International audienceIn recent decades, the development of archaeobotany in the Mediterranean has made it possible to document the main plant resources exploited, the agricultural practices implemented, as well as major phenomena of circulation and integration of new plant resources within historical societies. Concern-ing the medieval Western Mediterranean world, archaeobotanical studies have recently received a new impulse, allowing for a better characterization of Muslim agriculture, of its diffusion and of its effec-tive implantation in the Iberian Peninsula, both in rural and urban contexts. This innovative work lays the foundations for a new reflection on the persistence and evolution of plant resources production and management in t...