According to , Christianity could have been present in Spain from a very early period.
St. Paul intended to go to
Hispania to preach the gospel there after visiting the Romans along the way. But there is no clear evidence if he ever made it. After 410 AD, Spain was taken over by the
Visigoths who had been converted to
Arianism around 360. From the 5th to the 7th century,
about thirty synods, were held at
Toledo to regulate and standardise matters of discipline, decreed uniformity of liturgy throughout the kingdom (see the
Unidad católica de España).
Medieval Spain was the scene of almost constant warfare between Islamic and Christian kingdoms. Islamic and Christian people generally lived in peaceful co-existence under Islamic rule such as in
Al-Andalus, as long as the Christians paid the religious taxes and held no weapons in their homes, with many instances of inter-religious marriage, of Muslim men with Christian women focusing on converting masses to Islam through the familiar power of the father-figure back then. However, there was tension from the
Pope and the
Catholic Church to oppose Islamic rule in Spain and to "reclaim" Europe. This was the period of the so-called "
Golden age of Jewish culture in Spain". The
Almohads, who had taken control of the
Almoravids' Maghrebi and Andalusian territories by 1147, far surpassed the Almoravids in
Islamic fundamentalism, and they notably treated the non-Islamic
dhimmis harshly. Faced with the choice of death, conversion, or emigration, many Jews fled to North Africa and Egypt. The
Reconquista was the long process by which the Catholics reconquered Spain from Islamic rule by 1492. The
Spanish Inquisition was established in 1478 to complete the religious purification of the Iberian Peninsula. In the centuries that followed, Spain saw itself as the bulwark of Catholicism and doctrinal purity. Spanish missionaries carried Catholicism to the
Americas and the
Philippines, establishing various missions in the newly colonized lands. The missions served as a base for both administering colonies as well as spreading Christianity. According to
Juan Avilés Farré, Catholicism constituted the "doctrinal basis of the most significant organizations of the anti-democratic and anti-liberal right-wing" in Spain developed in the period going from the demise of right-wing liberal conservatism led by
Cánovas del Castillo to the installment of the
Francoist dictatorship, including
maurism,
Patriotic Union, the group around
Acción Española and
Falange Española. The Catholic Church in Spain supported
Francisco Franco in the
Spanish Civil War and afterwards established a
close relationship with the Spanish state, with many Catholic priests serving in the government. After the
Second Vatican Council, relations between Church and State started to deteriorate, especially during the reign of
Pope Paul VI. == Sites ==