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Berbers In North Africa Essay Research Paper (стр. 2 из 2)

the Atlas Mountains, whence in the eleventh century they moved

southwest to Oued Mzab. Maintaining their cohesion and beliefs

over the centuries, Ibadi religious leaders have dominated public

life in the region to this day.

For many years, the Fatimids posed a threat to Morocco, but

their deepest ambition was to rule the East, the Mashriq, which

included Egypt and Muslim lands beyond. By 969 they had

conquered Egypt. In 972 the Fatimid ruler Al Muizz established

the new city of Cairo as his capital. The Fatimids left the rule

of Ifriqiya and most of Algeria to the Zirids (972-1148). This

Berber dynasty, which had founded the towns of Miliana, Medea,

and Algiers and centered significant local power in Algeria for

the first time, turned over its domain west of Ifriqiya to the

Banu Hammad branch of its family. The Hammadids ruled from 1011

to 1151, during which time Bejaia became the most important port

in the Maghrib.

This period was marked by constant conflict, political

instability, and economic decline. The Hammadids, by rejecting

the Ismaili doctrine for Sunni orthodoxy and renouncing

submission to the Fatimids, initiated chronic conflict with the

Zirids. Two great Berber confederations- the Sanhaja and the

Zenata- engaged in an epic struggle. The fiercely brave, camel-

borne nomads of the western desert and steppe as well as the

sedentary farmers of the Kabylie region to the east swore

allegiance to the Sanhaja. Their traditional enemies, the

Zenata, were tough, resourceful horsemen from the cold plateau of

the northern interior of Morocco and the western Tell in Algeria.

In addition, raiders from Genoa, pisa, and Norman Sicily

attacked ports and disrupted coastal trade. Trans-Saharan trade

shifted to Fatimid Egypt and to routes in the west leading to

Spanish markets. The countryside was being overtaxed by growing

cities.

Contributing to these political and economic dislocations

was a large incursion of Arab bediun from Egypt starting in the

first half of the eleventh century. Part of this movement was an

invasion by the Banu Hilal and Banu Sulaym tribes, apparently

sent by the Fatimids to weaken the Zirids. These Arab bediun

overcame the Zirids and Hammadids and in 1057 sacked Al Qayrawan.

They sent farmers fleeing from the fertile plains to the

mountains and left cities and towns in ruin. For the first time,

the extensive use of Arabic spread to the countryside. Sedentary

Berbers who sought protection from the Hilalians were gradually

arabized.

The Almoravid movement developed early in the eleventh

century among the Sanhaja of the western Sahara, whose control of

trans-Saharan trade routes was under pressure from the Zenata

Berbers in the north and the state of Ghana in the south. Yahya

ibn Ibrahim al Jaddali, a leader of the lamtuna tribe of the

Sanhaja confederation, decided to raise the level of Islamic

knowledge and practice among his people. To accomplish this, on

his return from the hajj (Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca) in 1048-49,

he brought with him Abd Allah ibn Yasin al Juzuli, a Moroccan

scholar. In the early years of the movement, the scholar was

concerned only with imposing moral discipline and a strict

adherence to Islamic principles among his followers. Abd Allah

ibn Yasin also became known as one of the marabouts, or holy

persons (from al murabitun, “those who have made a religious

retreat.” Almoravids is the Spanish transliteration of al

murabitun).

The Almoravid movement shifted from promoting religious

reform to engaging in military conquest after 1054 an was led by

Lamtuna leaders:first Yahya, then his brother Abu Bakr, and then

his cousin Yusuf ibn Tashfin. With Marrakech as their capital,

the Almoravids had conquered Morocco, the Maghrib as far east as

Algiers, and Spain up to the Ebro River by 1106. Under the

Almoravids, the Maghrib and Spain acknowledged the spiritual

authority of the Abbasid caliphate in Baghdad, reuniting them

temporarily with the Islamic community in the Mashriq.

Although it was not an entirely peaceful time, North Africa

benefited economically and culturally during the Almoravid

period, which lasted until 1147. Muslim Spain (Andalus in

Arabic) was a great source of artistic and intellectual

inspiration. The most famous writers of Andalus worked in the

Almoravid court, and the builders of the Grand Mosque of

Tilimsan, completed in 1136, used as a model the Grand Mosque of

Cordoba.

