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- The History of Portugal from the Muslim invasion of the Iberian Peninsula in 711 to the death of Henry of Burgundy, first count of the Second County of Portugal in 1112 is a 400-year period in which the national identity of the Portuguese people was formed and the basis for the Portuguese independence was created. This period starts with the fall of the Visigothic kingdom after Tariq ibn-Ziyad's invasion of Iberia and the establishment of the Umayyad control in the territory. During this period of Muslim presence several scientific improvements were made, namely agricultural and astronomical. These areas would be vital for Portugal's 15th century expansion. In parallel to the Muslim occupation, the Christian Reconquista started quickly after the invasion, by the hands of Pelayo. Amid several steps back and forward, the Christian kingdoms of Asturias, and later León, Navarre, Aragon, Galicia and Castile managed to increasingly control larger parts of the peninsula, starting from the North. In what is today's Portuguese territory, the lands between the rivers Minho and Douro were conquered early in the Reconquista. A vassal county of the Kingdom of Asturias emerged around the city of Portucale, under Count Vímara Peres. Further south, another border county was formed when more land was conquered from the moors: the County of Coimbra led by Hermenegildo Guterres. During this period, the two counties would suffer multiple attacks, with the County of Portucale being 200 years later reincorporated in the shortlived Kingdom of Galicia and Portugal, and then again into León. The County of Coimbra was shortly after reconquered by the Moors, and then recreated under count Sisnando Davides. Both territories would later be incorporated under Raymond of Burgundy's County of Galicia. Meanwhile, in the south of today's Portugal, the Umayyad control remained until the emergence of the Taifa kingdoms. After the arrival of Henry of Burgundy, cousin of Raymond, the territories of the former counties of Portucale and Coimbra were given to him, forming the Second County of Portugal. Count Henry continued the Reconquista in western Iberia and expanded his county's dominions. He was also involved in several intrigues inside the Leonese court, together with his cousin Raymond and his wife Urraca of Castile, in order to assure Portuguese independence and ascension to the throne by Raymond. When he died in 1112, the population of the County of Portugal, including the powerful families, were favourable of independence, a feat that his son Afonso Henriques would accomplish years later.
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