In
the town of Murcia, we have some monuments which date back
to the Iberian people (Santuario de la Luz, Verdolay
)
and Hispanic- Romans (Martyrium de la Alberca, the Paleo-Christian
Basilica of Algezares, Los Garres
).
However, it was the Moorish civilisation which left a deep
imprint on what we call Murcia today. The city and the Murcian
"Huerta" (agricultural countryside) stem from
the Middle Ages. Madinat Musiya, as our city was known,
was founded by the Cordoban Emir Abderrahman II in the year
825. He wanted to have political control over the Southeast
of Al-Andalus (Muslim Spain), creating the capital in the
centre of the region and in a crossroads which linked Andalucia,
The East, La Mancha and La Meseta. Very soon, together with
the Hispanic Romans they established noble Moorish families
and a diverse mixture of peoples: Moors, Egyptians, Syrians,
and Magrebis.
Murcia was a place where Muslims, Jews and Christians all
lived together. During the 12th and 13th Centuries it was
to become one of the most important western Muslim cities,
as significant as other Spanish-Muslim cities such as Cordoba,
Toledo, Sevilla, Valencia and Granada.