Granada
The last Arabic kingdom in Spain was in granada
In 1492, the Spanish regained Granada, the last Muslim-held city in Spain.
Southern Spain. The Kingdom was called Granada and surrendered 1492.
Granada was the last Muslim city in Spain to surrender to Christian forces in 1492.
Granada was the last city to be Moorish territory.
In the course of history, the lands we now call Spain have been held by: - various independent Celtic tribes - the Phoenicians - Imperial Rome - the Kingdom of the Visigoths - various independent Christian and Muslim kingdoms - the Kingdom of Spain
Granada was the site of the last Moorish kingdom in Spain. It was surrendered to Isabel and Ferdinand in 1492.
The last Muslim ruler in Spain was Muhammad II, the Emir of Granada. Ferdinand and Isabella's army defeated his in 1492.
The rulers of the Kingdom of Granada were primarily the Nasrid dynasty, which was established in the 13th century. The most notable ruler was Yusuf I, who reigned from 1333 to 1354 and significantly expanded the kingdom's influence. The last ruler was Boabdil, who surrendered Granada to the Catholic Monarchs, Ferdinand and Isabella, in 1492, marking the end of Muslim rule in Spain.
What is now Spain and Portugal was captured by Muslim armies starting in 711 AD. Most of the area became the Emirate of Córdoba. The farthest Muslim advance was the Battle of Poitiers in 732 AD. Poitiers is now in central France. The last Muslim state on the peninsula (the kingdom of Granada) was defeated in 1491.
Spain expelled the Muslim Moors in the 15th century.
Al-Andalus was a Muslim state in Spain settled by the Abbasids.