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Almoravid dynasty

The Almoravid dynasty (Arabic: المرابطون, romanizedAl-Murābiṭūn, lit.'those from the ribats'[7]) was an imperial Berber Muslim dynasty centered in the territory of present-day Morocco.[8][9] It established an empire in the 11th century that stretched over the western Maghreb and Al-Andalus, starting in the 1050s and lasting until its fall to the Almohads in 1147.[10] The Almoravid capital was Marrakesh, a city founded by the Almoravid leader Abu Bakr ibn Umar c. 1070. The dynasty emerged from a coalition of the Lamtuna, Gudala, and Massufa, nomadic Berber tribes living in what is now Mauritania and the Western Sahara,[11][12] traversing the territory between the Draa, the Niger, and the Senegal rivers.[13][14]

Almoravid dynasty
Al-Murābiṭūn
المرابطون
1050s–1147
The Almoravid empire at its greatest extent, c. 1120.
StatusEmpire
Capital
Common languagesBerber languages, Arabic, Mozarabic
Religion
Islam (Sunni)
Minorities: Christianity (Roman Catholic), Judaism
GovernmentHereditary monarchy
Emir 
• c. 1050–1057
Yahya ibn Umar
• 1146–1147
Ishaq ibn Ali
History 
• Established
1050s
• Disestablished
1147
Area
1120 est.[6]1,000,000 km2 (390,000 sq mi)
CurrencyAlmoravid dinar

The Almoravids were crucial in preventing the fall of Al-Andalus (Muslim rule in Iberia)[15] to the Iberian Christian kingdoms, when they decisively defeated a coalition of the Castilian and Aragonese armies at the Battle of Sagrajas in 1086. This enabled them to control an empire that stretched 3,000 km (1,900 mi) north to south. Their rulers never claimed the title of caliph and instead took on the title of Amir al-Muslimīn ("Prince of the Muslims") while formally acknowledging the overlordship of the Abbasid Caliphs in Baghdad.[16] However, the rule of the dynasty was relatively short-lived. The Almoravids fell—at the height of their power—when they failed to stop the Masmuda-led rebellion initiated by Ibn Tumart. As a result, their last king Ishaq ibn Ali was killed in Marrakesh in April 1147 by the Almohad Caliphate, which replaced them as a ruling dynasty both in the Maghreb and Al-Andalus.

Name

The term "Almoravid" comes from the Arabic "al-Murabit" (المرابط), through the Spanish: almorávide.[17] The transformation of the b in "al-Murabit" to the v in almorávide is an example of betacism in Spanish.

In Arabic, "al-Murabit" literally means "one who is tying" but figuratively means "one who is ready for battle at a fortress". The term is related to the notion of ribat رِباط, a North African frontier monastery-fortress, through the root r-b-t (ربط "rabat": to tie, to unite or رابط "raabat": to encamp).[18][19]

The name "Almoravid" was tied to a school of Malikite law called "Dar al-Murabitin" founded in Sus al-Aksa, modern day Morocco, by a scholar named Waggag ibn Zallu. Ibn Zallu sent his student Abdallah ibn Yasin to preach Malikite Islam to the Sanhaja Berbers of the Adrar (present-day Mauritania). Hence, the name of the Almoravids comes from the followers of the Dar al-Murabitin, "the house of those who were bound together in the cause of God."[20]

It is uncertain exactly when or why the Almoravids acquired that appellation. al-Bakri, writing in 1068, before their apex, already calls them the al-Murabitun, but does not clarify the reasons for it. Writing three centuries later, Ibn Abi Zar suggested it was chosen early on by Abdallah ibn Yasin[21] because, upon finding resistance among the Gudala Berbers of Adrar (Mauritania) to his teaching, he took a handful of followers to erect a makeshift ribat (monastery-fortress) on an offshore island (possibly Tidra island, in the Bay of Arguin).[22] Ibn Idhari wrote that the name was suggested by Ibn Yasin in the "persevering in the fight" sense, to boost morale after a particularly hard-fought battle in the Draa valley c. 1054, in which they had taken many losses. Whichever explanation is true, it seems certain the appellation was chosen by the Almoravids for themselves, partly with the conscious goal of forestalling any tribal or ethnic identifications.

The name might be related to the ribat of Waggag ibn Zallu in the village of Aglu (near present-day Tiznit), where the future Almoravid spiritual leader Abdallah ibn Yasin got his initial training. The 13th-century Moroccan biographer Ibn al-Zayyat al-Tadili, and Qadi Ayyad before him in the 12th century, note that Waggag's learning center was called Dar al-Murabitin (The house of the Almoravids), and that might have inspired Ibn Yasin's choice of name for the movement.[23][24]

Contemporaries frequently referred to them as the al-mulathimun ("the veiled ones", from litham, Arabic for "veil"). The Almoravids veiled themselves below the eyes with a tagelmust, a custom they adapted from southern Sanhaja Berbers. (This can still be seen among the modern Tuareg people, but it was unusual further north.) Although practical for the desert dust, the Almoravids insisted on wearing the veil everywhere, as a badge of "foreignness" in urban settings, partly as a way of emphasizing their puritan credentials. It served as the uniform of the Almoravids. Under their rule, sumptuary laws forbade anybody else from wearing the veil, thereby making it the distinctive dress of the ruling class. In turn, the succeeding Almohads made a point of mocking the Almoravid veil as symbolic of effeminacy and decadence.[citation needed]

 
A 15th century depiction of the 11th century Almoravid general Abu Bakr ibn Umar ("Rex Bubecar") near the Senegal River in 1413 Majorcan chart. Abu Bakr was known for his conquests in Africa.

History

Origins

The Berbers of the Maghreb in the early Middle Ages could be roughly classified into three major groups: the Zenata across the north, the Masmuda, concentrated in central Morocco, and the Sanhaja, clustered in the western part of the Sahara and the hills of the eastern Maghreb.[25][26] The eastern Sanhaja included the Kutama Berbers, who had been the base of the Fatimid rise in the early 10th century, and the Zirid dynasty, who ruled Ifriqiya as vassals of the Fatimids after the latter moved to Egypt in 972. The western Sanhaja were divided into several tribes: the Gazzula and the Lamta in the Draa valley and the foothills of the Anti-Atlas range; further south, encamped in the western Sahara, were the Massufa, the Banu Warith; and most southerly of all, the Lamtuna and Gudala, in littoral Mauritania down to the borderlands of the Senegal River.[citation needed]

The western Sanhaja had been converted to Islam some time in the 9th century. They were subsequently united in the 10th century and, with the zeal of new converts, launched several campaigns against the "Sudanese" (pagan peoples of sub-Saharan Africa).[27] Under their king Tinbarutan ibn Usfayshar, the Sanhaja Lamtuna erected (or captured) the citadel of Aoudaghost, a critical stop on the trans-Saharan trade route. After the collapse of the Sanhaja union, Aoudaghost passed over to the Ghana Empire; and the trans-Saharan routes were taken over by the Zenata Maghrawa of Sijilmasa. The Maghrawa also exploited this disunion to dislodge the Sanhaja Gazzula and Lamta out of their pasturelands in the Sous and Draa valleys. Around 1035, the Lamtuna chieftain Abu Abdallah Muhammad ibn Tifat (alias Tarsina), tried to reunite the Sanhaja desert tribes, but his reign lasted less than three years.[citation needed]

 
The Almoravid empire at its height stretched from the city of Aoudaghost to the Zaragoza in Al-Andalus

Around 1040, Yahya ibn Ibrahim, a chieftain of the Gudala (and brother-in-law of the late Tarsina), went on pilgrimage to Mecca. On his return, he stopped by Kairouan in Ifriqiya, where he met Abu Imran al-Fasi, a native of Fez and a jurist and scholar of the Sunni Maliki school. At this time, Ifriqiya was in ferment. The Zirid ruler, al-Mu'izz ibn Badis, was openly contemplating breaking with his Shi'ite Fatimid overlords in Cairo, and the jurists of Kairouan were agitating for him to do so. Within this heady atmosphere, Yahya and Abu Imran fell into conversation on the state of the faith in their western homelands, and Yahya expressed his disappointment at the lack of religious education and negligence of Islamic law among his southern Sanhaja people. With Abu Imran's recommendation, Yahya ibn Ibrahim made his way to the ribat of Waggag ibn Zelu in the Sous valley of southern Morocco, to seek out a Maliki teacher for his people. Waggag assigned him one of his residents, Abdallah ibn Yasin.[citation needed]

Abdallah ibn Yasin was a Gazzula Berber, and probably a convert rather than a born Muslim. His name can be read as "son of Ya-Sin" (the title of the 36th surah of the Quran), suggesting he had obliterated his family past and was "re-born" of the Holy Book.[28] Ibn Yasin certainly had the ardor of a puritan zealot; his creed was mainly characterized by a rigid formalism and a strict adherence to the dictates of the Quran, and the Orthodox tradition.[29] (Chroniclers such as al-Bakri allege Ibn Yasin's learning was superficial.) Ibn Yasin's initial meetings with the Godala people went poorly. As he had more ardor than depth, Ibn Yasin's arguments were disputed by his audience. He responded to questioning with charges of apostasy and handed out harsh punishments for the slightest deviations. The Godala soon had enough and expelled him almost immediately after the death of his protector, Yahya ibn Ibrahim, sometime in the 1040s.[citation needed]

Ibn Yasin, however, found a more favorable reception among the neighboring Lamtuna people.[29] Probably sensing the useful organizing power of Ibn Yasin's pious fervor, the Lamtuna chieftain Yahya ibn Umar al-Lamtuni invited the man to preach to his people. The Lamtuna leaders, however, kept Ibn Yasin on a careful leash, forging a more productive partnership between them. Invoking stories of the early life of Muhammad, Ibn Yasin preached that conquest was a necessary addendum to Islamicization, that it was not enough to merely adhere to God's law, but necessary to also destroy opposition to it. In Ibn Yasin's ideology, anything and everything outside of Islamic law could be characterized as "opposition". He identified tribalism, in particular, as an obstacle. He believed it was not enough to urge his audiences to put aside their blood loyalties and ethnic differences, and embrace the equality of all Muslims under the Sacred Law, it was necessary to make them do so. For the Lamtuna leadership, this new ideology dovetailed with their long desire to refound the Sanhaja union and recover their lost dominions. In the early 1050s, the Lamtuna, under the joint leadership of Yahya ibn Umar and Abdallah ibn Yasin—soon calling themselves the al-Murabitin (Almoravids)—set out on a campaign to bring their neighbors over to their cause.[citation needed]

