of Granada were segregated
(01:31:54)
from the rest of the population their
(01:31:58)
ghetto survives as the old quarter of
(01:32:00)
the city today many of the houses the
(01:32:08)
Muslims were forced out of still
(01:32:10)
standing Antonio or hawala lives in one
(01:32:14)
it's almost inverted because you didn't
(01:32:16)
have any windows looking out onto the
(01:32:18)
street the focus is in the middle here
(01:32:20)
yes the corner is the center of the
(01:32:23)
family life so all the doors and windows
(01:32:27)
are open to the quarter and close to the
(01:32:30)
to the street privacy was one of the
(01:32:34)
most important characteristic of these
(01:32:36)
houses outside the house they were
(01:32:39)
Christian they went to the chart with
(01:32:42)
the priest they celebrate the wedding in
(01:32:44)
the Christian way but then later they
(01:32:48)
came home to celebrate again the wedding
(01:32:51)
in the Muslims - what happened there
(01:32:54)
when they when the Inquisition came
(01:32:56)
knocking on the door well as you see
(01:32:58)
these houses have the bent entry so from
(01:33:03)
outside even if the door is open is not
(01:33:06)
possible to see what happens in the
(01:33:09)
corner the inquisitors went from door to
(01:33:12)
door seeking out those they still
(01:33:15)
suspected of being Muslim a number of
(01:33:18)
civic leaders had already been expelled
(01:33:19)
and so often there was only women and
(01:33:21)
children left they herded them up and
(01:33:24)
held them in churches by night so they
(01:33:26)
could be tried the following morning
(01:33:29)
some of the women cried out that they
(01:33:31)
were like lambs being taken to the
(01:33:33)
slaughter and wished that instead they'd
(01:33:36)
been allowed to die in their own home
(01:33:38)
[Music]
(01:33:40)
the Inquisition was so brutally
(01:33:42)
efficient that within 20 years all
(01:33:44)
Muslims in Spain had been forcibly
(01:33:46)
converted to Catholicism but this wasn't
(01:33:50)
enough many still continued to practice
(01:33:53)
their faith in private and so in 1609
(01:33:56)
the Spanish crown ordered the removal of
(01:33:59)
all Muslims from Spain
(01:34:02)
perhaps the most shocking thing in the
(01:34:05)
expulsion is they were not actually
(01:34:07)
expelling Arabs nor were they expelling
(01:34:09)
Berbers the huge majority of the people
(01:34:12)
that were being expelled by blood by DNA
(01:34:15)
if you will were as Iberian as their
(01:34:18)
Christian cousins and the north who were
(01:34:20)
kicking them out of the peninsula it's
(01:34:22)
really quite an enormous ly different
(01:34:24)
vision of what the explosions were and
(01:34:27)
what they meant when we realized that
(01:34:28)
the people who were being thrust out
(01:34:30)
were as native to their insula as the
(01:34:34)
Christian Kings why do you think the
(01:34:36)
Catholic authorities felt they had to
(01:34:39)
expel the Moors in 1609 the Spanish
(01:34:42)
Empire for it was indeed by then the
(01:34:44)
Empire simply felt pressed by in so many
(01:34:48)
different directions they were very much
(01:34:51)
afraid of the Turks who were in fact
(01:34:53)
raiding from North Africa and raiding
(01:34:54)
along the southern coast of Spain they
(01:34:57)
were fighting wars still in the miracles
(01:34:59)
it was one internal problem that they
(01:35:03)
simply could not deal with any longer
(01:35:07)
in ten years over a quarter of a million
(01:35:11)
Muslims were expelled from Spain
(01:35:14)
forbidden to take any possessions with
(01:35:16)
them most sought refuge in North Africa
(01:35:20)
[Music]
(01:35:23)
when Isabella and Ferdinand our age this
(01:35:26)
is where they were buried it's a little
(01:35:29)
corner of the Alam bruh and it's
(01:35:30)
decorated with inscriptions from the
(01:35:32)
Quran
(01:35:33)
[Music]
(01:35:37)
they read there is no true god but allah
(01:35:46)
many ways it's a curious choice for a
(01:35:49)
christian in two months but it does
(01:35:51)
speak of that complicated relationship
(01:35:53)
that was enjoyed by the catholics and
(01:35:55)
the muslims on one level it says that
(01:35:58)
Isabella and Ferdinand were still half
(01:36:00)
in love with all things Islamic but on
(01:36:03)
the other its a bold and uncompromising
(01:36:06)
statement of control and in Cordoba the
(01:36:16)
new Catholic rulers did something
(01:36:18)
unbelievable in a daring act of what can
(01:36:22)
only be described as inspired vandalism
(01:36:24)
architects who gouged out the center of
(01:36:26)
the mosque in its place built one of the
(01:36:29)
most spectacular cathedrals in Spain
