After a small civil war in the already
Christianized Visigothic Kingdom in
Hispania, King
Roderic (
Rodrigo in
Portuguese and
Spanish) had a strong position in the peninsula. His opponents, exiled in
Ceuta, asked
Musa ibn Nusair,
Umayyad Muslim governor and general, for help. The initially skeptical general sent an experimental expedition mainly consisting of Moors from North and West Africa, led by
Tariq ibn Ziyad, thus initiating the Muslim conquest of Iberia. Tariq utterly defeated Roderic's Visigothic army in the
Battle of Guadalete, and soon after captured
Toledo and
Córdoba. With Tariq's success, Musa joined the expedition and established himself as governor of the new territories. By 714
Évora,
Santarém and
Coimbra had been conquered, and two years later
Lisbon was in Muslim control. By 718 most of today's Portuguese territory was under Umayyad rule. The Umayyads
eventually stopped between Poitiers and Tours but
Muslim rule in Iberia would last until 1492 with the fall of the
Kingdom of Granada. ==Emirate and the Caliphate==