Conquests

Northern Africa

From 1053, the Almoravids began to Islamize the Berber areas of the Sahara and the regions south of the desert. After winning over the Sanhaja Berber tribe, they quickly took control of the entire desert trade route, seizing Sijilmasa at the northern end in 1054, and Aoudaghost (Awdaghust) at the southern end in 1055. Yahya ibn Umar was killed in a battle in 1057,[30] but Abdullah ibn Yasin, whose influence as a religious teacher was paramount, named his brother Abu Bakr ibn Umar as chief. Under him, the Almoravids soon began to spread their power beyond the desert, and conquered the tribes of the Atlas Mountains. In 1058 they crossed the High Atlas and conquered Aghmat, a prosperous commercial town near the foothills of the mountains, and made it their capital.[31][11] They then came in contact with the Barghawata, a Berber tribal confederation, who followed an Islamic "heresy" preached by Salih ibn Tarif three centuries earlier. The Barghawata resisted. Abdullah ibn Yasin was killed in battle with them in 1059, in Krifla, a village near Rommani, Morocco. They were, however, completely conquered by Abu Bakr ibn Umar, and were forced to convert to orthodox Islam.[32] Abu Bakr married a noble and wealthy Berber woman, Zaynab an-Nafzawiyyah, who would become very influential in the development of the dynasty.[33] Zaynab was the daughter of a wealthy merchant from Houara, who was said to be from Kairouan.[33]

In 1061, Abu Bakr ibn Umar made a division of the power he had established, handing over the more-settled parts to his cousin Yusuf ibn Tashfin as viceroy, and also assigning to him his favourite wife Zaynab. Ibn Umar kept the task of suppressing the revolts that had broken out in the desert. When he returned to resume control, he found his cousin too powerful to be superseded.[32] Abu Bakr ibn Umar founded the new capital of Marrakesh around this time. Historical sources cite a variety of dates for this event ranging from 1062, given by Ibn Abi Zar and Ibn Khaldun, to 1078 (470 AH), given by Muhammad al-Idrisi.[34] The year 1070, given by Ibn Idhari,[35] is more commonly cited by modern historians.[36][37][38][39][40][41][42] Some writers cite the year 1062.[43][44][45] In November 1087[46] Abu Bakr was killed in battle – according to oral tradition by an arrow[47][48] – while fighting in the historic region of the Sudan.[46]

Yusuf ibn Tashfin had in the meantime brought the large area of what is now Morocco, Western Sahara, and Mauritania under Almoravid control. He spent at least several years capturing each fort and settlement in the region around Fez and in northern Morocco.[49] After most of the surrounding region was under his control, he was finally able to conquer Fez definitively. However, there is some contradiction and uncertainty among historical sources regarding the exact chronology of these conquests, with some sources dating the main conquests to the 1060s and others dating them to the 1070s.[50] Some modern authors cite the date of the final conquest of Fez as 1069 (461 AH).[51][52][53] Historian Ronald Messier gives the date more specifically as 18 March 1070 (462 AH).[54] Other historians date this conquest to 1074 or 1075.[51][55][56]

In 1079 Ibn Tashfin sent an army 20,000 strong from Marrakesh to push towards what is now Tlemcen to attack the Banu Ya'la, the Zenata tribe occupying the area. Led by a commander named Mazdali Ibn Tilankan, the army defeated the Banu Ya'la and executed their leader, Mali Ibn Ya'la, but did not push to Tlemcen right away. Instead, Ibn Tashfin himself led an army in 1081 that conquered Tlemcen, massacring the Maghrawa forces there and their leader, al-Abbas Ibn Bakhti al-Maghrawi.[57] He pressed on and by 1082 he had captured Algiers.[53] Ibn Tashfin subsequently treated Tlemcen as his eastern base. At that time the city had consisted of an older settlement called Agadir, but Ibn Tashfin founded a new city next to it called Takrart, which later merged with Agadir in the Almohad period to become the present city.[58][59]

The Almoravids subsequently clashed with the Hammadids to the east multiple times, but they did not make a sustained effort to conquer the central Maghrib and instead focused their efforts on other fronts.[60][61] Eventually, in 1104, they signed a peace treaty with the Hammadids.[60] Algiers became their easternmost outpost.[61] Before campaigning in Al-Andalus, where the Taifas emirs were requesting his help, Ibn Tashfin made the capture of Ceuta his primary objective instead. Ceuta, controlled by Zenata forces under the command of Diya al-Dawla Yahya, was the last major city on the African side of the Strait of Gibraltar that still held out against him.[62] In return for a promise to help him against the encroaching Christian kingdoms, Ibn Tashfin demanded that al-Mu'tamid ibn Abbad, the ruler of Seville, provide assistance in besieging the city. Al-Mu'tamid obliged and sent a fleet to blockade the city by sea, while Ibn Tashfin's son Tamim led the siege by land. The city finally surrendered in August 1084.[62]

Ghana Empire and the southern wing

According to Arab tradition, the Almoravids conquered the Ghana Empire sometime around 1076 CE.[63] An example of this tradition is the record of historian Ibn Khaldun, who cited Shaykh Uthman, the faqih of Ghana, writing in 1394. According to this source, the Almoravids weakened Ghana and collected tribute from the Sudan, to the extent that the authority of the rulers of Ghana dwindled away, and they were subjugated and absorbed by the Sosso, a neighboring people of the Sudan.[64] Traditions in Mali related that the Sosso attacked and took over Mali as well, and the ruler of the Sosso, Sumaouro Kanté, took over the land.[65]

However criticism from Conrad and Fisher (1982) argued that the notion of any Almoravid military conquest at its core is merely perpetuated folklore, derived from a misinterpretation or naive reliance on Arabic sources.[66] According to Professor Timothy Insoll, the archaeology of ancient Ghana simply does not show the signs of rapid change and destruction that would be associated with any Almoravid-era military conquests.[67]

Dierke Lange agreed with the original military incursion theory but argues that this doesn't preclude Almoravid political agitation, claiming that the main factor of the demise of the Ghana Empire owed much to the latter.[68] According to Lange, Almoravid religious influence was gradual, rather than the result of military action; there the Almoravids gained power by marrying among the nation's nobility. Lange attributes the decline of ancient Ghana to numerous unrelated factors, one of which is likely attributable to internal dynastic struggles instigated by Almoravid influence and Islamic pressures, but devoid of military conquest.[69]

This interpretation of events has been disputed by later scholars like Sheryl L. Burkhalter (1992), who argued that, whatever the nature of the "conquest" in the south of the Sahara, the influence and success of the Almoravid movement in securing west African gold and circulating it widely necessitated a high degree of political control.[70]

The traditional position says that the ensuing war with the Almoravids pushed Ghana over the edge, ending the kingdom's position as a commercial and military power by 1100. It collapsed into tribal groups and chieftaincies, some of which later assimilated into the Almoravids while others founded the Mali Empire.

The Arab geographer Ibn Shihab al-Zuhri wrote that the Almoravids ended Ibadi Islam in Tadmekka in 1084 and that Abu Bakr "arrived at the mountain of gold" in the deep south. After the death of Abu Bakr (1087), the confederation of Berber tribes in the Sahara was divided between the descendants of Abu Bakr and his brother Yahya, and would have lost control of Ghana.[71] Sheryl Burkhalter suggests that Abu Bakr's son Yahya was the leader of the Almoravid expedition that conquered Ghana in 1076, and that the Almoravids would have survived the loss of Ghana and the defeat in the Maghreb by the Almohads, and would have ruled the Sahara until the end of the 12th century.[72]

Southern Iberia and the northern wing

In 1086 Yusuf ibn Tashfin was invited by the Muslim taifa princes of Al-Andalus in the Iberian Peninsula to defend their territories from the encroachment of Alfonso VI, King of León and Castile. In that year, Ibn Tashfin crossed the Strait of Gibraltar to Algeciras, and defeated Castile at the Battle of Sagrajas. He was prevented from following up his victory by trouble in Africa, which he chose to settle in person.

He returned to Iberia in 1090, avowedly for the purpose of annexing the taifa principalities of Iberia. He was supported by most of the Iberian people, who were discontented with the heavy taxation imposed upon them by their spendthrift rulers.[32] Their religious teachers, as well as others in the east (most notably, al-Ghazali in Persia and al-Turtushi in Egypt, who was himself an Iberian by birth from Tortosa), detested the taifa rulers for their religious indifference. The clerics issued a fatwa (a non-binding legal opinion) that Yusuf was of sound morals and had the religious right to dethrone the rulers, whom he saw as heterodox in their faith. By 1094, Yusuf had annexed most of the major taifas, with the exception of the one at Zaragoza. The Almoravids were victorious at the Battle of Consuegra, during which the son of El Cid, Diego Rodríguez, perished. Alfonso, with some Leónese, retreated into the castle of Consuegra, which was besieged for eight days until the Almoravids withdrew to the south.

After friendly correspondence with the caliph at Baghdad, whom he acknowledged as Amir al-Mu'minin ("Commander of the Faithful"), Yusuf ibn Tashfin in 1097 assumed the title of Amir al Muslimin ("Commander of the Muslims"). He died in 1106, when he was reputed to have reached the age of 100. The Almoravid power was at its height at Yusuf's death: the Moorish empire then included all of Northwest Africa as far eastward as Algiers, and all of Iberia south of the Tagus and as far eastward as the mouth of the Ebro, and including the Balearic Islands.[73]

 
An Almoravid dinar coin from Seville, 1116. (British Museum); the Almoravid gold dinar would set the standard of the Iberian maravedí.

In 1108 Tamim Al Yusuf defeated the Kingdom of Castile at the Battle of Uclés. Yusuf did not reconquer much territory from the Christian kingdoms, except that of Valencia; but he did hinder the progress of the Christian Reconquista by uniting al-Andalus. In 1134, at the Battle of Fraga, the Almoravids were victorious and even succeeded in slaying Alfonso the Battler in the battle.

Decline

Under Yusuf's son and successor, Ali ibn Yusuf, Sintra and Santarém were added, and he invaded Iberia again in 1119 and 1121, but the tide had turned, as the French had assisted the Aragonese to recover Zaragoza. In 1138, Ali ibn Yusuf was defeated by Alfonso VII of León and Castile, and in the Battle of Ourique (1139), by Afonso I of Portugal, who thereby won his crown. Lisbon was conquered by the Portuguese in 1147.[74]

According to some scholars, Ali ibn Yusuf represented a new generation of leadership that had forgotten the desert life for the comforts of the city.[75] He was defeated by the combined action of his Christian foes in Iberia and the agitation of the Almohads (Muwahhids) in Morocco. After Ali ibn Yusuf's death in 1143, his son Tashfin ibn Ali lost ground rapidly before the Almohads. In 1146 he was killed in a fall from a precipice while attempting to escape after a defeat near Oran.[74]

His two successors were Ibrahim ibn Tashfin and Ishaq ibn Ali, but their reigns were short. The conquest of the city of Marrakesh by the Almohads in 1147 marked the fall of the dynasty, though fragments of the Almoravids continued to struggle throughout the empire.[74] Among these fragments, there was the rebel Yahya Al-Sahrāwiyya, who resisted Almohad rule in the Maghreb for eight years after the fall of Marrakesh before surrendering in 1155.[76] Also in 1155, the remaining Almoravids were forced to retreat to the Balearic Islands and later Ifriqiya under the leadership of the Banu Ghaniya, who were eventually influential in the downfall of their conquerors, the Almohads, in the Eastern part of the Maghreb.[77]

Culture

Religion

The Almoravid movement started as a conservative Islamic reform movement inspired by the Maliki school of jurisprudence.[78] The writings of Abu Imran al-Fasi, a Moroccan Maliki scholar, influenced Yahya Ibn Ibrahim and the early Almoravid movement.[79][80]

Art

 
The Pisa Griffin, believed to have originated in 11th century Iberia.[81]

Amira Bennison describes the art of the Almoravid period as influenced by the "integration of several areas into a single political unit and the resultant development of a widespread Andalusi–Maghribi style", as well as the tastes of the Sanhaja rulers as patrons of art.[82] Bennison also challenges Robert Hillenbrand's characterization of the art of al-Andalus and the Maghreb as provincial and peripheral in consideration of Islamic art globally, and of the contributions of the Almoravids as "sparse" as a result of the empire's "puritanical fervour" and "ephemerality."[83]

At first, the Almoravids, subscribing to the conservative Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence, rejected what they perceived as decadence and a lack of piety among the Iberian Muslims of the Andalusi taifa kingdoms.[80] However, monuments and textiles from Almería from the late Almoravid period indicate that the empire had changed its attitude with time.[80]

Artistic production under the Almoravids included finely constructed minbars produced in Córdoba; marble basins and tombstones in Almería; fine textiles in Almería, Málaga, Seville; and luxury ceramics.[84]

 
A stele found at Gao-Saney believed to have been created in Almería during the Almoravid period.[85] Now located at the National Museum of Mali.

