Taifa of Toledo

Taifa of Toledo
1018 (de facto)–1085
Taifa Kingdom of Toledo, c. 1037.
CapitalToledo
Common languagesArabic
Religion
Islam, Christianity (Mozarabic Rite), Judaism
GovernmentMonarchy
Emir 
 c. 1036–1043
Ismail al-Zahir
 1043–1075
Yahya I al-Ma'mun
 1075–1085
Yahya al-Qadir
Historical eraMiddle Ages
 Established
1018 (de facto)
 incorporated to the taifa of Badajoz
1080–1081
 Disestablished
1085
CurrencyDirham and Dinar
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Caliphate of Cordoba
Kingdom of Castile
Today part ofSpain

The Taifa of Toledo (Arabic: طائفة طليطلة, romanized: ṭa'ifat ṭulayṭula) was an Islamic polity (taifa) located in the centre of the Iberian Peninsula in the High Middle Ages. It was ruled by the Dhulnunids, a Hawwara Berber clan. It emerged after 1018 upon the fracturing of the Caliphate of Córdoba, when the Dhulnunids, already strong in the lands of Santaver, Cuenca, Huete and Uclés, seized control over the city of Toledo, the capital of the Middle March of Al-Andalus. Upon later territorial conquest, the taifa also expanded to the land of Calatrava. It lasted until the Christian conquest of Toledo in 1085.