Editorial Summary
Everyday life is visible unevenly: elite writing, legal material, architecture, archaeology, trade evidence, and later memory all preserve different things. This hub uses cities, households, work, status, food, clothing, minorities, and slavery to make social history concrete without pretending the evidence is complete.
How to Use This Hub
Start with urban life and social classes, then move into households, minorities, slavery, food, and clothing. When the topic involves ordinary people, ask which sources actually preserve their voices and which only describe them from above.
Core Frame
This topic asks how people lived: work, status, gender, household, law, worship, markets, and city life.
Choose a Route
Start in the City
Use urban life as the entry point for markets, baths, neighborhoods, infrastructure, and status.
Follow Households and Communities
These pages help readers avoid confusing legal categories with lived reality.
See Everyday Material Life
Food, agriculture, gardens, clothing, and textiles make social history more concrete.
Reader Cautions
Social history is unevenly preserved because elite, legal, and literary sources do not represent every community equally.
Questions This Hub Answers
- Whose life is visible in the sources?
- Which social rank is being described?
- What changes by city, countryside, or frontier?
Best Next Steps
Use the city and status pages as the first layer. Then follow food, textile, minority, and slavery pages to see where legal categories and lived experience diverge.
Editorial Position
Moor History Center treats daily life as an evidence problem: the more ordinary the person, the more carefully the source trail has to be named.
Sources and Further Reading
- Glick, Thomas F. Islamic and Christian Spain in the Early Middle Ages
- Catlos, Brian A. Kingdoms of Faith
- Constable, Olivia Remie. Trade and Traders in Muslim Spain
- Arié, Rachel. L'Espagne musulmane au temps des Nasrides
- Harvey, L. P. Muslims in Spain, 1500 to 1614
- Dodds, Menocal, and Balbale. The Arts of Intimacy