Marble work

A large group of marble tombstones have been preserved from the first half of the 12th century. They were crafted in Almería in Al-Andalus, at a time when it was a prosperous port city under Almoravid control. The tombstones were made of Macael marble, which was quarried locally, and carved with extensive Kufic inscriptions that were sometimes adorned with vegetal or geometric motifs.[86] These demonstrate that the Almoravids not only reused Umayyad marble columns and basins, but also commissioned new works.[87] The inscriptions on them are dedicated to various individuals, both men and women, from a range of different occupations, indicating that such tombstones were relatively affordable. The stones take the form of either rectangular stelae or of long horizontal prisms known as mqabriyyas (similar to the ones found in the much later Saadian Tombs of Marrakesh). They have been found in many locations across West Africa and Western Europe, which is evidence that a wide-reaching industry and trade in marble existed. A number of pieces found in France were likely acquired from later pillaging. Some of the most ornate tombstones found outside Al-Andalus were discovered in Gao-Saney in the African Sahel, testament to the reach of Almoravid influence into the African continent.[87][86]

Two Almoravid-period marble columns have also been found reused as spolia in later monuments in Fes. One is incorporated into the window of the Dar al-Muwaqqit (timekeeper's house) overlooking the courtyard of the Qarawiyyin Mosque, built in the Marinid period. The other is embedded into the decoration of the exterior southern façade of the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II, a structure which was rebuilt by Ismail Ibn Sharif.[88]

Textiles

The fact that Ibn Tumart, leader of the Almohad movement, is recorded as having criticized Sultan Ali ibn Yusuf for "sitting on a luxurious silken cloak" at his grand mosque in Marrakesh indicates the important role of textiles under the Almoravids.[89]

 
Fragment of the shroud of San Pedro de Osma, early 12th century: the imagery features pairs of lions and harpies, surrounded by men holding griffins

Many of the remaining fabrics from the Almoravid period were reused by Christians, with examples in the reliquary of San Isidoro in León, a chasuble from Saint-Sernin in Toulouse, the Chasuble of San Juan de Ortega in the church of Quintanaortuña (near Burgos), the shroud of San Pedro de Osma, and a fragment found at the church of Thuir in the eastern Pyrenees.[84][90][91][92] Some of these pieces are characterized by the appearance of Kufic or "Hispano-Kufic" woven inscriptions, with letters sometimes ending in ornamental vegetal flourishes. The Chasuble of San Juan de Ortega is one such example, made of silk and gold thread and dating to the first half of the 12th century.[90][91] The Shroud of San Pedro de Osma is notable for its inscription stating "this was made in Baghdad", suggesting that it was imported. However, more recent scholarship has suggested that the textile was instead produced locally in centres such as Almeria, but that they were copied or based on eastern imports.[90] It's even possible that the inscription was knowingly falsified in order to exaggerate its value to potential sellers; Al-Saqati of Málaga, a 12th-century writer and market inspector,[93] wrote that there were regulations designed to prohibit the practice of making such false inscriptions.[90] As a result of the inscription, many of these textiles are known in scholarship as the "Baghdad group", representing a stylistically coherent and artistically rich group of silken textiles seemingly dating to reign of Ali ibn Yusuf or the first half of the 12th century.[90] Aside from the inscription, the shroud of San Pedro de Osma is decorated with images of two lions and harpies inside roundels that are ringed by images of small men holding griffins, repeating across the whole fabric.[90] The chasuble from Saint-Sernin is likewise decorated with figural images, in this case a pair of peacocks repeating in horizontal bands, with vegetal stems separating each pair and small kufic inscriptions running along the bottom.[91]

The decorative theme of having a regular grid of roundels containing images of animals and figures, with more abstract motifs filling the spaces in between, has origins traced as far back as Persian Sasanian textiles. In subsequent periods, starting with the Almohads, these roundels with figurative imagery are progressively replaced with more abstract roundels, while epigraphic decoration becomes more prominent than before.[90]

Calligraphy and manuscript illumination

 
An illuminated Quran manuscript in florid Kufic and Maghrebi script.

In early Islamic manuscripts, Kufic was the main script used for religious texts. Western or Maghrebi Kufic evolved from the standard (or eastern) Kufic style and was marked by the transformation of the low swooping sections of letters from rectangular forms to long semi-circular forms. It is found in 10th century Qurans before the Almoravid period.[94] Almoravid Kufic is the variety of Maghrebi Kufic script that was used as an official display script during the Almoravid period.[95]

Eventually, Maghrebi Kufic gave rise to a distinctive cursive script known as "Maghrebi", the only cursive script of Arabic derived from Kufic, which was fully formed by the early 12th century under the Almoravids.[94] This style was commonly used in Qurans and other religious works from this period onward, but it was rarely ever used in architectural inscriptions.[96][94] One version of this script during this early period is the Andalusi script, which was associated with Al-Andalus. It was usually finer and denser, and while the loops of letters below the line are semi-circular, the extensions of letters above the line continue to use straight lines that recall its Kufic origins. Another version of the script is rounder and larger, and is more associated with the Maghreb, although it is nonetheless found in Andalusi volumes too.[94]

 
 
Part of the frontispiece (left) and a page from the text (right) of a Maghrebi or Andalusi Qur'an dated to 1090, the oldest known illuminated Qur'an from this region

The oldest known illuminated Quran from the western Islamic world (i.e. the Maghreb and Al-Andalus) dates from 1090, towards the end of the first Taifas period and the beginning of the Almoravid domination in Al-Andalus.[97]: 304 [96]: 224  It was produced either in the Maghreb or Al-Andalus and is now kept at the Uppsala University Library. Its decoration is still in the earliest phases of artistic development, lacking the sophistication of later volumes, but many of the features that were standard in later manuscripts[98] are present: the script is written in the Maghrebi style in black ink, but the diacritics (vowels and other orthographic signs) are in red or blue, simple gold and black roundels mark the end of verses, and headings are written in gold Kufic inside a decorated frame and background.[97]: 304  It also contains a frontispiece, of relatively simple design, consisting of a grid of lozenges variously filled with gold vegetal motifs, gold netting, or gold Kufic inscriptions on red or blue backgrounds.[96]: 224 

More sophisticated illumination is already evident in a copy of a sahih dated to 1120 (during the reign of Ali ibn Yusuf), also produced in either the Maghreb or Al-Andalus, with a rich frontispiece centered around a large medallion formed by an interlacing geometric motif, filled with gold backgrounds and vegetal motifs.[96]: 225  A similarly sophisticated Quran, dated to 1143 (at the end of Ali ibn Yusuf's reign) and produced in Córdoba, contains a frontispiece with an interlacing geometric motif forming a panel filled with gold and a knotted blue roundel at the middle.[97]: 304 

Ceramics

The Almoravid conquest of al-Andalus caused a temporary rupture in ceramic production, but it returned in the 12th century.[99] There is a collection of about 2,000 Maghrebi-Andalusi ceramic basins or bowls (bacini) in Pisa, where they were used to decorated churches from the early 11th to fifteenth centuries.[99] There were a number of varieties of ceramics under the Almoravids, including cuerda seca pieces.[99] The most luxurious form was iridescent lustreware, made by applying a metallic glaze to the pieces before a second firing.[99] This technique came from Iraq and flourished in Fatimid Egypt.[99]

Minbars

 
Detail of the Almoravid minbar, commissioned by Ali Bin Yusuf Bin Tashfin al-Murabiti 1137 for his great mosque in Marrakesh.

The Almoravid minbars — such as the minbar of the Grand Mosque of Marrakesh commissioned by Sultan Ali ibn Yusuf (1137), or the minbar for the University of al-Qarawiyyin (1144) —[100][80] expressed the Almoravids' Maliki legitimacy, their "inheritance of the Umayyad imperial role", and the extension of that imperial power into the Maghreb.[87] Both minbars are exceptional works of marquetry and woodcarving, decorated with geometric compositions, inlaid materials, and arabesque reliefs.[100][101][102]

Architecture

The Almoravid period, along with the subsequent Almohad period, is considered one of the most formative stages of Moroccan and Moorish architecture, establishing many of the forms and motifs of this style that were refined in subsequent centuries.[103][104][105][106] Manuel Casamar Perez remarks that the Almoravids scaled back the Andalusi trend towards heavier and more elaborate decoration which had developed since the Caliphate of Córdoba and instead prioritized a greater balance between proportions and ornamentation.[107]

 
In their North African constructions, the Almoravids explored the use of cusping to make arches more decorative, as seen here in the Almoravid Qubba in Marrakesh.[108]

The two centers of artistic production in the Islamic west before the rise of the Almoravids were Kairouan and Córdoba, both former capitals in the region which served as sources of inspiration.[82] The Almoravids were responsible for establishing a new imperial capital at Marrakesh, which became a major center of architectural patronage thereafter. The Almoravids adopted the architectural developments of al-Andalus, such as the complex interlacing arches of the Great Mosque in Córdoba and of the Aljaferia palace in Zaragoza, while also introducing new ornamental techniques from the east such as muqarnas ("stalactite" or "honeycomb" carvings).[104][109]

After taking control of Al-Andalus in the Battle of Sagrajas, the Almoravids sent Muslim, Christian and Jewish artisans from Iberia to North Africa to work on monuments.[110] The Great Mosque in Algiers (c. 1097), the Great Mosque of Tlemcen (1136) and al-Qarawiyyin (expanded in 1135) in Fez are important examples of Almoravid architecture.[100] The Almoravid Qubba is one of the few Almoravid monuments in Marrakesh surviving, and is notable for its highly ornate interior dome with carved stucco decoration, complex arch shapes, and minor muqarnas cupolas in the corners of the structure.[111]: 114  The central nave of the expanded Qarawiyyin Mosque notably features the earliest full-fledged example of muqarnas vaulting in the western Islamic world. The complexity of these muqarnas vaults at such an early date – only several decades after the first simple muqarnas vaults appeared in distant Iraq – has been noted by architectural historians as surprising.[112]: 64  Another high point of Almoravid architecture is the intricate ribbed dome in front of the mihrab of the Great Mosque of Tlemcen, which likely traces its origins to the 10th-century ribbed domes of the Great Mosque of Córdoba. The structure of the dome is strictly ornamental, consisting of multiple ribs or intersecting arches forming a twelve-pointed star pattern. It is also partly see-through, allowing some outside light to filter through a screen of pierced and carved arabesque decoration that fills the spaces between the ribs.[113][111]: 116–118 

