The final
triumph of the 700-year Christian reconquest of Spain,
marked by the fall of Granada in 1492, was accompanied by
the forced conversion of Spanish Muslims (Moriscos). As a
result of the Inquisition, thousands of Jews fled or were
deported to the Maghrib, where many gained influence in
government and commerce. Without
much difficulty, Christian Spain imposed its influence on
the Maghrib coast by constructing fortified outposts
(presidios) and collecting tribute during the fifteenth and
early sixteenth centuries. On or near the Algerian coast,
Spain took control of Mers el Kebir in 1505, Oran in 1509,
and Tlemcen, Mostaganem, and Tènés, all west
of Algiers, in 1510. In the same year, the merchants of
Algiers handed over one of the rocky islets in their harbor,
where the Spaniards built a fort. The presidios in North
Africa turned out to be a costly and largely ineffective
military endeavor that did not guarantee access for Spain's
merchant fleet. Indeed, most trade seemed to be transacted
in the numerous free ports. Moreover, from the sixteenth to
the eighteenth century, sailing superior ships and hammering
out shrewd concessions, merchants from England, Portugal,
Holland, France, and Italy, as well as Spain, dominated
Mediterranean trade. Why Spain
did not extend its North African conquests much beyond a few
modest enclaves has puzzled historians. Some suggest that
Spain held back because it was preoccupied with maintaining
its territory in Italy; others that Spain's energies were
absorbed in obtaining the riches of the New World. Still
another possibility is that Spain was more intent on
projecting its force on the high seas than on risking defeat
in the forbidding interior of Africa. Marabouts
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Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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