El Rey Que Desapareció En Un Río Y Nadie Supo Por Qué

In July 711, the last Visigothic king disappeared in the Guadalete River. His body was never found. His crown, according to some sources, floated in the water. But what happened in Spain that summer was not a conquest. It was something much harder to accept: a betrayal carried out from within the kingdom itself. This is the angle that history books avoid telling. The fall of Hispania was not the work of a foreign army. It was the work of Spaniards who decided to surrender what they could not win. ON CROWN AND ASHES The history of Spain told from the perspective of fracture, crisis, and tension. Not from victory or national pride. With documentary rigor and a cinematic tone. If you like the channel, subscribe to continue discovering the episodes that shaped Spain — those we know and those we prefer to forget. SOURCES: Mozarabic Chronicle of 754 Ajbar Machmuâ History Wambae Regis (Julián de Toledo) Collins, Roger — "The Arab Conquest of Spain, 710-797" Chalmeta, Pedro — "Invasion and Islamization" #HistoryOfSpain #Guadalete #Visigoths #711 #Rodrigo #HispaniaVisigoda