{{Short description|Tribute in medieval Iberia}} {{for|the son of Philomelus in Greek mythology|Parias (mythology)}} {{Italic title}} thumb|300px|Map (''in Spanish'') of the ''taifa'' kingdoms and the Christians states at the time of the breakup of the Caliphate (1031). In medieval Spain, '''''parias''''' (from medieval Latin ''pariāre'', "to make equal [an account]", i.e. pay)<ref>[http://buscon.rae.es/draeI/SrvltConsulta?TIPO_BUS=3&LEMA=parias "parias."] ''Diccionario de la Lengua Española'', 22nd ed. (online).</ref> were a form of tribute paid by the ''taifas'' of al-Andalus to the Christian kingdoms of the north.<ref>According to Catlos, 83, Arabic authors referred to the ''parias'' as a ''jizya'', the equivalent of the Islamic head tax on non-believers.</ref> ''Parias'' dominated relations between the Islamic and the Christian states in the years following the disintegration of the Caliphate of Córdoba (1031) until the reunification of Islamic Spain under the Almoravid dynasty (beginning in 1086).<ref name=fletcher>Fletcher, 7–8.</ref> The ''parias'' were a form of protection money established by treaty. The payee owed the tributary military protection against foes both Islamic and Christian. Usually the original exaction was forced, either by a large ''razzia'' or the threat of one, or as the cost of supporting one Islamic party against another.<ref>Reilly, 9.</ref> (The word "''taifa''" means "party [kingdom]" and refers to the prevalence of factionalism in Islamic Spain during the ''taifas'' era.)<ref>[http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/580659/taifa "Taifa."] ''Encyclopædia Britannica''. 2009. From ''Encyclopædia Britannica Online''. Retrieved 8 August 2009.</ref>
==History== The earliest evidence of ''parias'' pertains to eastern Spain, to the Kingdom of Aragon and the County of Barcelona, which exacted a very early one—called the ''vetus paria'' or "old paria"—from the ''taifa'' of Zaragoza.<ref name=fletcher/> While ''parias'' may have been paid by the local Muslim leaders just west of the Llobregat after Raymond Borrel's ''razzia'' on Córdoba in 1010, the earliest ''paria'' that can be dated was collected by Raymond Berengar I of Barcelona from Lleida and Zaragoza after his attack on those territories in 1045.<ref>Kosto, 13.</ref><ref name=bisson25>Bisson, 23–25.</ref> In the 1060s he was still demanding ''parias'' from Lleida and Zaragoza, as well as the ''taifa'' of Tortosa.<ref name=bisson25/> The Aragonese king Sancho Ramírez also took ''parias'' from the king of Zaragoza's underlings at Huesca and Tudela.<ref>Bisson, 13.</ref>
In western Spain the first ruler to exact such tribute was Ferdinand I of León and Castile.<ref name=fletcher/> From at least 1060, perhaps as early as 1055, Ferdinand had been exacting ''parias'' from the ''taifas'' of Seville, Toledo, and Zaragoza, and possibly also Badajoz and Valencia.<ref name=fletcher/> In accordance with his testament, Ferdinand's ''parias'' were divided amongst his heirs along with his kingdom in December 1065: the eldest son, Sancho II, received Castile with the ''vetus paria''; the second son, Alfonso VI, received León with the ''parias'' of Toledo; and the third son, García II, received Galicia with the ''parias'' of Badajoz and Seville.<ref>Reilly, 9. There is no reference in Ferdinand's will to the ''paria'' from Valencia.</ref> Eventually all the tribute found its way into the hands of Alfonso VI, who also exacted ''parias'' from Granada.<ref name=fletcher/> Valencia fell into the hands of Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar (1094), and upon recovery by the Muslims it was forced to briefly pay ''parias'' to Barcelona, payments which were later re-established by Raymond Berengar IV.<ref>Bisson, 33.</ref> These ''parias'' were still being collected in the reign of James I the Conqueror (1213–76), who put an end to them by conquering Valencia.<ref>Bisson, 64.</ref>
thumb|200px|The tower of Cluny III, financed through monies originally collected as ''parias''.
