Political fragmentation and the triumph of Islamic culture (c. 1250–c. 1500)

print Print
Please select which sections you would like to print:
verifiedCite
While every effort has been made to follow citation style rules, there may be some discrepancies. Please refer to the appropriate style manual or other sources if you have any questions.
Select Citation Style
Share
Share to social media
URL
https://www.britannica.com/place/North-Africa
Feedback
Corrections? Updates? Omissions? Let us know if you have suggestions to improve this article (requires login).
Thank you for your feedback

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article.

After the collapse of Almohad rule, the Maghrib became divided into three Muslim states, each ruled by a Berber (Amazigh) dynasty: the Ḥafṣids, whose territory included Tunisia, eastern Algeria, and Tripolitania; the Marīnids, ruling over Morocco; and the Zayyānids, whose capital was in Tlemcen, ruling over most of western Algeria when this region was not occupied by the Marīnids. Both the rigorist legalistic doctrine of the Almoravids and the more enlightened religious orientation of the Almohads had proved to be unsuitable as foundations for durable political authority. Furthermore, the rulers themselves were unsuitable to act as custodians of the faith. Islamic culture came of age in the Maghrib only after the rulers gave up attempting to identify their authority with a single religious doctrine and allowed religious life to develop freely through the interplay of religious ideas and social forces in relative independence from the state. The Maghribi rulers subsequently legitimized their authority by cultivating relations of trust and cooperation with the leading religious scholars of the time. Their capital cities became, consequently, the foremost centres of learning in their realms and were adorned not only with exquisite mosques but also with sumptuous madrasahs, residential colleges built and financed by the rulers. The Mālikī school of law was again recognized. Its scholars were held in great esteem and granted various privileges by the rulers, but they were not allowed to determine the conduct of government.

From the 12th century Sufism had spread widely in the Maghrib. Sufi holy men were venerated in both the towns and the countryside. Although in the towns their influence tended to be overshadowed by that of the legal scholars and the organs of the state, in the countryside they constituted the main custodians of Islamic norms. Often allied with tribal chiefs and sometimes having their own communities, these religious leaders helped establish order and stability by using their moral authority to uphold religious norms and arbitrate conflicts. They could perform these functions and gain influence over the tribal societies because the rulers’ administrative authority extended little beyond their capital cities and garrison towns, and the rulers, as well as the urban scholars, considered tribal society to be of marginal importance. Indeed, the tribes exercised direct influence on political life only when they became involved in conflicts for power within the ruling family or when their warriors took part in wars against a foreign enemy.

Relations between the three Maghribi states were greatly influenced by the pressures that the Christian states of the Iberian Peninsula exerted on them from the mid-13th century. The Ḥafṣids claimed to be the heirs of Almohad religious authority, but after the first independent Ḥafṣid ruler, Abū Zakariyyāʾ (1228–49), they gave up attempting to substantiate this claim, either by pressing forward the conquest of the western Maghrib or by helping the Muslims of Spain militarily. The Marīnids inherited both the heartland of the former Almohad state in Morocco and its confrontation with the Christians in Spain, but, because of political instability, they were never able to take the initiative in the war against the Christians. Through their military outposts in southern Spain, they merely tried to check attacks on Morocco itself and to help the Muslim principality of Granada (Gharnāṭah) survive as a buffer between them and the Christian powers. In March 1344 the Marīnids suffered a serious military defeat when the army of the Christian kingdom of Castile, reinforced by warriors from England, France, and Italy, conquered Algeciras, their last military outpost in Spain. Meanwhile, since the mid-13th century, the Ḥafṣids and Zayyānids had been carrying on commercial relations with Christian Aragon. In return for allowing subjects of the king of Aragon to trade freely in their dominions, they received military help in the form of Catalan mercenaries. Defeat at the hands of the Christians, at a time when the Ḥafṣids and Zayyānids had friendly relations with Aragon, prompted the Marīnid sultan Abū al-Ḥasan ʿAlī (1331–51) to invade their territories. Between 1346 and 1347 his army overran the eastern Maghrib as far east as Tripolitania, but, when the Arab tribes of Tunisia joined in the battle against them, the Marīnids were overwhelmed, and Abū al-Ḥasan himself had to flee by sea from Tunis. His son and successor, Abū ʿInān, also invaded the eastern Maghrib, in 1356–57, but he, too, had to withdraw from Tunisia when faced with Arab tribal resistance.