(01:36:35)
[Music]
(01:36:41)
the result is a shocking and blasphemous
(01:36:44)
conflation of two of the world's most
(01:36:46)
powerful religions it is unnerving ly
(01:36:50)
beautiful but possesses an underlying
(01:36:52)
schizophrenia as if a terrible and
(01:36:55)
silent battle is being carried out in
(01:36:57)
the very architecture of the building
(01:37:00)
[Music]
(01:37:08)
[Music]
(01:37:16)
Spain's troubled relationship with its
(01:37:19)
Muslim past
(01:37:20)
continued into the 20th century the
(01:37:23)
dictator Franco invented his own version
(01:37:25)
of his country's heritage
(01:37:29)
franco this spirit was somehow
(01:37:31)
interrupting what was for him a
(01:37:34)
continuum history he wanted somehow to
(01:37:37)
if not deleted he wanted to forget about
(01:37:39)
it so what he did was to explain the
(01:37:42)
whole Muslim or the whole al-andalus as
(01:37:45)
a kind of continuum from the visigothic
(01:37:48)
period to the Catholic kings and by
(01:37:53)
saying that the Muslims in al-andalus
(01:37:55)
were not such big good Muslims but much
(01:37:59)
more crystallized so this is the
(01:38:03)
political use of history he wanted to
(01:38:07)
explain the identity of Mima Spaniards
(01:38:09)
and for Franco that identity was a
(01:38:12)
continuation from the visigothic period
(01:38:14)
right through to the Catholic exactly
(01:38:19)
Seraphin fan Hall is an academic whose
(01:38:21)
books on the history of al-andalus
(01:38:23)
are bestsellers in Spain do you think
(01:38:26)
that Spanish people today are proud at
(01:38:29)
all of the Arabic s episode in their
(01:38:31)
history or are they ashamed of it
(01:38:36)
strictly speaking it's not her past is
(01:38:39)
the pastor of other people as a
(01:38:44)
modern-day Spaniards I would feel very
(01:38:46)
little connection with the Arab past
(01:38:50)
Spanish people don't live like them we
(01:38:54)
don't dress like them
(01:38:57)
we don't feel like me Anissa sentido I
(01:39:00)
don't know how you can say we are the
(01:39:02)
same because we are not the same we have
(01:39:04)
nothing in common and if I weren't a
(01:39:11)
professor of Arabic studies I would have
(01:39:13)
absolutely no feeling for Muslim culture
(01:39:20)
for a very long time people have
(01:39:23)
protested and urged that history been
(01:39:26)
truthfully told that they not be fed
(01:39:28)
this nonsense but this is the
(01:39:31)
inheritance of the Inquisition the
(01:39:33)
Inquisition's character is alive and
(01:39:35)
well I can tell you one thing Spanish
(01:39:39)
people have a tendency to prevent others
(01:39:41)
from speaking their minds a tendency to
(01:39:44)
try and control the way others behave
(01:39:46)
and think you can be sure that when you
(01:39:49)
try and speak the truth you pay for it
(01:39:54)
and so al Andaluz fell East became East
(01:40:00)
and West became West two distinct
(01:40:03)
cultures politically and religiously
(01:40:05)
divided
(01:40:06)
[Music]
(01:40:09)
and yet what the history of the Moors
(01:40:11)
shows is that these two cultures are
(01:40:13)
also linked in ways that we might never
(01:40:15)
have imagined
(01:40:16)
[Music]
(01:40:18)
the West has been inspired by Islam but
(01:40:22)
more than that it was in the very act of
(01:40:24)
fighting the Muslims that Europe
(01:40:26)
consolidated its identity
(01:40:29)
[Music]
(01:40:34)
when we started Christopher Columbus was
(01:40:36)
setting sail for the new world and as he
(01:40:39)
pointed his boats westwards Spain
(01:40:41)
aligned herself with him turning away
(01:40:44)
from the East the Muslims had been
(01:40:47)
fought and now they were to be forgotten
(01:40:49)
as time went by memories of the Islamic
(01:40:53)
past were molded until they became a
(01:40:55)
more comforting storybook version of
(01:40:57)
history but this is a case where truth
(01:41:01)
really is stranger than fiction the
(01:41:04)
story of al-andalus isn't a simple tale
(01:41:06)
of good versus bad East versus West it's
(01:41:10)
intriguing and complicated it's
(01:41:12)
brilliant and brutal it's very human and
(01:41:15)
it's very messy and it's for precisely
(01:41:18)
that reason that it needs to be
(01:41:20)
remembered not written out of the
(01:41:22)
history books
(01:41:25)
[Music]
(01:41:31)
well if you want to know more about the
(01:41:33)
many cultures that have shaped and
(01:41:35)
changed Britain visit origination
(01:41:37)
insight at channel for calm slash
(01:41:40)
culture coming up next on for father Ted
(01:41:43)
is tempted by a saucy novelist
(01:41:46)
[Music]
(01:41:52)
[Applause]
