Stanley Lane-Poole's The History of Moors in Spain traces Iberia's Islamic centuries from the 711 conquest to Granada's fall in 1492. In lucid Victorian narrative, it follows Umayyad Córdoba's florescence, taifa fragmentation, Almoravid and Almohad reform, and Nasrid Granada. Blending Arabic chronicles with Latin annals, and written within Victorian Orientalist historiography, Lane-Poole highlights architecture (the Great Mosque, the Alhambra), hydraulic agriculture, poetry, and philosophy around Averroes, while mapping the Christian Reconquista's shifting frontiers. A British orientalist and numismatist, Lane-Poole (1854-1931) trained at the British Museum cataloging Arabic coins, a discipline that grounded his chronology and feel for material culture. Nephew of E. W. Lane and later Professor of Arabic at Trinity College Dublin, he ranged across manuscripts and epigraphy, writing on Saladin and Egypt; these pursuits underwrite his sympathetic portrait of Andalusi learning and polity. Readers of medieval, Islamic, and Iberian history will find this a vivid, elegantly argued synthesis. Though written within a nineteenth-century Orientalist frame, it remains a foundational, accessible account of al-Andalus's cultural and political experiments. Approach with critical awareness of its era's biases, and you will encounter a learned, compelling guide.
Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.