Much of the wealth acquired through ''parias'' was distributed to cathedrals and monasteries, while some found its way back to the aristocracy.<ref name=fletcher/> Sometime between 1053 and 1065 Ferdinand of León pledged an annual census of 1,000 ''aurei'' for the Abbey of Cluny, a donation re-established by Alfonso VI in 1077 and then increased to 2,000 ''aurei'' in 1090 by this same monarch.<ref name=fletcher/> This, known as the "Alfonsine census", was "the biggest donation that Cluny ever received from king or layman, and it was never to be surpassed".<ref>Fletcher, 8, quoting Charles Julian Bishko, "Fernando I y los orígenes de la alianza castellano-leonesa con Cluny", ''Cuadernos de Historia de España'', 47–48 (1968), 107. In 1131 Henry I of England offered 100 silver marks annually, a paltry sum in light of the Leonese gold.</ref> The large payments to Cluny, which financed Hugh the Great's construction of the massive third abbey church, undoubtedly helped publish the wealth of Spain throughout Europe.<ref name=fletcher/> Unfortunately for Cluny, changing conditions in Spain caused the payments to cease in 1111, and this brought on a financial crisis during the abbacies of Pons of Melgueil (1109–22) and Peter the Venerable (1122–56).<ref name=fletcher/> By 1100 the ''parias'' had decreased to a mere "trickle".<ref>Fletcher, 15.</ref> Only in 1246, when the Kingdom of Granada, the last remaining Islamic state in Spain, agreed to pay half its annual revenue in ''parias'' to Castile, did tribute again constitute a major portion of Christian Spain's wealth.<ref name=hillgarth>Hillgarth, 321. The kingdom of Granada, bloated with Muslim refugees, was prosperous, due in large part to its valuable port at Málaga and its advanced irrigation techniques that kept the Vega fertile. The king was a vassal of Castile and owed attendance at court as well as military aids, even against Islamic opponents, a grave offence to Islamic law.</ref> Though the burden of these last ''parias'' was sometimes reduced to a quarter or a fifth of state revenue, the Grenadine kings were forced to tax their subjects far beyond what was permissible under Islamic law.<ref name=hillgarth/>
==Amounts== ''Parias'' were generally paid in gold coin (''aurei'', "golden ones", or ''numos de auro'', "coins of gold", in Latin), usually Islamic ''dinars'' or ''mithqals'', accompanied by gifts of carpets, silks, ivories, plate, and other luxuries not produced widely in Christian Europe.<ref name=fletcher/> They were extremely large sums for the times, though it is impossible to determine their precise value in modern terms.<ref name=fletcher/> The ''vetus paria'' in about 1060, when it was being paid to Ferdinand of León, was worth around 10,000 ''aurei per annum''.<ref name=fletcher/> This was raised to 12,000 ''numos de auro per annum'' when Sancho IV of Navarre acquired it.<ref name=fletcher/> In 1075 Alfonso VI negotiated 30,000 ''mithqals'' from Granada, including two years' worth of arrears, putting the annual ''parias'' at around 10,000 ''mithqals'', comparable to the ''vetus paria''.<ref name=fletcher/> The largest ''parias'' on record were those forced on the eastern ''taifas'' by Alfonso's vassal Rodrigo Díaz de Vivar in 1089–91, during which period he took in 146,000 ''dinars''.<ref name=fletcher/> By comparison, a typical nobleman's ransom cost 500–1,000 ''aurei'' in contemporary Spain and in Córdoba 400 horses or seventy human slaves were worth about 10,000 ''mithqals'' in the 1060s.<ref name=fletcher/> "From being among the poorest rulers in Europe," historian Richard Fletcher notes, "[the Christian kings of Spain] quickly became among the richest," and "the kingdom of León-Castile, in particular, acquired a reputation for inexhaustible wealth during the second half of the eleventh century," due in large part to the receipt of ''parias''.<ref name=fletcher/>
==Notes== {{reflist}}
==Works cited== *Charles J. Bishko. 1980. [http://libro.uca.edu/frontier/spanfrontier.htm ''Studies in Medieval Spanish Frontier History''.] London: Variorum Reprints. *Brian A. Catlos. 2004. ''The Victors and the Vanquished<!--: Christians and Muslims of Catalonia and Aragon, 1050–1300-->''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. *Thomas N. Bisson. 1986. ''The Medieval Crown of Aragon: A Short History''. Oxford: Clarendon Press. *Richard A. Fletcher. 1978. [http://libro.uca.edu/ekl/ekl.htm ''The Episcopate in the Kingdom of León in the Twelfth Century''.] Oxford: Oxford University Press. *Jocelyn N. Hillgarth. 1976. ''The Spanish Kingdoms, 1250–1516'', volume 1. Oxford: Clarendon Press. *Adam J. Kosto. 2001. ''Making Agreements in Medieval Catalonia<!--: Power, Order, and the Written Word, 1000–1200-->''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. *Bernard F. Reilly. 1982. [http://libro.uca.edu/urraca/urraca.htm ''The Kingdom of León-Castilla under Queen Urraca, 1109–1126''.] Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Category:History of al-Andalus Category:Taxation in Spain Category:Economic history of Spain