Treaty of Xàtiva
The Treaty of Xàtiva was signed in 1244 between the Christian King James I of Aragon and the Muslim commander Abu Bakr in Xàtiva in the Iberian Peninsula. The treaty laid out generous terms of surrender of the Moors to the Christians, where the Moors were allowed to hold the Xativa Castle for two years before handing it over to the Christian monarchy.
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Categories:
- Warfare of the Middle Ages
- Treaties of Al-Andalus
- Reconquista treaties
- Surrenders
- 1240s treaties
- Treaties of the Crown of Aragon
- 1244 in Europe
- 13th century in Aragon
- Spanish history stubs
- Al-Andalus stubs