Political life in the Maghrib from the mid-14th to the end of the 15th century was dominated by the preoccupation of the ruling dynasties with internecine conflicts, which in the case of the Ḥafṣids was complicated by the domination of many parts of their territories by Arab tribes. These conflicts caused the Ḥafṣid state to be divided into two parts between 1348 and 1370, one being ruled from Tunis and the other from Bejaïa, with the ruler of each part supported by a different Arab tribal group. After it was reunified in 1370 by Sultan Abū al-ʿAbbās, the Ḥafṣid state enjoyed periods of relative stability interspersed with strife. Political instability did not, however, prevent learning from developing in the towns. The greatest intellectual figure of the Maghrib before the modern period, the historian and sociologist Ibn Khaldūn, was born and educated at that time in Tunis. Conflicts for power within the Zayyānid state enabled the Marīnids to establish indirect control over Tlemcen in the second half of the 14th century, but, being preoccupied with strife within their own dominions, they were not able to realize their long-held ambition of bringing the whole of the Maghrib under their rule.

The Maghrib from about 1500 to 1830

Between 1471 and 1510 the line of confrontation between the Muslims of the Maghrib and the Christians of the Iberian Peninsula shifted from Spain to the Maghrib itself. The Portuguese occupied a number of positions on the Moroccan coast between 1471 and 1505, which included Tangier in the north and Agadir in the south. The Spaniards conquered Granada, the last Muslim stronghold on the peninsula, in 1492, and between 1505 and 1510 they began establishing garrison posts along the Maghribi coast. The most important of these were at Oran (Wahrān) and Bejaïa in Algeria and Tripoli in Libya. The strong religious reaction in the Maghrib to Christian colonial intrusion enabled the Saʿdī dynasty of sharifs to capture power in Morocco in 1549 and paved the way for Ottoman rule to be established later in the rest of the Maghrib.

Morocco under sharifian dynasties

As a reaction to the Portuguese presence in Agadir, the tribes in southern Morocco were organized by the sharifian Saʿdī family—with the active support of Sufi leaders—into a militant religious movement directed against both the Portuguese presence and Morocco’s own rulers, the Waṭṭāsids. The latter was a branch of the Marīnid dynasty that had usurped power in Fez in 1472 and pursued a policy of coexistence with the Portuguese. After occupying Marrakech in 1525 and consolidating their authority in southern Morocco, the Saʿdīs conquered Agadir in 1541. By 1550 they had forced the Portuguese to evacuate the rest of their positions on the Moroccan coast and conquered the Waṭṭāsid capital of Fez. The Saʿdīs consolidated their rule in Morocco thereafter and, by later defending the territory against Ottoman expansion from Algeria, gave it a national identity distinct from the rest of the Maghrib. Their authority was legitimized by their descent from the Prophet, but the dynasty’s mainstay was the support it received from the settled agricultural and commercial communities, as well as the possession and use of firearms by its troops. The dynasty reached the zenith of its power during the reign of Aḥmad al-Manṣūr (1578–1603), who, with the help of Spanish and Turkish mercenaries, built Morocco’s first professional army. With this force at his command, al-Manṣūr imposed his will on the whole country, besides defending it against the Ottoman Empire and, in 1591, conquering the West African state of Songhai (present-day Mali). However, conflict for power after his death divided the country into several principalities that lasted until they were reunited through another sharifian family, that of the ʿAlawites.

The ʿAlawites, who rule Morocco to this day, came to power with the help of Arab tribes that had moved into Morocco in large numbers during the Almohad period. The founder of the dynasty, Mawlāy al-Rashīd, mobilized these tribes against the powerful Berber principality of the Dilāʾiyyah that had dominated the Middle Atlas and parts of northern Morocco since the 1640s. Mawlāy al-Rashīd’s half brother, Mawlāy Ismāʿīl, succeeded in reunifying Morocco with the help of a professional army of slaves (ʿabīd) known as ʿAbīd al-Bukhārī, who were drawn from the descendants of the many sub-Saharan Africans who were brought back to Morocco after the conquest of Songhai. After Mawlāy Ismāʿīl’s death, however, conflict over succession between his sons, who are said to have numbered about 500, complicated by the intrigues of the ʿAbid officers, ushered in a period of chaos and economic decline that lasted nearly 50 years. Following the dynasty’s recovery during the reign of Sultan Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd Allāh (1757–90) and continuing under Sultan Mawlāy Sulaymān (1792–1822), Morocco enjoyed a period of relative stability that was disturbed on a large scale only by conflicts between the ruling dynasty and tribes recognizing the authority of Sufi leaders. The economy of Morocco also started to recover in that period, and the state’s external trade expanded. However, the French occupation of Algeria after 1830, together with European political and economic infiltration of Morocco thereafter, created new challenges with which the state’s traditional political system could not adequately cope.

