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A fact from First siege of Gibraltar appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 18 July 2012 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
Hi Victuallers,
Thanks, yeah should be very possible, will keep working on it with Gibmetal.
Best, ClarkSui (talk)
Not sure why the internet link for the reference on the papal bull under Castilian Mobilization and in the bibliography section is not showing up. Any thoughts?
- ClarkSui (talk)
The aftermath section linked the defeat and the subsequent concessions by Granada to the deposition of Muhammad III, citing the work of Frederick Sayer (1865). I think this account is no longer accepted by more recent scholarship, simply because Muhammad III was deposed earlier (either March or April) in 1309 before the fall of Gibraltar (September).[1][2] If there's no objection I'm going to go ahead and remove it.
^Mann, J. H. (1873). "XVII: The First Siege". A History of Gibraltar and its Sieges (2nd ed.). University of California: Provost. pp. 139–140. It is alleged that this surrender of territory and money to the Christians reacted against the Moorish king, insomuch as his brother, Nasr, conspired against him, and he was compelled to abdicate by a tumult in the city, .... This story does not support the account given by Ayala, who makes the dethronement of Mohammed to have happened in April, 1309, and the siege of Algeciras to have been begun by Ferdinand IV., in a.h. 709, i.e. after June 10 in that year, and, consequently, not in the reign of Mohammed III., but in that of his dethroner and brother Nasr