Aside from more ornamental religious structures, the Almoravids also built many fortifications, although most of these in turn were demolished or modified by the Almohads and later dynasties. The new capital, Marrakesh, initially had no city walls but a fortress known as the Ksar el-Hajjar ("Fortress of Stone") was built by the city's founder, Abu Bakr ibn Umar, in order to house the treasury and serve as an initial residence.[114][115] Eventually, circa 1126, Ali Ibn Yusuf also constructed a full set of walls, made of rammed earth, around the city in response to the growing threat of the Almohads.[114][115] These walls, although much restored and partly expanded in later centuries, continue to serve as the walls of the medina of Marrakesh today. The medina's main gates were also first built at this time, although many of them have since been significantly modified. Bab Doukkala, one of the western gates, is believed to have best preserved its original Almoravid layout.[116] It has a classic bent entrance configuration, of which variations are found throughout the medieval period of the Maghreb and Al-Andalus.[115][117]: 116  Elsewhere, the archaeological site of Tasghîmût, southeast of Marrakesh, and Amargu, northeast of Fes, provide evidence about other Almoravid forts. Built out of rubble stone or rammed earth, they illustrate similarities with older Hammadid fortifications, as well as an apparent need to build quickly during times of crisis.[103]: 219–220 [118] The walls of Tlemcen (present-day Algeria) were likewise partly built by the Almoravids, using a mix of rubble stone at the base and rammed earth above.[103]: 220 

In domestic architecture, none of the Almoravid palaces or residences have survived, and they are known only through texts and archaeology. During his reign, Ali Ibn Yusuf added a large palace and royal residence on the south side of the Ksar el-Hajjar (on the present site of the Kutubiyya Mosque). This palace was later abandoned and its function was replaced by the Almohad Kasbah, but some of its remains have been excavated and studied in the 20th century. These remains have revealed the earliest known example in Morocco of a riad garden (an interior garden symmetrically divided into four parts).[115]: 71 [103]: 404  In 1960 other excavations near Chichaoua revealed the remains of a domestic complex or settlement dating from the Almoravid period or even earlier. It consisted of several houses, two hammams, a water supply system, and possibly a mosque. On the site were found many fragments of architectural decoration which are now preserved at the Archeological Museum of Rabat. These fragments are made of deeply-carved stucco featuring Kufic and cursive Arabic inscriptions as well as vegetal motifs such as palmettes and acanthus leaves.[96]: 219–223  The structures also featured painted decoration in red ochre, typically consisting of border motifs composed of two interlacing bands. Similar decoration has also been found in the remains of former houses excavated in 2006 under the 12th-century Almoravid expansion of the Qarawiyyin Mosque in Fes. In addition to the usual border motifs were larger interlacing geometric motifs as well as Kufic inscriptions with vegetal backgrounds, all executed predominantly in red.[96]: 195–197 

Literature

 
A plaque at the burial place of the Poet King Al-Mu'tamid ibn Abbad, interred 1095 in Aghmat, Morocco.

The Almoravid movement has its intellectual origins in the writings and teachings of Abu Imran al-Fasi, who first inspired Yahya Ibn Ibrahim of the Godala tribe in Kairouan. Ibn Ibrahim then inspired Abdallah ibn Yasin to organize for jihad and start the Almoravid movement.[119]

Moroccan literature flourished in the Almoravid period. The political unification of Morocco and al-Andalus under the Almoravid dynasty rapidly accelerated the cultural interchange between the two continents, beginning when Yusuf ibn Tashfin sent al-Mu'tamid ibn Abbad, former poet king of the Taifa of Seville, into exile in Tangier and ultimately Aghmat.[120]

The historians Ibn Hayyan, Al-Bakri, Ibn Bassam, and al-Fath ibn Khaqan all lived in the Almoravid period. Ibn Bassam authored Dhakhīra fī mahāsin ahl al-Jazīra [ar],[121] Al-Fath ibn Khaqan authored Qala'idu l-'Iqyan,[122] and Al-Bakri authored al-Masālik wa ’l-Mamālik (Book of Roads and Kingdoms).[123]

In the Almoravid period two writers stand out: Qadi Ayyad and Avempace. Ayyad is known for having authored Kitāb al-Shifāʾ bī Taʾrif Ḥuqūq al-Muṣṭafá.[124] Many of the Seven Saints of Marrakesh were men of letters.

The muwashshah was an important form of poetry and music in the Almoravid period. Great poets from the period are mentioned in anthologies such as Kharidat al Qasar [ar],[125] Rawd al-Qirtas, and Mu'jam as-Sifr.[126]

The Moroccan historian Muhammad al-Manuni [ar] noted that there were 104 paper mills in Fez under Yusuf ibn Tashfin in the 11th century.[127]

Military organization

Abdallah ibn Yasin imposed very strict disciplinary measures on his forces for every breach of his laws.[128] The Almoravids' first military leader, Yahya ibn Umar al-Lamtuni, gave them a good military organization. Their main force was infantry, armed with javelins in the front ranks and pikes behind, which formed into a phalanx,[129] and was supported by camelmen and horsemen on the flanks.[32][129] They also had a flag carrier at the front who guided the forces behind him; when the flag was upright, the combatants behind would stand and when it was turned down, they would sit.[129]

Al-Bakri reports that, while in combat, the Almoravids did not pursue those who fled in front of them.[129] Their fighting was intense and they did not retreat when disadvantaged by an advancing opposing force; they preferred death over defeat.[129] These characteristics were possibly unusual at the time.[129]

Legends

After the death of El Cid, Christian chronicles reported a legend of a Turkish woman leading a band of 300 "Amazons", black female archers. This legend was possibly inspired by the ominous veils on the faces of the warriors and their dark skin colored blue by the indigo of their robes.[130]

Dynasty

Rulers

Sanhaja tribal leaders recognizing the spiritual authority of Abdallah ibn Yasin (d. 1058 or 1059[a]):

Subsequent rulers:

Family tree

Almoravid family tree[142]
Turgut ibn Wartasin al-Lamtuni
Ibrahim
alias Talagagin
MuhammadHamid
TashfinAli'Umaral-HajjTilankan
Yusuf ibn Tashfin
(3)
IbrahimAbu Bakr ibn TashfinAbu Bakr ibn Umar
(2)
Yahya ibn Umar al-Lamtuni
(1)
AliMuhammadMazdali
Ali ibn Yusuf
(4)
Muhammad ibn A'ishaDawud Tamin ibn A'ishaAbu BakrIbrahimSirYahya ibn A'ishaIbrahimMuhammadAliIsaAbu Hafs UmarYahyaMuhammadAbu Bakr
Tashfin ibn Ali
(5)
Ishaq ibn Ali
(7)
FatimaYahya
Ibrahim ibn Tashfin
(6)
Muhammad

Timeline

Ishaq ibn AliIbrahim ibn TashfinTashfin ibn AliAli ibn YusufYusuf ibn TashfinAbu Bakr ibn UmarYahya ibn Umar al-LamtuniYahya ben IbrahimAbdallah ibn Yasin

Notes

  1. ^ Sources recount his death in 450 Hijri,[7] and modern authors give the Gregorian date as either 1058[7][131] or 1059.[132][31]

References

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  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Almoravides". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 717–718.
Royal house
Almoravid dynasty
Preceded by Ruling house of Morocco
1040–1145
Succeeded by

