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Battle of Calatañazor

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July 1002

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Battle of Cervera, Battle of Cutanda, Battle of Alhandic, Battle of Uclés, Battle of Simancas

The battle of calata azor


The Battle of Calatañazor was a legendary battle of the Reconquista that took place in July 1002 at Calatañazor between an army of invading Saracens under the ferocious Saracin leader, al-Mansur (938-1002), also spelled Almanzor, and a force of Christian allies led by Alfonso V of León, Sancho III of Navarre, and Sancho García of Castile. Almanzor, died the night of 10–11 August of wounds received in the battle. Its ahistoricity was first demonstrated by Reinhart Dozy in 1881, a man noted for his antipathy towards Muslims. The French Arabist Évariste Lévi-Provençal attributed the destruction of San Millán de la Cogolla by the Saracens to the campaign of Calatañazor.

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Legend

Almanzor was finishing a campaign in Galicia when he decided to invade Castile. He assembled a large army at Calatañazor, where the Leonese and Castilians met him. Thousands of Muslims were slain and Almanzor himself escaped only because of nightfall:

Under cover of darkness he fled with his retinue. The next day Vermudo marched on the Muslim camp at dawn, but found it abandoned and collected instead an enormous booty. García Fernández, having pursued the fleeing Muslims, came away with a large number of prisoners.

The same day as the battle in another part of Spain a fisherman was seen exclaiming, first in Arabic then in Spanish, "In Calatañazor Almanzor lost the drum". Many Muslims came from Córdoba to see the fisherman, but every time they approached him he disappeared before their eyes only to reappear elsewhere repeating the same lament. Lucas of Tuy believed it was the devil lamenting the disaster of Calatañazor (el diablo que llorava la cayda de los moros). Almanzor never ate or drank after his defeat, and dying in Medinaceli he was buried there.

References

Battle of Calatañazor Wikipedia