Legend often outpaces history—read the archive, then enjoy the tale.
Sources and Sequence
- 2 January 1492: Boabdil (Muhammad XII) surrenders Granada to the Catholic Monarchs.
- Capitulations: promised rights for Muslims initially; later pressures transformed life for Moriscos.
- The keys and procession: recorded as emblematic gestures of transfer.
The “Sigh of the Moor”
- Place: Puerto del Suspiro del Moro on the road toward the Alpujarras.
- Story: Boabdil looks back and sighs; his mother Aixa rebukes him in later legend.
- Function: a morality tale framed after the fact—identity, memory, and loss.
Where to Stand Today
- Viewpoints along the A‑44 corridor (signed); safer to use designated stops.
- In the city: look from San Nicolás and imagine the procession and banners.
Reading the Moment
- Politics: negotiated end of a long war; elite bargains and common fates diverge.
- Memory: 19th‑century art and literature amplified the pathos of the scene.
Bottom Line
Hold the archive in one hand and the legend in the other—both shape Granada’s story.