almoravid, dynasty, other, uses, murabitun, arabic, المرابطون, romanized, murābiṭūn, those, from, ribats, imperial, berber, muslim, dynasty, centered, territory, present, morocco, established, empire, 11th, century, that, stretched, over, western, maghreb, and. For other uses see Murabitun The Almoravid dynasty Arabic المرابطون romanized Al Murabiṭun lit those from the ribats 7 was an imperial Berber Muslim dynasty centered in the territory of present day Morocco 8 9 It established an empire in the 11th century that stretched over the western Maghreb and Al Andalus starting in the 1050s and lasting until its fall to the Almohads in 1147 10 The Almoravid capital was Marrakesh a city founded by the Almoravid leader Abu Bakr ibn Umar c 1070 The dynasty emerged from a coalition of the Lamtuna Gudala and Massufa nomadic Berber tribes living in what is now Mauritania and the Western Sahara 11 12 traversing the territory between the Draa the Niger and the Senegal rivers 13 14 Almoravid dynastyAl Murabiṭun المرابطون1050s 1147The Almoravid empire at its greatest extent c 1120 StatusEmpireCapitalAzougui 1058 1 2 3 4 Aghmat 1058 c 1070 5 Marrakesh c 1070 1147 Common languagesBerber languages Arabic MozarabicReligionIslam Sunni Minorities Christianity Roman Catholic JudaismGovernmentHereditary monarchyEmir c 1050 1057Yahya ibn Umar 1146 1147Ishaq ibn AliHistory Established1050s Disestablished1147Area1120 est 6 1 000 000 km2 390 000 sq mi CurrencyAlmoravid dinarPreceded by Succeeded byZenata kingdomsFirst Taifas periodBarghawata Confederacy Almohad CaliphateSecond Taifas periodThe Almoravids were crucial in preventing the fall of Al Andalus Muslim rule in Iberia 15 to the Iberian Christian kingdoms when they decisively defeated a coalition of the Castilian and Aragonese armies at the Battle of Sagrajas in 1086 This enabled them to control an empire that stretched 3 000 km 1 900 mi north to south Their rulers never claimed the title of caliph and instead took on the title of Amir al Muslimin Prince of the Muslims while formally acknowledging the overlordship of the Abbasid Caliphs in Baghdad 16 However the rule of the dynasty was relatively short lived The Almoravids fell at the height of their power when they failed to stop the Masmuda led rebellion initiated by Ibn Tumart As a result their last king Ishaq ibn Ali was killed in Marrakesh in April 1147 by the Almohad Caliphate which replaced them as a ruling dynasty both in the Maghreb and Al Andalus Contents 1 Name 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 2 Conquests 2 2 1 Northern Africa 2 2 2 Ghana Empire and the southern wing 2 2 3 Southern Iberia and the northern wing 2 3 Decline 3 Culture 3 1 Religion 3 2 Art 3 2 1 Marble work 3 2 2 Textiles 3 2 3 Calligraphy and manuscript illumination 3 2 4 Ceramics 3 2 5 Minbars 3 3 Architecture 3 4 Literature 4 Military organization 4 1 Legends 5 Dynasty 5 1 Rulers 5 2 Family tree 5 3 Timeline 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 BibliographyName EditThe term Almoravid comes from the Arabic al Murabit المرابط through the Spanish almoravide 17 The transformation of the b in al Murabit to the v in almoravide is an example of betacism in Spanish In Arabic al Murabit literally means one who is tying but figuratively means one who is ready for battle at a fortress The term is related to the notion of ribat ر باط a North African frontier monastery fortress through the root r b t ربط rabat to tie to unite or رابط raabat to encamp 18 19 The name Almoravid was tied to a school of Malikite law called Dar al Murabitin founded in Sus al Aksa modern day Morocco by a scholar named Waggag ibn Zallu Ibn Zallu sent his student Abdallah ibn Yasin to preach Malikite Islam to the Sanhaja Berbers of the Adrar present day Mauritania Hence the name of the Almoravids comes from the followers of the Dar al Murabitin the house of those who were bound together in the cause of God 20 It is uncertain exactly when or why the Almoravids acquired that appellation al Bakri writing in 1068 before their apex already calls them the al Murabitun but does not clarify the reasons for it Writing three centuries later Ibn Abi Zar suggested it was chosen early on by Abdallah ibn Yasin 21 because upon finding resistance among the Gudala Berbers of Adrar Mauritania to his teaching he took a handful of followers to erect a makeshift ribat monastery fortress on an offshore island possibly Tidra island in the Bay of Arguin 22 Ibn Idhari wrote that the name was suggested by Ibn Yasin in the persevering in the fight sense to boost morale after a particularly hard fought battle in the Draa valley c 1054 in which they had taken many losses Whichever explanation is true it seems certain the appellation was chosen by the Almoravids for themselves partly with the conscious goal of forestalling any tribal or ethnic identifications The name might be related to the ribat of Waggag ibn Zallu in the village of Aglu near present day Tiznit where the future Almoravid spiritual leader Abdallah ibn Yasin got his initial training The 13th century Moroccan biographer Ibn al Zayyat al Tadili and Qadi Ayyad before him in the 12th century note that Waggag s learning center was called Dar al Murabitin The house of the Almoravids and that might have inspired Ibn Yasin s choice of name for the movement 23 24 Contemporaries frequently referred to them as the al mulathimun the veiled ones from litham Arabic for veil The Almoravids veiled themselves below the eyes with a tagelmust a custom they adapted from southern Sanhaja Berbers This can still be seen among the modern Tuareg people but it was unusual further north Although practical for the desert dust the Almoravids insisted on wearing the veil everywhere as a badge of foreignness in urban settings partly as a way of emphasizing their puritan credentials It served as the uniform of the Almoravids Under their rule sumptuary laws forbade anybody else from wearing the veil thereby making it the distinctive dress of the ruling class In turn the succeeding Almohads made a point of mocking the Almoravid veil as symbolic of effeminacy and decadence citation needed A 15th century depiction of the 11th century Almoravid general Abu Bakr ibn Umar Rex Bubecar near the Senegal River in 1413 Majorcan chart Abu Bakr was known for his conquests in Africa History EditOrigins Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Berbers of the Maghreb in the early Middle Ages could be roughly classified into three major groups the Zenata across the north the Masmuda concentrated in central Morocco and the Sanhaja clustered in the western part of the Sahara and the hills of the eastern Maghreb 25 26 The eastern Sanhaja included the Kutama Berbers who had been the base of the Fatimid rise in the early 10th century and the Zirid dynasty who ruled Ifriqiya as vassals of the Fatimids after the latter moved to Egypt in 972 The western Sanhaja were divided into several tribes the Gazzula and the Lamta in the Draa valley and the foothills of the Anti Atlas range further south encamped in the western Sahara were the Massufa the Banu Warith and most southerly of all the Lamtuna and Gudala in littoral Mauritania down to the borderlands of the Senegal River citation needed The western Sanhaja had been converted to Islam some time in the 9th century They were subsequently united in the 10th century and with the zeal of new converts launched several campaigns against the Sudanese pagan peoples of sub Saharan Africa 27 Under their king Tinbarutan ibn Usfayshar the Sanhaja Lamtuna erected or captured the citadel of Aoudaghost a critical stop on the trans Saharan trade route After the collapse of the Sanhaja union Aoudaghost passed over to the Ghana Empire and the trans Saharan routes were taken over by the Zenata Maghrawa of Sijilmasa The Maghrawa also exploited this disunion to dislodge the Sanhaja Gazzula and Lamta out of their pasturelands in the Sous and Draa valleys Around 1035 the Lamtuna chieftain Abu Abdallah Muhammad ibn Tifat alias Tarsina tried to reunite the Sanhaja desert tribes but his reign lasted less than three years citation needed The Almoravid empire at its height stretched from the city of Aoudaghost to the Zaragoza in Al Andalus Around 1040 Yahya ibn Ibrahim a chieftain of the Gudala and brother in law of the late Tarsina went on pilgrimage to Mecca On his return he stopped by Kairouan in Ifriqiya where he met Abu Imran al Fasi a native of Fez and a jurist and scholar of the Sunni Maliki school At this time Ifriqiya was in ferment The Zirid ruler al Mu izz ibn Badis was openly contemplating breaking with his Shi ite Fatimid overlords in Cairo and the jurists of Kairouan were agitating for him to do so Within this heady atmosphere Yahya and Abu Imran fell into conversation on the state of the faith in their western homelands and Yahya expressed his disappointment at the lack of religious education and negligence of Islamic law among his southern Sanhaja people With Abu Imran s recommendation Yahya ibn Ibrahim made his way to the ribat of Waggag ibn Zelu in the Sous valley of southern Morocco to seek out a Maliki teacher for his people Waggag assigned him one of his residents Abdallah ibn Yasin citation needed Abdallah ibn Yasin was a Gazzula Berber and probably a convert rather than a born Muslim His name can be read as son of Ya Sin the title of the 36th surah of the Quran suggesting he had obliterated his family past and was re born of the Holy Book 28 Ibn Yasin certainly had the ardor of a puritan zealot his creed was mainly characterized by a rigid formalism and a strict adherence to the dictates of the Quran and the Orthodox tradition 29 Chroniclers such as al Bakri allege Ibn Yasin s learning was superficial Ibn Yasin s initial meetings with the Godala people went poorly As he had more ardor than depth Ibn Yasin s arguments were disputed by his audience He responded to questioning with charges of apostasy and handed out harsh punishments for the slightest deviations The Godala soon had enough and expelled him almost immediately after the death of his protector Yahya ibn Ibrahim sometime in the 1040s citation needed Ibn Yasin however found a more favorable reception among the neighboring Lamtuna people 29 Probably sensing the useful organizing power of Ibn Yasin s pious fervor the Lamtuna chieftain Yahya ibn Umar al Lamtuni invited the man to preach to his people The Lamtuna leaders however kept Ibn Yasin on a careful leash forging a more productive partnership between them Invoking stories of the early life of Muhammad Ibn Yasin preached that conquest was a necessary addendum to Islamicization that it was not enough to merely adhere to God s law but necessary to also destroy opposition to it In Ibn Yasin s ideology anything and everything outside of Islamic law could be characterized as opposition He identified tribalism in particular as an obstacle He believed it was not enough to urge his audiences to put aside their blood loyalties and ethnic differences and embrace the equality of all Muslims under the Sacred Law it was necessary to make them do so For the Lamtuna leadership this new ideology dovetailed with their long desire to refound the Sanhaja union and recover their lost dominions In the early 1050s the Lamtuna under the joint leadership of Yahya ibn Umar and Abdallah ibn Yasin soon calling themselves the al Murabitin Almoravids set out on a campaign to bring their neighbors over to their cause citation needed Conquests Edit Northern Africa Edit From 1053 the Almoravids began to Islamize the Berber areas of the Sahara and the regions south of the desert After winning over the Sanhaja Berber tribe they quickly took control of the entire desert trade route seizing Sijilmasa at the northern end in 1054 and Aoudaghost Awdaghust at the southern end in 1055 Yahya ibn Umar was killed in a battle in 1057 30 but Abdullah ibn Yasin whose influence as a religious teacher was paramount named his brother Abu Bakr ibn Umar as chief Under him the Almoravids soon began to spread their power beyond the desert and conquered the tribes of the Atlas Mountains In 1058 they crossed the High Atlas and conquered Aghmat a prosperous commercial town near the foothills of the mountains and made it their capital 31 11 They then came in contact with the Barghawata a Berber tribal confederation who followed an Islamic heresy preached by Salih ibn Tarif three centuries earlier The Barghawata resisted Abdullah ibn Yasin was killed in battle with them in 1059 in Krifla a village near Rommani Morocco They were however completely conquered by Abu Bakr ibn Umar and were forced to convert to orthodox Islam 32 Abu Bakr married a noble and wealthy Berber woman Zaynab an Nafzawiyyah who would become very influential in the development of the dynasty 33 Zaynab was the daughter of a wealthy merchant from Houara who was said to be from Kairouan 33 In 1061 Abu Bakr ibn Umar made a division