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The Agricultural Revolution of al-Andalus

21 June 2026 · gndzlp · ~9 min read

The orange groves, the Valencia rice and the irrigation canals that come to mind today when we think of Spain are in fact a legacy of an Islamic civilization. From the 8th century onward, al-Andalus (al-Andalus), established on the Iberian Peninsula, was not merely a political entity; it was also the center of a great agricultural revolution that historians call the "Medieval Green Revolution." In this article we explore how Muslims brought life to arid lands, which plants they carried from East to West, and how they turned agronomy into a science.

Note: This article is for historical and cultural information; it aims to offer an engaging overview that makes reading history enjoyable.

What and where is al-Andalus?

Al-Andalus is the name given to the territories of the Iberian Peninsula (most of present-day Spain and Portugal) under Muslim rule from the year 711 until 1492. Cities such as Córdoba, Seville and Granada were among the most populous, most enlightened and most productive centers of their age. Contrary to popular belief, the foundation of this prosperity was not trade alone but a productive agriculture: an agriculture that fed the cities, provided tax revenue and grew the population.

The "Green Revolution": Taming water

Much of the Iberian Peninsula has a hot, arid climate. The greatest achievement of the Muslim farmers was building the irrigation (water-engineering) systems that would overcome this aridity. Techniques brought from the East—especially from Syria, Iraq and Iran—were adapted to the soils of al-Andalus:

Taming water was not a miracle in itself; the real revolution was that this water made it possible to take more than one harvest per year. Thanks to irrigation, planting could also take place in the summer months, and the soil never lay idle.

Crops from the East: The plants that changed the kitchen

The most visible face of the al-Andalus agricultural revolution is the new plants that Muslim merchants and farmers brought from the eastern parts of the Islamic world (India, Iran, Arabia, North Africa). Many of these were previously either unknown or uncommon in Europe:

What is striking is not merely that these plants were "brought in"; it is that each one was adapted to the climate and the soil. Farmers learned through experiment—and recorded—which plant yielded best in which season, in which soil, and with how much water.

An interesting linguistic trace: Many agricultural words in Spanish and other European languages are of Arabic origin: aceituna (olive, zaytuna), azúcar (sugar, sukkar), algodón (cotton, qutn), naranja (orange, naranj), acequia (irrigation canal, as-saqiya). Languages are the silent witnesses of history.

Agriculture becomes a science: Books on agronomy

Perhaps the most enduring contribution of al-Andalus was that it took agriculture out of oral tradition and turned it into a written science. In this field, called "filaha" (agronomy/the science of agriculture), the scholars of the age wrote detailed books. These works covered such things as:

One of the most famous of these works is the Kitab al-Filaha (Book of Agriculture) by Ibn al-Awwam, who lived in Seville in the 12th century. Treating hundreds of plant species and dozens of soil and irrigation techniques systematically, this book was, centuries later, translated into European languages and became one of the sources of modern agricultural science. It was an early example of a scientific outlook based on observation and experiment.

The culture of orchards and gardens

In al-Andalus, agriculture was not confined to the field; it reached into the cities and into the courtyards of houses. The gardens (bustan), cooled by the sound of water and adorned with fruit trees and flowers, were spaces of both beauty and production. The gardens and pools of the Alhambra Palace in Granada are the finest proof that water had become a symbol of a civilization. Here, agriculture was a means not only of filling the stomach but also of beauty and peace.

The lesson from this legacy

The agricultural revolution of al-Andalus leaves us with several enduring lessons:

Experience this legacy in a game

BAĞBAN: Harvest Run brings the different regions, crops and seasonal effects of the Islamic world into a farming game: planting the right crop in the right soil, watching over irrigation and the season, and growing the barakah are the heart of the game. If you would like to try this journey that stretches from al-Andalus to the Silk Road:

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