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Amapola
12-12-2009, 03:37 PM
The Almogavars (Aragonese: Almogabars, Spanish: Almogávares, Catalan: Almogŕvers, from Arabic: al-Mugavari) were a class of soldiers from the Crown of Aragon, well-known during the Christian reconquista (reconquest) of the Iberian peninsula.

They were much employed as mercenaries in Italy, Latin Greece and the Levant during the 13th and 14th centuries.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/62/Almogavers-catalans.jpg/746px-Almogavers-catalans.jpg
Almogavar-style troops during the conquest of Mallorca.

History

The Almogavars came mainly from the mountain regions of Aragon and, to a lesser extent, from Navarre. They were frontiersmen and foot-soldiers who wore no armour, dressed in skins, were shod with brogues (abarcas), and carried the arms similar to those of Roman legionaries: two heavy javelins, or assegai (atzagaia in Catalan); and a short stabbing sword.

They were professional soldiers, and served kings, the Roman Catholic Church, nobles, or towns for pay; eventually they also hired themselves out to the Byzantine Empire. When Peter III of Aragon made war on Charles of Anjou after the Sicilian Vespers of March 30, 1282 for the possession of Naples and Sicily, the Almogavars formed the most effective element of his army. Their discipline and ferocity, the force with which they hurled their javelins, and their activity, made them very formidable to the heavy cavalry of the Angevin armies. They fought against cavalry by attacking firstly horses instead of knights. Once the knight was on the ground he was an easy victim for the Almogavar.

When the Peace of Caltabellotta in 1302 ended the war in southern Italy, the Almogavars, under the leadership of Roger de Flor ("Roger Blum", a former Knight Templar), formed the Catalan Company in the service of the emperor of the East, Andronicus II Palaeologus, to fight against the Turks. Both kings of Aragon and Sicily agreed with the idea since peace had been reached and it was viable alternative to having the Almogavar standing army unemployed in their realms.

Their campaign in Asia Minor during 1303 and 1304 was a series of military victories, but when they insisted in receiving the agreed payment, the Emperor refused. Thereafter the Almogavars turned to violence, making their presence intolerable to the Byzantine population. Roger de Flor and his lieutenants were assassinated by orders of the Emperor 1305 while meeting to discuss terms on their compensation, presumably on the instigation of Genoese merchants, who were conspiring to keep their own position of influence and power and keep the Catalans out of the loop. This betrayal resulted in the Almogavars ravaging the neighbourhood of Constantinople.

Subsequently they marched against the Duchy of Athens, under the rule of the French House of Brienne. Duke Walter V of Brienne was defeated and slain by the Almogavars with all his knights at the Battle of the Cephissus, or Orchomenus[citation needed], in Boeotia in March 1310. They then divided the wives and possessions of the Frenchmen by lot, and summoned a prince of the house of Aragon to rule over them.

The foundation of the Aragonese rule over the duchy of Athens was to be the culminating achievement of the Almogavars. Although the duchy eventually fell to the Ottoman Empire, even today the King of Spain still holds the title of 'Duke of Athens and Neopatria'.

Etymology

The origin of the word Almogavar is not clear. As most Iberian words beginning with the prefix "al-", it is likely to be derived from the Arabic language. Catalan sources claim that the word "Almogŕver" is based on the name al-mughawwar, meaning «els que provoquen algarades» ("the ones wreaking havoc") given to them by the Saracens. When they made brief incursions (lasting one or two days) of about twelve men into Muslim-controlled territory, they were led by the "Adalí" (Arabic ad-dalla, "guide"). The captain of a large squadron was known in Catalan as "Almogaten" (Arabic al-muqaddam, "captain").[1]

Other sources claim that the word Almogavar may come from the Arabic "al-muqafir," a "raider" or "devastator".

The battle cry of the Almogŕvers

Aur! Aur! Desperta ferro!
Deus aia!
...
Veyentnos sols venir, los pobles ja flamejen:
veyentnos sols passar, son bech los corbs netejen.
La guerra y lo saqueig, no hi ha mellors plahers.
Avant, almugavers! Que avisin als fossers!
La veu del somatent nos crida ja a la guerra.
Fadigues, plujes, neus, calors resistirem,
y si'ns abat la sňn, pendrčra per llit la terra,
y si'ns rendeix la fam carn crua menjarem!

Desperta ferro! Avant! Depressa com lo llamp
cayčm sobre son camp!
Almugavers, avant! Anem allí a fer carn!
Les feres tenen fam!

Meaning:


Listen! listen! Wake up, O iron! Help us God!...Just seeing us coming the villages are already ablaze. Just seeing us passing the crows are wiping their beaks. War and plunder, there are no greater pleasures. Forward Almogavars! Let them call the gravediggers! The voice of the somatent is calling us to war. Weariness, rains, snow and heat we shall endure. And if sleep overtakes us, we will use the earth as our bed. And if we get hungry, we shall eat raw meat. Wake up, O iron! Forward! Fast as the lightning let us fall over their camp! Forward Almogavars! Let us go there to make flesh, the wild beasts are hungry!

Gallop
11-24-2022, 07:17 PM
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Ande andah?

HannibaltheGreat
12-08-2022, 12:20 AM
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