of the power he had established handing over the more settled parts to his cousin Yusuf ibn Tashfin as viceroy and also assigning to him his favourite wife Zaynab Ibn Umar kept the task of suppressing the revolts that had broken out in the desert When he returned to resume control he found his cousin too powerful to be superseded 32 Abu Bakr ibn Umar founded the new capital of Marrakesh around this time Historical sources cite a variety of dates for this event ranging from 1062 given by Ibn Abi Zar and Ibn Khaldun to 1078 470 AH given by Muhammad al Idrisi 34 The year 1070 given by Ibn Idhari 35 is more commonly cited by modern historians 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Some writers cite the year 1062 43 44 45 In November 1087 46 Abu Bakr was killed in battle according to oral tradition by an arrow 47 48 while fighting in the historic region of the Sudan 46 Yusuf ibn Tashfin had in the meantime brought the large area of what is now Morocco Western Sahara and Mauritania under Almoravid control He spent at least several years capturing each fort and settlement in the region around Fez and in northern Morocco 49 After most of the surrounding region was under his control he was finally able to conquer Fez definitively However there is some contradiction and uncertainty among historical sources regarding the exact chronology of these conquests with some sources dating the main conquests to the 1060s and others dating them to the 1070s 50 Some modern authors cite the date of the final conquest of Fez as 1069 461 AH 51 52 53 Historian Ronald Messier gives the date more specifically as 18 March 1070 462 AH 54 Other historians date this conquest to 1074 or 1075 51 55 56 In 1079 Ibn Tashfin sent an army 20 000 strong from Marrakesh to push towards what is now Tlemcen to attack the Banu Ya la the Zenata tribe occupying the area Led by a commander named Mazdali Ibn Tilankan the army defeated the Banu Ya la and executed their leader Mali Ibn Ya la but did not push to Tlemcen right away Instead Ibn Tashfin himself led an army in 1081 that conquered Tlemcen massacring the Maghrawa forces there and their leader al Abbas Ibn Bakhti al Maghrawi 57 He pressed on and by 1082 he had captured Algiers 53 Ibn Tashfin subsequently treated Tlemcen as his eastern base At that time the city had consisted of an older settlement called Agadir but Ibn Tashfin founded a new city next to it called Takrart which later merged with Agadir in the Almohad period to become the present city 58 59 The Almoravids subsequently clashed with the Hammadids to the east multiple times but they did not make a sustained effort to conquer the central Maghrib and instead focused their efforts on other fronts 60 61 Eventually in 1104 they signed a peace treaty with the Hammadids 60 Algiers became their easternmost outpost 61 Before campaigning in Al Andalus where the Taifas emirs were requesting his help Ibn Tashfin made the capture of Ceuta his primary objective instead Ceuta controlled by Zenata forces under the command of Diya al Dawla Yahya was the last major city on the African side of the Strait of Gibraltar that still held out against him 62 In return for a promise to help him against the encroaching Christian kingdoms Ibn Tashfin demanded that al Mu tamid ibn Abbad the ruler of Seville provide assistance in besieging the city Al Mu tamid obliged and sent a fleet to blockade the city by sea while Ibn Tashfin s son Tamim led the siege by land The city finally surrendered in August 1084 62 Ghana Empire and the southern wing Edit According to Arab tradition the Almoravids conquered the Ghana Empire sometime around 1076 CE 63 An example of this tradition is the record of historian Ibn Khaldun who cited Shaykh Uthman the faqih of Ghana writing in 1394 According to this source the Almoravids weakened Ghana and collected tribute from the Sudan to the extent that the authority of the rulers of Ghana dwindled away and they were subjugated and absorbed by the Sosso a neighboring people of the Sudan 64 Traditions in Mali related that the Sosso attacked and took over Mali as well and the ruler of the Sosso Sumaouro Kante took over the land 65 However criticism from Conrad and Fisher 1982 argued that the notion of any Almoravid military conquest at its core is merely perpetuated folklore derived from a misinterpretation or naive reliance on Arabic sources 66 According to Professor Timothy Insoll the archaeology of ancient Ghana simply does not show the signs of rapid change and destruction that would be associated with any Almoravid era military conquests 67 Dierke Lange agreed with the original military incursion theory but argues that this doesn t preclude Almoravid political agitation claiming that the main factor of the demise of the Ghana Empire owed much to the latter 68 According to Lange Almoravid religious influence was gradual rather than the result of military action there the Almoravids gained power by marrying among the nation s nobility Lange attributes the decline of ancient Ghana to numerous unrelated factors one of which is likely attributable to internal dynastic struggles instigated by Almoravid influence and Islamic pressures but devoid of military conquest 69 This interpretation of events has been disputed by later scholars like Sheryl L Burkhalter 1992 who argued that whatever the nature of the conquest in the south of the Sahara the influence and success of the Almoravid movement in securing west African gold and circulating it widely necessitated a high degree of political control 70 The traditional position says that the ensuing war with the Almoravids pushed Ghana over the edge ending the kingdom s position as a commercial and military power by 1100 It collapsed into tribal groups and chieftaincies some of which later assimilated into the Almoravids while others founded the Mali Empire The Arab geographer Ibn Shihab al Zuhri wrote that the Almoravids ended Ibadi Islam in Tadmekka in 1084 and that Abu Bakr arrived at the mountain of gold in the deep south After the death of Abu Bakr 1087 the confederation of Berber tribes in the Sahara was divided between the descendants of Abu Bakr and his brother Yahya and would have lost control of Ghana 71 Sheryl Burkhalter suggests that Abu Bakr s son Yahya was the leader of the Almoravid expedition that conquered Ghana in 1076 and that the Almoravids would have survived the loss of Ghana and the defeat in the Maghreb by the Almohads and would have ruled the Sahara until the end of the 12th century 72 Southern Iberia and the northern wing Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1086 Yusuf ibn Tashfin was invited by the Muslim taifa princes of Al Andalus in the Iberian Peninsula to defend their territories from the encroachment of Alfonso VI King of Leon and Castile In that year Ibn Tashfin crossed the Strait of Gibraltar to Algeciras and defeated Castile at the Battle of Sagrajas He was prevented from following up his victory by trouble in Africa which he chose to settle in person He returned to Iberia in 1090 avowedly for the purpose of annexing the taifa principalities of Iberia He was supported by most of the Iberian people who were discontented with the heavy taxation imposed upon them by their spendthrift rulers 32 Their religious teachers as well as others in the east most notably al Ghazali in Persia and al Turtushi in Egypt who was himself an Iberian by birth from Tortosa detested the taifa rulers for their religious indifference The clerics issued a fatwa a non binding legal opinion that Yusuf was of sound morals and had the religious right to dethrone the rulers whom he saw as heterodox in their faith By 1094 Yusuf had annexed most of the major taifas with the exception of the one at Zaragoza The Almoravids were victorious at the Battle of Consuegra during which the son of El Cid Diego Rodriguez perished Alfonso with some Leonese retreated into the castle of Consuegra which was besieged for eight days until the Almoravids withdrew to the south After friendly correspondence with the caliph at Baghdad whom he acknowledged as Amir al Mu minin Commander of the Faithful Yusuf ibn Tashfin in 1097 assumed the title of Amir al Muslimin Commander of the Muslims He died in 1106 when he was reputed to have reached the age of 100 The Almoravid power was at its height at Yusuf s death the Moorish empire then included all of Northwest Africa as far eastward as Algiers and all of Iberia south of the Tagus and as far eastward as the mouth of the Ebro and including the Balearic Islands 73 An Almoravid dinar coin from Seville 1116 British Museum the Almoravid gold dinar would set the standard of the Iberian maravedi In 1108 Tamim Al Yusuf defeated the Kingdom of Castile at the Battle of Ucles Yusuf did not reconquer much territory from the Christian kingdoms except that of Valencia but he did hinder the progress of the Christian Reconquista by uniting al Andalus In 1134 at the Battle of Fraga the Almoravids were victorious and even succeeded in slaying Alfonso the Battler in the battle Decline Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Under Yusuf s son and successor Ali ibn Yusuf Sintra and Santarem were added and he invaded Iberia again in 1119 and 1121 but the tide had turned as the French had assisted the Aragonese to recover Zaragoza In 1138 Ali ibn Yusuf was defeated by Alfonso VII of Leon and Castile and in the Battle of Ourique 1139 by Afonso I of Portugal who thereby won his crown Lisbon was conquered by the Portuguese in 1147 74 According to some scholars Ali ibn Yusuf represented a new generation of leadership that had forgotten the desert life for the comforts of the city 75 He was defeated by the combined action of his Christian foes in Iberia and the agitation of the Almohads Muwahhids in Morocco After Ali ibn Yusuf s death in 1143 his son Tashfin ibn Ali lost ground rapidly before the Almohads In 1146 he was killed in a fall from a precipice while attempting to escape after a defeat near Oran 74 His two successors were Ibrahim ibn Tashfin and Ishaq ibn Ali but their reigns were short The conquest of the city of Marrakesh by the Almohads in 1147 marked the fall of the dynasty though fragments of the Almoravids continued to struggle throughout the empire 74 Among these fragments there was the rebel Yahya Al Sahrawiyya who resisted Almohad rule in the Maghreb for eight years after the fall of Marrakesh before surrendering in 1155 76 Also in 1155 the remaining Almoravids were forced to retreat to the Balearic Islands and later Ifriqiya under the leadership of the Banu Ghaniya who were eventually influential in the downfall of their conquerors the Almohads in the Eastern part of the Maghreb 77 Culture EditReligion Edit The Almoravid movement started as a conservative Islamic reform movement inspired by the Maliki school of jurisprudence 78 The writings of Abu Imran al Fasi a Moroccan Maliki scholar influenced Yahya Ibn Ibrahim and the early Almoravid movement 79 80 Art Edit The Pisa Griffin believed to have originated in 11th century Iberia 81 Amira Bennison describes the art of the Almoravid period as influenced by the integration of several areas into a single political unit and the resultant development of a widespread Andalusi Maghribi style as well as the tastes of the Sanhaja rulers as patrons of art 82 Bennison also challenges Robert Hillenbrand s characterization of the art of al Andalus and the Maghreb as provincial and peripheral in consideration of Islamic art globally and of the contributions of the Almoravids as sparse as a result of the empire s puritanical fervour and ephemerality 83 At first the Almoravids subscribing to the conservative Maliki school of Islamic jurisprudence rejected what they perceived as decadence and a lack of piety among the Iberian Muslims of the Andalusi taifa kingdoms 80 However monuments and textiles from Almeria from the late Almoravid period indicate that the empire had changed its attitude with time 80 Artistic production under the Almoravids included finely constructed minbars produced in Cordoba marble basins and tombstones in Almeria fine textiles in Almeria Malaga Seville and luxury ceramics 84 A stele found at Gao Saney believed to have been created in Almeria during the Almoravid period 85 Now located at the National Museum of Mali Marble work Edit A large group of marble tombstones have been preserved from the first half of the 12th century They were crafted in Almeria in Al Andalus at a time when it was a prosperous port city under Almoravid control The tombstones were made of Macael marble which was quarried locally and carved with extensive Kufic inscriptions that were sometimes adorned with vegetal or geometric motifs 86 These demonstrate that the Almoravids not only reused Umayyad marble columns and basins but also commissioned new works 87 The inscriptions on them are dedicated to various individuals both men and women from a range of