A number of disparate onomastic phenomena occurring in northwestern Iberia have long puzzled scholars: the abundance of Arabic personal names in early medieval Christian communities, often fossilised as place-names; the extraordinarily profuse Romance toponym Quintana; and a surprisingly high number of hypothetical Amazigh (i.e. Berber) demonyms. In this paper we argue that these seemingly disparate onomastic phenomena can all be explained if it is accepted that following the Islamic invasion of Iberia in 711, the Amazigh settlers of the Northwest were at least partially latinophone. The internal history of the Maghreb suggests this would have been the case at least in the sense of Latin as a lingua franca, a situation which the speed and s...
The main argument of this paper is not to show that the Mozarabic dialects were characterized either...
Spanish and Arabic have been in contact for long periods and in different regions. While this is lar...
Most approaches to the history of Mozarabs (Christians with lineal roots in Muslim-ruled Iberia) in ...
A number of disparate onomastic phenomena occurring in northwestern Iberia have long puzzled scholar...
The existence in Hispania of a very large number of place-names with the -briga ending has been used...
The Iberian language is directly attested by ca. 2,250 inscriptions spanning the period from the 5th...
It seems probable that a considerable majority of those who came over from Africa to the Iberian Pen...
The study of copious Latin and French loanwords which entered the English language in the Mi...
Man has ever invaded, pushing aside previous owners to claim possession. Thus history tells us: of n...
This thesis is an attempt to follow, at the level of syntax, the complete process, from the onset to...
This article interprets the Arabic notes of a Christian who made a primer of Latin grammatical texts...
Aljamiado literature, composed in Romance and recorded in Arabic script by Moriscos before their fin...
A brief presentation of new research into the Arab term of madjus ('magician'), that comes from the ...
Un análisis detallado de los topónimos de la Cantabria antigua impugna la idea de una substancial pr...
The diffusion of raḥl placenames in Andalus and the islands of Majorca, Sicily and Malta in the High...
The main argument of this paper is not to show that the Mozarabic dialects were characterized either...
Spanish and Arabic have been in contact for long periods and in different regions. While this is lar...
Most approaches to the history of Mozarabs (Christians with lineal roots in Muslim-ruled Iberia) in ...
A number of disparate onomastic phenomena occurring in northwestern Iberia have long puzzled scholar...
The existence in Hispania of a very large number of place-names with the -briga ending has been used...
The Iberian language is directly attested by ca. 2,250 inscriptions spanning the period from the 5th...
It seems probable that a considerable majority of those who came over from Africa to the Iberian Pen...
The study of copious Latin and French loanwords which entered the English language in the Mi...
Man has ever invaded, pushing aside previous owners to claim possession. Thus history tells us: of n...
This thesis is an attempt to follow, at the level of syntax, the complete process, from the onset to...
This article interprets the Arabic notes of a Christian who made a primer of Latin grammatical texts...
Aljamiado literature, composed in Romance and recorded in Arabic script by Moriscos before their fin...
A brief presentation of new research into the Arab term of madjus ('magician'), that comes from the ...
Un análisis detallado de los topónimos de la Cantabria antigua impugna la idea de una substancial pr...
The diffusion of raḥl placenames in Andalus and the islands of Majorca, Sicily and Malta in the High...
The main argument of this paper is not to show that the Mozarabic dialects were characterized either...
Spanish and Arabic have been in contact for long periods and in different regions. While this is lar...
Most approaches to the history of Mozarabs (Christians with lineal roots in Muslim-ruled Iberia) in ...