Mothers of a Hybrid Dynasty:
Race, Genealogy, and
Acculturation in al-Andalus
D. Fairchild Ruggles
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Champaign, Illinois
One of the enduring debates among historians of Iberian culture is the
question of how acculturation (or transculturation) occurred in the Iberian
Peninsula, where large populations of Christians descended from Hispano-
Romans and Visigoths lived alongside Muslim Arabs, Muslim Berbers, and
Jews from 711–1492 and after. At the extremes of the political and intellec-
tual camps, Iberian culture has been characterized as either the product of a
dark-skinned, Muslim, North African people who conquered the Iberian
Peninsula in the early eighth century and were only partially expelled after
1492, or an essence that is European, Christian, and white.
1
Today most
scholars adopt the more reasonable position that Spain and Portugal are the
result of an intermingling of those peoples with a generous admixture of
Jews.
2
These perspectives describe the consequence of convivencia (cohab-
itation) but they rarely address the question of how such cultural diversity
occurred. Convivencia is a loose term that suggests that by virtue of living in
close proximity the people of the Iberian peninsula enjoyed cultural diver-
sity and a corresponding richness of artistic forms and styles between the
arrival of Islam in 711 and the expulsions in 1492. But history shows that,
just as military and political frontiers do not necessarily prevent trade on the
popular level, the proximity of diverse groups does not in and of itself cause
interchange.
3
With respect to al-Andalus, historians have rarely agreed
on how diversity was achieved. One argument is that Arabs and Muslim
Berbers came to Spain in 711, met a population descended from Roman
and Visigothic Christians, married and produced children with the genes
and cultural formation of both groups, and suddenly Spain became a melt-
ing pot of many ethnic flavors. Opponents to this model point out that the
Muslim army that crossed the Straits of Gibraltar in 711 did not consist
solely of men; the soldiers traveled with their families, and so, instead of an
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 34:1, Winter 2004.
Copyright © by Duke University Press / 2004 / $2.00.