different occupations indicating that such tombstones were relatively affordable The stones take the form of either rectangular stelae or of long horizontal prisms known as mqabriyyas similar to the ones found in the much later Saadian Tombs of Marrakesh They have been found in many locations across West Africa and Western Europe which is evidence that a wide reaching industry and trade in marble existed A number of pieces found in France were likely acquired from later pillaging Some of the most ornate tombstones found outside Al Andalus were discovered in Gao Saney in the African Sahel testament to the reach of Almoravid influence into the African continent 87 86 Two Almoravid period marble columns have also been found reused as spolia in later monuments in Fes One is incorporated into the window of the Dar al Muwaqqit timekeeper s house overlooking the courtyard of the Qarawiyyin Mosque built in the Marinid period The other is embedded into the decoration of the exterior southern facade of the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II a structure which was rebuilt by Ismail Ibn Sharif 88 Textiles Edit The fact that Ibn Tumart leader of the Almohad movement is recorded as having criticized Sultan Ali ibn Yusuf for sitting on a luxurious silken cloak at his grand mosque in Marrakesh indicates the important role of textiles under the Almoravids 89 Fragment of the shroud of San Pedro de Osma early 12th century the imagery features pairs of lions and harpies surrounded by men holding griffins Many of the remaining fabrics from the Almoravid period were reused by Christians with examples in the reliquary of San Isidoro in Leon a chasuble from Saint Sernin in Toulouse the Chasuble of San Juan de Ortega in the church of Quintanaortuna near Burgos the shroud of San Pedro de Osma and a fragment found at the church of Thuir in the eastern Pyrenees 84 90 91 92 Some of these pieces are characterized by the appearance of Kufic or Hispano Kufic woven inscriptions with letters sometimes ending in ornamental vegetal flourishes The Chasuble of San Juan de Ortega is one such example made of silk and gold thread and dating to the first half of the 12th century 90 91 The Shroud of San Pedro de Osma is notable for its inscription stating this was made in Baghdad suggesting that it was imported However more recent scholarship has suggested that the textile was instead produced locally in centres such as Almeria but that they were copied or based on eastern imports 90 It s even possible that the inscription was knowingly falsified in order to exaggerate its value to potential sellers Al Saqati of Malaga a 12th century writer and market inspector 93 wrote that there were regulations designed to prohibit the practice of making such false inscriptions 90 As a result of the inscription many of these textiles are known in scholarship as the Baghdad group representing a stylistically coherent and artistically rich group of silken textiles seemingly dating to reign of Ali ibn Yusuf or the first half of the 12th century 90 Aside from the inscription the shroud of San Pedro de Osma is decorated with images of two lions and harpies inside roundels that are ringed by images of small men holding griffins repeating across the whole fabric 90 The chasuble from Saint Sernin is likewise decorated with figural images in this case a pair of peacocks repeating in horizontal bands with vegetal stems separating each pair and small kufic inscriptions running along the bottom 91 The decorative theme of having a regular grid of roundels containing images of animals and figures with more abstract motifs filling the spaces in between has origins traced as far back as Persian Sasanian textiles In subsequent periods starting with the Almohads these roundels with figurative imagery are progressively replaced with more abstract roundels while epigraphic decoration becomes more prominent than before 90 Calligraphy and manuscript illumination Edit An illuminated Quran manuscript in florid Kufic and Maghrebi script In early Islamic manuscripts Kufic was the main script used for religious texts Western or Maghrebi Kufic evolved from the standard or eastern Kufic style and was marked by the transformation of the low swooping sections of letters from rectangular forms to long semi circular forms It is found in 10th century Qurans before the Almoravid period 94 Almoravid Kufic is the variety of Maghrebi Kufic script that was used as an official display script during the Almoravid period 95 Eventually Maghrebi Kufic gave rise to a distinctive cursive script known as Maghrebi the only cursive script of Arabic derived from Kufic which was fully formed by the early 12th century under the Almoravids 94 This style was commonly used in Qurans and other religious works from this period onward but it was rarely ever used in architectural inscriptions 96 94 One version of this script during this early period is the Andalusi script which was associated with Al Andalus It was usually finer and denser and while the loops of letters below the line are semi circular the extensions of letters above the line continue to use straight lines that recall its Kufic origins Another version of the script is rounder and larger and is more associated with the Maghreb although it is nonetheless found in Andalusi volumes too 94 Part of the frontispiece left and a page from the text right of a Maghrebi or Andalusi Qur an dated to 1090 the oldest known illuminated Qur an from this region The oldest known illuminated Quran from the western Islamic world i e the Maghreb and Al Andalus dates from 1090 towards the end of the first Taifas period and the beginning of the Almoravid domination in Al Andalus 97 304 96 224 It was produced either in the Maghreb or Al Andalus and is now kept at the Uppsala University Library Its decoration is still in the earliest phases of artistic development lacking the sophistication of later volumes but many of the features that were standard in later manuscripts 98 are present the script is written in the Maghrebi style in black ink but the diacritics vowels and other orthographic signs are in red or blue simple gold and black roundels mark the end of verses and headings are written in gold Kufic inside a decorated frame and background 97 304 It also contains a frontispiece of relatively simple design consisting of a grid of lozenges variously filled with gold vegetal motifs gold netting or gold Kufic inscriptions on red or blue backgrounds 96 224 More sophisticated illumination is already evident in a copy of a sahih dated to 1120 during the reign of Ali ibn Yusuf also produced in either the Maghreb or Al Andalus with a rich frontispiece centered around a large medallion formed by an interlacing geometric motif filled with gold backgrounds and vegetal motifs 96 225 A similarly sophisticated Quran dated to 1143 at the end of Ali ibn Yusuf s reign and produced in Cordoba contains a frontispiece with an interlacing geometric motif forming a panel filled with gold and a knotted blue roundel at the middle 97 304 Ceramics Edit The Almoravid conquest of al Andalus caused a temporary rupture in ceramic production but it returned in the 12th century 99 There is a collection of about 2 000 Maghrebi Andalusi ceramic basins or bowls bacini in Pisa where they were used to decorated churches from the early 11th to fifteenth centuries 99 There were a number of varieties of ceramics under the Almoravids including cuerda seca pieces 99 The most luxurious form was iridescent lustreware made by applying a metallic glaze to the pieces before a second firing 99 This technique came from Iraq and flourished in Fatimid Egypt 99 Minbars Edit Detail of the Almoravid minbar commissioned by Ali Bin Yusuf Bin Tashfin al Murabiti 1137 for his great mosque in Marrakesh The Almoravid minbars such as the minbar of the Grand Mosque of Marrakesh commissioned by Sultan Ali ibn Yusuf 1137 or the minbar for the University of al Qarawiyyin 1144 100 80 expressed the Almoravids Maliki legitimacy their inheritance of the Umayyad imperial role and the extension of that imperial power into the Maghreb 87 Both minbars are exceptional works of marquetry and woodcarving decorated with geometric compositions inlaid materials and arabesque reliefs 100 101 102 Architecture Edit Main article Almoravid architecture The Almoravid period along with the subsequent Almohad period is considered one of the most formative stages of Moroccan and Moorish architecture establishing many of the forms and motifs of this style that were refined in subsequent centuries 103 104 105 106 Manuel Casamar Perez remarks that the Almoravids scaled back the Andalusi trend towards heavier and more elaborate decoration which had developed since the Caliphate of Cordoba and instead prioritized a greater balance between proportions and ornamentation 107 In their North African constructions the Almoravids explored the use of cusping to make arches more decorative as seen here in the Almoravid Qubba in Marrakesh 108 The two centers of artistic production in the Islamic west before the rise of the Almoravids were Kairouan and Cordoba both former capitals in the region which served as sources of inspiration 82 The Almoravids were responsible for establishing a new imperial capital at Marrakesh which became a major center of architectural patronage thereafter The Almoravids adopted the architectural developments of al Andalus such as the complex interlacing arches of the Great Mosque in Cordoba and of the Aljaferia palace in Zaragoza while also introducing new ornamental techniques from the east such as muqarnas stalactite or honeycomb carvings 104 109 After taking control of Al Andalus in the Battle of Sagrajas the Almoravids sent Muslim Christian and Jewish artisans from Iberia to North Africa to work on monuments 110 The Great Mosque in Algiers c 1097 the Great Mosque of Tlemcen 1136 and al Qarawiyyin expanded in 1135 in Fez are important examples of Almoravid architecture 100 The Almoravid Qubba is one of the few Almoravid monuments in Marrakesh surviving and is notable for its highly ornate interior dome with carved stucco decoration complex arch shapes and minor muqarnas cupolas in the corners of the structure 111 114 The central nave of the expanded Qarawiyyin Mosque notably features the earliest full fledged example of muqarnas vaulting in the western Islamic world The complexity of these muqarnas vaults at such an early date only several decades after the first simple muqarnas vaults appeared in distant Iraq has been noted by architectural historians as surprising 112 64 Another high point of Almoravid architecture is the intricate ribbed dome in front of the mihrab of the Great Mosque of Tlemcen which likely traces its origins to the 10th century ribbed domes of the Great Mosque of Cordoba The structure of the dome is strictly ornamental consisting of multiple ribs or intersecting arches forming a twelve pointed star pattern It is also partly see through allowing some outside light to filter through a screen of pierced and carved arabesque decoration that fills the spaces between the ribs 113 111 116 118 Aside from more ornamental religious structures the Almoravids also built many fortifications although most of these in turn were demolished or modified by the Almohads and later dynasties The new capital Marrakesh initially had no city walls but a fortress known as the Ksar el Hajjar Fortress of Stone was built by the city s founder Abu Bakr ibn Umar in order to house the treasury and serve as an initial residence 114 115 Eventually circa 1126 Ali Ibn Yusuf also constructed a full set of walls made of rammed earth around the city in response to the growing threat of the Almohads 114 115 These walls although much restored and partly expanded in later centuries continue to serve as the walls of the medina of Marrakesh today The medina s main gates were also first built at this time although many of them have since been significantly modified Bab Doukkala one of the western gates is believed to have best preserved its original Almoravid layout 116 It has a classic bent entrance configuration of which variations are found throughout the medieval period of the Maghreb and Al Andalus 115 117 116 Elsewhere the archaeological site of Tasghimut southeast of Marrakesh and Amargu northeast of Fes provide evidence about other Almoravid forts Built out of rubble stone or rammed earth they illustrate similarities with older Hammadid fortifications as well as an apparent need to build quickly during times of crisis 103 219 220 118 The walls of Tlemcen present day Algeria were likewise partly built by the Almoravids using a mix of rubble stone at the base and rammed earth above 103 220 In domestic architecture none of the Almoravid palaces or residences have survived and they are known only through texts and archaeology During his reign Ali Ibn Yusuf added a large palace and