Like the Almoravids, the Almohads found their initial

inspiration in Islamic reform. Their spiritual leader, the

Moroccan Muhammad ibn Abdallah ibn Tumart, sought to reform

Almoravid decadence. Rejected in Marrakech and other cities, he

turned to his Masmuda tribe in the Atlas Mountains for support.

Because of their emphasis on the unity of God, his followers were

known as Al Muwahhidun (unitarians, or Almohads).

Although declaring himself mahdi, imam, and masum

(infallible leader sent by God), Muhammad ibn Abdallah ibn Tumart

consulted with a council of ten of his oldest disciples.

Influenced by the Berber tradition of representative government,

he later added an assembly composed of fifty leaders from various

tribes. The Almohad rebellion began in 1125 with attacks on

Moroccan cities, including Sus and Marrakech.

Upon Muhammad ibn Abdallah ibn Tumart’s death in 1130, his

successor Abd al Mumin took the title of caliph and placed

members of his own family in power, converting the system into a

traditional monarchy. The Almohads entered Spain at the

invitation of the Andalusian amirs, who had risen against the

Almoravids there. Abd al Mumin forced the submission of the

amirs and reestablished the caliphate of Cordoba, giving the

Almohad sultan supreme religious as well as political authority

within his domains. The Almohads took control of Morocco in

1146, captured Algiers around 1151, and by 1160 had completed the

conquest of the central Maghrib and advanced to Tripolitania.

Nonetheless, pockets of Almoravid resistance continued to hold

out in the Kabylie region for at least fifty years.

After Abd al Mumin’s death in 1163, his son Abu Yaqub Yusuf

(ruled 1163-1184) and grandson Yaqub al Mansur (ruled 1184-1199)

presided over the zenith of Almohad power. For the first time,

the Maghrib was united under a local regime, and although the

empire was troubled by conflict on its fringes, handcrafts and

agriculture flourished at its center and an efficient bureaucracy

filled the tax coffers. In 1229 the Almohad court renounced the

teachings of Muhammad ibn Tumart, opting instead for greater

tolerence and a return to the Maliki school of law. As evidence

of this change, the Almohads hosted two of the greatest thinkers

of Anadalus: Abu Bakr ibn Tufayl and Ibn Rushid (Averroes).

The Almohads shared the crusading instincts of their

Christian adversaries, but the continuing wars in Spain over-

taxed their resources. In the Maghrib, the Almohad position was

compromised by factional strife and was challenged by a renewal

of tribal warfare. The Bani Merin (Zenata Berbers) took

advantage of declining Almohad power to establish a tribal state

in Morocco, initiating nearly sixty years of warfare there that

concluded with their capture of Marrakech, the last Almohad

stronghold, in 1271. Despite repeated efforts to subjugate the

central Maghrib, however, the Merinids were never able to restore

the frontiers of the Almohad Empire.

From its capital at Tunis, the Hafsid Dynasty made good its

claim to be the legitimate successor of the Almohads in Ifriqiya,

while, in the central Maghrib, the Zayanids founded a dynasty at

Tlemcen. Based on a Zenata tribe, the Bani Abd el Wad, which had

been settled in the region by Abd al Mumin, the Zayanids also

emphasized their links with the Almohads.

For more than 300 years, until the region came under Ottoman

suzerainty in the sixteenth century, the Zayanids kept a tenuous

hold in the central Maghrib. The regime, which depended on the

administrative skills of Andalusians, was plagued by frequent

rebellions but learned to survive as the vassal of the Merinids

or Hafsids or later as an ally of Spain.

In conclusion, to the strong loyalties of the tribe, the

Berber added individualism, democratic participation in inter-

tribal affairs and fierce opposition to foreign invaders. Over

the centuries, many conquerors came to the Maghrib, but few

established durable empires, and few exercised a significant

cultural influence. In the religious sphere, the Berbers

continued to practice their animistic beliefs, while often

adopting religious heresies to oppose their Christian, Jewish or

Islamic overlords.

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