Further reading: Richard Fletcher, Moorish Spain
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1992); Abd
al-Wahid al-Marrakushi, History of the Almohades, ed.
R. Dozy (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1881); Roger Le Tourneau,
The Almohad Movement in North Africa in the Twelfth and
Thirteenth Century (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univer-
sity Press, 1969).
Almoravid dynasty
(1042–1147)
A b
erber
dynasty that arose from the deserts of
southern Mauritania, the Almoravids conquered
m
orocco
and Islamicate Spain during the sec-
ond half of the 11th century. The founder of the
Almoravid movement, a teacher of Maliki law
named Abd Allah ibn Yasin (d. 1058), was origi-
nally brought to the desert by a Berber chief, who
was eager for his people to receive proper Islamic
instruction. Imposing harsh religious discipline
upon the tribesmen, Ibn Yasin developed a core
group of followers, whom he later sent to conquer
the surrounding lands and enforce his rigorous
interpretation of Islam. Although Ibn Yasin was
killed in battle in 1058, his successors, Abu Bakr
ibn Umar (d. 1087) and Yusuf ibn Tashfin (d. 1106)
extended Almoravid rule southward into Ghana
and northward throughout Morocco and into Isl-
amicate Spain. After establishing their new capitol
of Marrakesh in southern Morocco, Almoravid
armies first crossed the Strait of Gibraltar in 1086
to support Muslim princes under siege from the
Christian reconquest (Spanish: Reconquista). By
the death of Ibn Tashfin in 1106, the Almoravids
were supreme rulers over Islamicate Spain.
Ironically, historians since i
bn
k
haldUn
(d.
1406) have speculated that the conquest of Spain
was actually the first step in the Almoravid
downfall. They argue that when the Almoravids
encountered the cultured lifestyle of a
ndalUsia
,
they eventually abandoned the disciplined ways
that had led to their success. Regardless, the
Almoravid military bogged down in Spain, and
their administrators encountered resistance from
the population, who resented domination by what
they thought were uncouth desert tribesmen. By
the 1140s, much of Andalusia was in open revolt,
while the Almohad movement was waging a suc-
cessful war against the Almoravids in Morocco.
The Almohad victory was complete upon the
death of the last Almoravid
sUltan
in 1147, and
the Almoravid dynasty came to an end as sud-
denly as it had burst upon the political scene less
than 100 years earlier. However, the lasting influ-
ence of the Almoravids is seen in the continued
dominance of the m
aliki
l
egal
s
chool
, which
they helped to establish in North Africa.
See also a
lmohad
dynasty
; W
est
a
Frica
.
Stephen Cory
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |