Isabella: The Blue Blooded Queen
Background History
The invasion of Western Europe by a the Moors, also known as the
Saracens, a Non-white Muslim army after 711 AD very nearly extinguished Aryan
Europe, the threat of the Moors was no less serious than the Hunnish
invasion which created the first Race War. The Moors were a mixed race:
part Arabic, part Black and part mixed race and are easily
distinguishable from the Aryan Visigothic of Spain. The Moors very nearly conquered
all of Spain, and were only turned back from occupying all of Western
Europe by a desperate White counter attack in France. The history of
this seven hundred yearlong race war is without doubt one of the most
arduous ever fought by the Aryans in defence of their homelands.
In 711 a Moorish fleet sailed onto the beachhead of Andalusia in Spain,
their first territory on the European mainland.
The Spanish Gothic king of the time, Roderic, engaged the Moors in a
three-day battle. The Moors won, and the Gothic Spaniards were forced to
retreat, giving the Moors time to land a seemingly inexhaustible supply
of soldiers from the North Africa. Soon the Moors had assembled a
massive army and within a few months had conquered most of Gothic Spain.
The Tribute of Aryan Virgins
During the Muslim dominance of Spain only isolated pockets of Gothic
resistance held out. In the North one a community secured its existence
by being forced to enter a treaty with the Moors, which demanded the
Goths had to hand over 100 Aryan Gothic virgins a year to the Moorish
leaders for use in their harems. Eventually these regions banded together
in an anti-Muslim alliance, and began pushing further south; slowly
driving the Muslim forces back reclaim more of their homelands. This push
lasted many hundreds of years unfortunately more than enough time for
race mixing between parts of the Aryan population and the Arab rulers
to have taken place. In a great battle fought on the plains of Toledo in
1212, a great Aryan army defeated the Muslim Moors, from then the
Moors occupied only the Southern parts of Spain.
Isabella and Ferdinand
It was only with the rise of two great leaders - the red haired, blue
eyed, Isabella I, Queen of Castile, and Ferdinand V, King of Aragon,
that the Moors were finally driven from Europe. Isabella, who is renown
for not only liberating Spain from the last of the Moors, but for being
one of the main sponsors of the voyages of discoveries of Christopher
Columbus. Her parents where Spanish and Portuguese nobility who had,
along with most of Spaniards, avoided race mixing caused by centuries of
Moorish rule. Aged 18 Isabella married Ferdinand, who was King of Aragon,
King of Sicily and King of Naples, they had five children. Isabella
became Queen of Castile when she was 23 years old. No sooner had she
become Queen, her kingdom was invaded by the Portuguese, who hoped to
capitalise on a weaker Span in the confusion following the Moorish invasion.
Castile was very nearly overrun, after a supreme effort Isabella and
Ferdinand were able to raise a strong enough army to defeat the
Portuguese. With the Portuguese threat settled, the Aryan King and Queen then
turned their attention to their real enemy: the Muslim Moors.
The Ten Year War
The Muslims renewed their assault on Spain in 1482; a war, which lasted
ten years, broke out. Isabella and Ferdinand used the money and riches
they had confiscated from Spain's Jewish population and bought large
quantities of new cannons and weapons. When they ran out of money,
Isabella sold all of her own royal and personal gold, silver, pearls and
jewels, to raise money for the liberation of her country from the Moors.
With these weapons of war, Isabella and Ferdinand waged a demanding and
extremely costly, in terms of lives and material, war to drive the
Moors out of Europe for once and for all.
The fall of Grenada
The Moors held the city of Grenada, in 1491 the great Aryan army stood
outside the gates of the city of Grenada; outside Ferdinand and
Isabella personally took command of the siege army. After five months the
Moors became desperate, their food supplies ran low and disease started to
spread within the closed walls. Finally the Moorish king, Abu
Abd-Allah, opened negotiations for surrender.
"On Monday 2 January 1492, Isabella and Ferdinand left the camp with
their army duly drawn up. As they came near to the Alhambra, Abu
Abd-Allah rode out, accompanied by many of his knights, with the keys of the
city in his hand. He tried to dismount in order to kiss the king's hand,
but the king would not allow it. The Moor kissed Ferdinand on the arm
and gave him the keys, saying 'Take the keys of your city, for I, and
the men who are within, are your vassals.' King Ferdinand took the keys
and gave them to the queen.
The surrender of Grenada in 1492 was the first time in 770 years the
Aryan Goths once again ruled all of Spain.
The Inquisition
While the Moors where in power, they employed Jews in their
administration, because of their common Semitic ancestry with the Spanish Jews and
because of the Jews hatred the Aryan Spanish. In the Grenada the
Spanish were enraged to learn that the Moorish king's Prime Minister and
most of his leading advisors were Jews: a total massacre of Jews in the
city followed that discovery. The alliance between Jews and the Moors
inflamed the anti-Semitic feeling amongst the Aryan Goths even further;
the Spanish Jews were amongst the first to feel the full effects of the
fall of the Moors from power in Spain. When Spain was finally liberated
from the Non-white Moors, the long suppressed anti-Jewish sentiment
broke out in full fury. Isabella had obtained from the Pope in Rome a
dispensation to establish the Inquisition in Spain, which soon turned into
a fully-fledged anti-Jewish campaign under the name of Christianity.
The infamous Spanish inquisition begun, it was set up to enforce
Christendom, was used to persecute Jews, who were regarded as the enemies of
White Spain. A secret meeting to resist the Inquisition with force was
held, Isabella's spies found out about the planned rebellion and arrested
the ringleaders, most prominent amongst them a rabbi named Diego de
Susan. He, along with six other Jews, was tried for subversion, found
guilty and executed by burning at the stake.
The Expulsion of the Jews
With anti-Semitic feelings burning brightly the Jews broke into panic,
and starting fleeing Spain in large numbers, some going to Italy, most
going to North Africa or to Muslim held Turkey, where they once again
enjoyed special status. In 1492 Isabella and Ferdinand formally expelled
all Jews from that country, punishing the Spanish Jews for having
actively collaborated with the Moors during their 780 year long occupation.
All property belonging to the Jews was seized by Isabella and added to
the state treasury. Individuals tainted with Jewish or Moor blood
where executed or fled from the country. Spanish society drove itself,
historian J.H. Elliot writes, on a ruthless, quest for pureza de sangre
(purity of blood). One of the process, used by Isabella to identify
individuals who where not of the Aryan race, was if blue veins where not
clearly visible on the inside of their arms, the individual was not
allowed to remain in Spain.
Spain's Golden Age
After the expulsion of the Moors and the Jews, Spain entered its Golden
Age: it created a huge empire, and became one of the most powerful
nations in Europe. Unfortunately for Spain the country declined once
again, after a change in the countries racial make-up. The liberation of
Spain from Moorish rule saved Western Europe from complete Arabic
domination, and as a result the Aryan Visigothic warriors who undertook this
700-year war will always be remembered for their great feat of arms, as
will Queen Isabella and her husband.
Peta WAU Australia