The crushing defeat of the Almohads significantly hastened their decline both in the Iberian Peninsula and in the
Maghreb a decade later. That gave further impulse to the
Christian Reconquest and sharply reduced the already declining power of the Moors in Iberia. Shortly after the battle, the Castilians took
Baeza and then
conquered Úbeda, major fortified cities near the battlefield and gateways to invade
Andalusia. According to a letter from Alfonso VIII of Castile to Pope Innocent III, Baeza was evacuated and its people moved to
Úbeda; Alfonso laid siege, killing 60,000 Muslims and enslaving many more. According to the
Latin Chronicle of Kings of Castile the number given is almost 100,000 Saracens, including children and women, who were captured. Thereafter, Alfonso VIII's grandson
Ferdinand III of Castile took
Córdoba in 1236,
Jaén in 1246, and
Seville in 1248; then he took
Arcos,
Medina-Sidonia,
Jerez, and
Cádiz. In 1252, Ferdinand was preparing his fleet and army for invasion of the Almohad lands in Africa, but he died in Seville on 30 May 1252, during an outbreak of plague in southern Hispania; only his death prevented the Castilians from taking the war to the Almohad on the Mediterranean coast.
James I of Aragon conquered the
Balearic Islands (from 1228 to 1232) and
Valencia (the city capitulated on 28 September 1238). By 1252 the Almohad empire was almost finished, at the mercy of another emerging Berber power. In 1269 a new association of Berber tribes, the
Marinids, took control of present-day Morocco. Later, the Marinids tried to recover the former Almohad territories in Iberia, but they were definitively defeated by
Alfonso XI of Castile and
Afonso IV of Portugal in the
Battle of Río Salado, the last major military encounter between large Christian and Muslim armies in Hispania. So, the battle of Las Navas de Tolosa seems to have been a true turning point in the history of the region, including the western Mediterranean sea.
Moorish Granada In 1292 Sancho IV took
Tarifa, key to the control of the Strait of Gibraltar.
Granada,
Almería, and
Málaga were the only major Muslim cities remaining in the Iberian peninsula. These three cities were the core of the
Emirate of Granada, ruled by the
Nasrid dynasty. Granada was a
vassal state of
Castile, until finally taken by the
Catholic Monarchs in 1492.
In fiction Harry Harrison's 1972
alternate history/
science fiction novel
Tunnel Through the Deeps depicts a history where the Moors won at Las Navas de Tolosa and retained part of Spain into the 20th century.
S.J.A Turney describes the battle in his historic novel
The Crescent and the Cross. == See also ==