Given that each individual is conditioned by a plurality of determining relations, one of the main aims of historians’ studies, therefore, must be to focus on individual relationships. This is key to the analysis of a society such as Hispania’s in the Middle Ages, standing apart and being distinguished by the presence of three ethno-religious communities living together and co-existing for a number of centuries. This article looks at the contact between Christian, Muslim and Jewish women in Christian territories during the 13th, 14th, and 15th centuries, and a study of these relationships requires an analysis of the position of women from those groups ruled after the conquest, a study of their roles, and the bonds that could have united them as well as the possible common influences resulting from their relationships.
Mudéjar women, intercommunitary relations, «co-existence».