Later accounts of this region’s history largely rely on the compendium “The Breath of Perfume from the Fragrant Branch of” this region. The death of the saints Flora and Mary in one of this region’s cities is detailed in a hagiography of 48 martyrs written by Eulogius. A Princeton historian coined a term meaning “living-togetherness” to describe the general coexistence of this region’s cultural groups. According to legend, the mother of a ruler of this region told him to “weep like a woman for a kingdom you could not defend as a man.” An anonymous historian from this region wrote the Chronicle of 754, which is also called The Mozarabic Chronicle. A namesake 11th-century fitna occurred in this region, where a knight called the “the lord” ruled a taifa. For 10 points, nationalist historiographers claimed that what region was liberated from foreign rule in the Reconquista ■END■
ANSWER: al-Andalus [accept Andalusia; accept Muslim Spain or Arab Spain or equivalents; accept Caliphate of Córdoba; accept Martyrs of Córdoba; accept Umayyad Spain; accept Taifa Spain; accept Almohad Spain; accept Emirate of Granada; accept Nasrid Spain; accept Iberia or España or Hispania in place of “Spain”; prompt on Spain, Iberia, España, or Hispania by asking “ruled by whom?”] (The historian Américo Castro coined the term convivencia. The knight was El Cid.)
<Other History>
= Average correct buzz position