royal residence on the south side of the Ksar el Hajjar on the present site of the Kutubiyya Mosque This palace was later abandoned and its function was replaced by the Almohad Kasbah but some of its remains have been excavated and studied in the 20th century These remains have revealed the earliest known example in Morocco of a riad garden an interior garden symmetrically divided into four parts 115 71 103 404 In 1960 other excavations near Chichaoua revealed the remains of a domestic complex or settlement dating from the Almoravid period or even earlier It consisted of several houses two hammams a water supply system and possibly a mosque On the site were found many fragments of architectural decoration which are now preserved at the Archeological Museum of Rabat These fragments are made of deeply carved stucco featuring Kufic and cursive Arabic inscriptions as well as vegetal motifs such as palmettes and acanthus leaves 96 219 223 The structures also featured painted decoration in red ochre typically consisting of border motifs composed of two interlacing bands Similar decoration has also been found in the remains of former houses excavated in 2006 under the 12th century Almoravid expansion of the Qarawiyyin Mosque in Fes In addition to the usual border motifs were larger interlacing geometric motifs as well as Kufic inscriptions with vegetal backgrounds all executed predominantly in red 96 195 197 Almoravid architecture The Almoravid Qubba in Marrakesh Remains of Bab Ali right a stone gate built for Ali ibn Yusuf s palace in Marrakesh next to the Ksar el Hajjar fortress Bab Doukkala one of the original gates of Marrakesh constructed circa 1126 Interior of the Great Mosque of Tlemcen Detail of the Almoravid era bronze overlays on the doors of al Qarawiyyin s Bab al Gna iz 101 Literature Edit A plaque at the burial place of the Poet King Al Mu tamid ibn Abbad interred 1095 in Aghmat Morocco The Almoravid movement has its intellectual origins in the writings and teachings of Abu Imran al Fasi who first inspired Yahya Ibn Ibrahim of the Godala tribe in Kairouan Ibn Ibrahim then inspired Abdallah ibn Yasin to organize for jihad and start the Almoravid movement 119 Moroccan literature flourished in the Almoravid period The political unification of Morocco and al Andalus under the Almoravid dynasty rapidly accelerated the cultural interchange between the two continents beginning when Yusuf ibn Tashfin sent al Mu tamid ibn Abbad former poet king of the Taifa of Seville into exile in Tangier and ultimately Aghmat 120 The historians Ibn Hayyan Al Bakri Ibn Bassam and al Fath ibn Khaqan all lived in the Almoravid period Ibn Bassam authored Dhakhira fi mahasin ahl al Jazira ar 121 Al Fath ibn Khaqan authored Qala idu l Iqyan 122 and Al Bakri authored al Masalik wa l Mamalik Book of Roads and Kingdoms 123 In the Almoravid period two writers stand out Qadi Ayyad and Avempace Ayyad is known for having authored Kitab al Shifaʾ bi Taʾrif Ḥuquq al Muṣṭafa 124 Many of the Seven Saints of Marrakesh were men of letters The muwashshah was an important form of poetry and music in the Almoravid period Great poets from the period are mentioned in anthologies such as Kharidat al Qasar ar 125 Rawd al Qirtas and Mu jam as Sifr 126 The Moroccan historian Muhammad al Manuni ar noted that there were 104 paper mills in Fez under Yusuf ibn Tashfin in the 11th century 127 Military organization EditAbdallah ibn Yasin imposed very strict disciplinary measures on his forces for every breach of his laws 128 The Almoravids first military leader Yahya ibn Umar al Lamtuni gave them a good military organization Their main force was infantry armed with javelins in the front ranks and pikes behind which formed into a phalanx 129 and was supported by camelmen and horsemen on the flanks 32 129 They also had a flag carrier at the front who guided the forces behind him when the flag was upright the combatants behind would stand and when it was turned down they would sit 129 Al Bakri reports that while in combat the Almoravids did not pursue those who fled in front of them 129 Their fighting was intense and they did not retreat when disadvantaged by an advancing opposing force they preferred death over defeat 129 These characteristics were possibly unusual at the time 129 Legends Edit After the death of El Cid Christian chronicles reported a legend of a Turkish woman leading a band of 300 Amazons black female archers This legend was possibly inspired by the ominous veils on the faces of the warriors and their dark skin colored blue by the indigo of their robes 130 Dynasty EditRulers Edit Sanhaja tribal leaders recognizing the spiritual authority of Abdallah ibn Yasin d 1058 or 1059 a Yahya Ibn Ibrahim al Jaddali also referred to as al Jawhar ibn Sakkum 131 7 Yahya ibn Umar al Lamtuni d 1055 or 1056 133 Abu Bakr ibn Umar d 1087 133 Subsequent rulers Yusuf ibn Tashfin 1061 1106 134 135 initially as Abu Bakr s lieutenant in the north 134 Ibrahim ibn Abu Bakr ruler of Sijilmasa 1070 1075 133 Ali ibn Yusuf 1106 1143 136 137 138 Tashfin ibn Ali 1143 1145 139 7 140 Ibrahim ibn Tashfin 1145 141 dethroned quickly 7 Ishaq ibn Ali 1145 1147 141 138 Family tree Edit Almoravid family tree 142 Turgut ibn Wartasin al LamtuniIbrahim alias TalagaginMuhammadHamidTashfinAli Umaral HajjTilankanYusuf ibn Tashfin 3 IbrahimAbu Bakr ibn TashfinAbu Bakr ibn Umar 2 Yahya ibn Umar al Lamtuni 1 AliMuhammadMazdaliAli ibn Yusuf 4 Muhammad ibn A ishaDawud Tamin ibn A ishaAbu BakrIbrahimSirYahya ibn A ishaIbrahimMuhammadAliIsaAbu Hafs UmarYahyaMuhammadAbu BakrTashfin ibn Ali 5 Ishaq ibn Ali 7 FatimaYahyaIbrahim ibn Tashfin 6 MuhammadTimeline EditNotes Edit Sources recount his death in 450 Hijri 7 and modern authors give the Gregorian date as either 1058 7 131 or 1059 132 31 References EditCitations Edit Arnaud Jean 21 May 2013 Introduction a la Mauritanie in French Institut de recherches et d etudes sur le monde arabe et musulman ISBN 978 2 271 08123 0 Nantet Bernard 30 May 2013 Le Sahara Histoire guerres et conquetes in French Tallandier ISBN 979 10 210 0172 5 Gaudio Attilio 1978 Le Dossier de la Mauritanie in French Nouvelles Editions Latines ISBN 978 2 7233 0035 3 Daddah Mokhtar Ould 1 October 2003 La Mauritanie contre vents et marees in French KARTHALA Editions ISBN 978 2 8111 3765 6 Garcin Jean Claude Balivet Michel Bianquis Thierry 1 January 1995 Etats societes et cultures du monde musulman medieval Xe XVe siecle 1 in French Presses universitaires de France reedition numerique FeniXX ISBN 978 2 13 067300 2 Turchin Peter Adams Jonathan M Hall Thomas D December 2006 East West Orientation of Historical Empires Journal of World systems Research 12 222 223 ISSN 1076 156X Retrieved 1 August 2020 a b c d e f Norris H T Chalmeta P 1993 al Murabiṭun In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P Pellat Ch eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Vol 7 Brill pp 583 591 G Stewart Is the Caliph a Pope in The Muslim World Volume 21 Issue 2 pages 185 196 April 1931 The Almoravid dynasty among the Berbers of North Africa founded a considerable empire Morocco being the result of their conquests Sadiqi Fatima The place of Berber in Morocco International Journal of the Sociology of Language 123 1 2009 7 22 The Almoravids were the first relatively recent Berber dynasty that ruled Morocco The leaders of this dynasty came from the Moroccan deep south Bennison 2016 p 336 341 a b Messier Ronald A 2009 Almoravids In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Three Brill ISBN 9789004181304 ISSN 1873 9830 Sluglett Peter Currie Andrew 2014 Atlas of Islamic History Routledge p 31 ISBN 978 1 138 82128 6 The Almoravids were an alliance of Sanhaja Berbers from the Guddala Lamtuna and Massufa tribes which formed in the 1040s in the area that is now Mauritania and Western Sahara Meynier Gilbert 2010 L Algerie coeur du Maghreb classique de l ouverture islamo arabe au repli 698 1518 in French La Decouverte ISBN 978 2 7071 5231 2 Extract from Encyclopedia Universalis on Almoravids Gomez Rivas Camilo 20 November 2014 Law and the Islamization of Morocco under the Almoravids The Fatwas of Ibn Rushd al Jadd to the Far Maghrib BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 27984 1 Kennedy Hugh 11 October 2016 Caliphate The History of an Idea Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 09438 7 Almoravid Definition of Almoravid by Lexico Lexico Dictionaries English Archived from the original on 16 October 2019 Retrieved 15 October 2019 Nehemia Levtzion Abd Allah b Yasin and the Almoravids in John Ralph Willis Studies in West African Islamic History p 54 P F de Moraes Farias The Almoravids Some Questions Concerning the Character of the Movement Bulletin de l IFAN series B 29 3 4 794 878 1967 Messier 2010 Ibn Abi Zar p 81 Ibn Abi Zar s account is translated in N Levtzion and J F P Hopkins eds 2000 Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History University of Ghana pp 239ff For tentative identification of the ribat see Moraes Farias 1967 Ibn al Zayyat 1220 التشوف إلى معرفة رجال التصوف Looking to know the men of Sufism p 89 Qadi Ayyad ترتيب المدارك وتنوير المسالك لمعرفة أعلام مذهب مالك Biographies of Eminent Maliki Scholars pp 839 40 ʻAbd al Waḥid Dhannun Ṭaha 1998 The Muslim conquest and settlement of North Africa and Spain Routledge ISBN 0 415 00474 8 online at Google Books Mones 1992 p 119 or p 228 in 1988 edition Lewicki 1992 pp 308 09 or pp 160 61 in 1988 edition M Brett and E Fentress 1996 The Berbers Oxford Blackwell p 100 Revealingly the 36th surah begins the salutation You are one of messengers and the imperative duty to set people on the straight path Ibn Yasin s choice of name was probably not a coincidence a b 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Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Vol 11 Brill pp 355 356 ISBN 9789004161214 Russell Hopley 2012 Yusuf ibn Tashfin Abu Ya qub In Akyeampong Emmanuel Kwaku Gates Jr Henry Louis eds Dictionary of African Biography Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 538207 5 Levi Provencal Evariste 1986 1960 ʿAli b Yusuf b Tas h ufin In Gibb H A R Kramers J H Levi Provencal E Schacht J Lewis B Pellat Ch eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Vol 1 Brill pp 389 390 ISBN 9789004161214 Hopley Russell 2012 Ali ibn Yusuf ibn Tashfin In Akyeampong Emmanuel Kwaku Gates Jr Henry Louis eds Dictionary of African Biography Oxford University Press p 174 ISBN 978 0 19 538207 5 a b Flood Timothy M 2018 Rulers and Realms in Medieval Iberia 711 1492 McFarland p 202 ISBN 978 1 4766 3372 5 Cory Stephen 2012 Tashfin ibn ʿAli In Akyeampong Emmanuel Kwaku Gates Jr Henry Louis eds Dictionary of African Biography Oxford University Press p 508 ISBN 978 0 19 538207 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Khaldun Record of the Beginnings and Events in the History of the Arabs and Berbers and their Powerful Contemporaries Vol 6 دار الفكر Ibn Abi Zar al Fassi Ali Abu al Hassan 1326 روض القرطاس في أخبار ملوك المغرب و تاريخ مدينة فاس The Garden of Pages in the Chronicles of the Kings of Morocco and the History of the City of Fes Uppsala University al Bakri 1068 كتاب المسالك و الممالك Book of the Roads and the Kingdoms دار الكتاب الإسلامي القاهرة Ibn Idhari al Murakushi Ahmad 1312 البيان المغرب في أخبار الأندلس والمغرب Book of the Amazing Story in the Chronicles of the Kings of al Andalus and Morocco جامعة الملك سعود Insoll T 2003 The Archaeology of Islam in Sub Saharan Africa Cambridge Cambridge University Press Kennedy Hugh 1996 Muslim Spain and Portugal A Political History of al Andalus Routledge ISBN 9781317870418 Lewicki T 1992 1988 The Role of the Sahara and Saharians in relationships between north and south In Elfasi M ed General History of Africa Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century UNESCO pp 276 313 Levtzion N and J F P Hopkins eds 1981 Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press 2000 edition Messier Ronald A 2010 The Almoravids and the Meanings of Jihad Praeger ABC CLIO p 118 ISBN 978 0 313 38590 2 Mones H 1992 1988 The conquest of North Africa and Berber resistance In Elfasi M ed General History of Africa Africa from the Seventh to the Eleventh Century UNESCO pp 224 46 Moraes Farias P F de 1967 The Almoravids Some Questions Concerning the Character of the Movement Bulletin de l IFAN series B 29 3 4 pp 794 878 Naylor Phillip C 2009 North Africa A History from Antiquity to the Present University of Texas Press ISBN 978 0 292 71922 4 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Almoravides Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 717 718 Royal house Almoravid dynastyPreceded byIdrisid dynasty Ruling house of Morocco1040 1145 Succeeded byAlmohad dynasty Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Almoravid dynasty amp oldid 1143646465, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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