Ottoman rule in the Maghrib

The Ottoman Turks occupied Egypt in 1517. Shortly afterward they became involved in the confrontation between Muslims and Christians in the Maghrib through the exploits of two Muslim privateers, ʿArūj and his brother Khayr al-Dīn Barbarossa, who occupied Algiers in 1516 and made it a base for operations against the Spaniards. After ʿArūj was killed in 1518 in an attack on Tlemcen, Khayr al-Dīn offered submission to the Ottoman sultan in return for military help, which subsequently enabled him to gain control over most of the Maghrib.

Algeria was the first country of the Maghrib to be ruled by the Ottoman Empire. Administered at first by governors sent from Istanbul, the Ottoman regency of Algiers was transformed into a sort of military republic when the troops stationed there rebelled against the Ottoman governor in 1689 and installed one of their officers as ruler, giving him the title of dey (maternal uncle). The Ottoman troops thus emerged as a ruling caste that periodically renewed itself with fresh recruits from various parts of the Mediterranean region. The deys, chosen from within this caste, governed Algeria independently from the Ottoman government. They retained religious ties to the Ottoman sultan, however, by recognizing him as caliph and by making the Ḥanafī school of law—the official school of the Ottoman Empire—the official school of law in Algeria as well. Piracy provided the ruling caste with its main source of revenue. Generated largely from the money received for ransoming Christian captives and from the price of peace levied on obliging Christian countries, such income remained forthcoming until the mid-18th century. Local inhabitants accepted the rule of the deys because the taxes they had to pay them were light and because their own leaders were allowed a large degree of autonomy in managing the affairs of their communities. Furthermore, the deys were careful to cultivate the good will of the influential Sufi personalities in the countryside. From the mid-18th century the balance of power in the Mediterranean started to turn in favour of the European powers. Thereafter the revenue that the deys derived from piracy declined. The heavy taxes that they subsequently had to impose on the Algerians led to conflicts with the tribal communities led by Sufi leaders, which ultimately weakened the regime of the deys on the eve of the French invasion of Algeria in 1830.

The Ottomans occupied Tunis in 1534 but were forced by Spanish troops to evacuate it the following year. Thereafter the Ḥafṣids ruled Tunisia under Spanish protection until the Ottomans reconquered the country in 1574. In 1591 the Ottoman troops stationed in Tunis rebelled against the governor sent from Istanbul and established a regime headed by deys chosen by the troops, which was similar to the dey-ruled regime that appeared in Algeria a little later. In Tunisia the regime of the deys was transformed from within through the importance that the bey, the officer responsible for maintaining order in the countryside and for collecting taxes, came to have in it. In 1705 the bey, Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī, effectively usurped the power of the dey when, with the help of Tunisian tribal warriors, he repulsed the invasion of Tunisia by the army of Algiers. Thus was established the Ḥusaynid dynasty of beys, which ruled the country until the monarchy was abolished in 1957. While recognizing the religious authority of the Ottoman sultan as caliph, the Ḥusaynids ruled Tunisia independently from the Ottoman government. They officially adopted the Ḥanafī school of law but governed the country through local Mālikī notables and allowed Mālikī religious scholars to manage the religious and legal affairs of their communities, while also bestowing favours on them. In common with other Maghribi states at the time, piracy was an important source of revenue. It was supplemented, however, by trade in the country’s products, which the beys controlled through monopolies and sold mostly to Jews at high prices.

The Ottomans conquered Tripoli in 1551, defeating the Knights of Malta. The Ottoman province that they established was governed from Tripoli and included the whole of present-day Libya. In 1711 the province underwent a change similar to the one that Tunisia had experienced in 1705, when the chief of the cavalry, Aḥmad Karamanli, usurped power and established his own dynasty. The Karamanlis ruled Libya until 1835 when, in the wake of a tribal rebellion supported by the British, direct Ottoman rule was reimposed there. From the mid-16th century Libya became active in the lucrative trans-Saharan trade that crossed its territory. In the Karamanli period it also became an important centre of piracy. After Napoleon I occupied Malta in 1798, Libya was opened to European trade, and it consequently became involved in the rivalry between the British and the French for supremacy both in the Mediterranean region and in West Africa.

At the time when Europe began its colonial expansion in the Maghrib—starting with the French occupation of Algiers in 1830—the region was divided into four political entities. Morocco, ruled by the ʿAlawite dynasty, was a sovereign country. Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya were autonomous states that recognized the religious authority of the Ottoman sultan. The French occupation of Algeria had direct and serious consequences for the authority of the rulers of Tunisia and Morocco and, indirectly, for the authority of the rulers of Libya as well.

Jamil M. Abun-Nasr