In the
closing decades of the ninth century, missionaries of the
Ismaili sect of Shia
Islam converted the Kutama Berbers of what was later known
as the Petite Kabylie region and led them in battle against
the Sunni
rulers of Ifriqiya. Al Qayrawan fell to them in 909. The
Ismaili imam, Ubaydallah, declared himself caliph and
established Mahdia as his capital. Ubaydallah initiated the
Fatimid Dynasty, named after Fatima, daughter of Muhammad
and wife of Ali, from whom the caliph claimed
descent. The
Fatimids turned westward in 911, destroying the imamate of
Tahirt and conquering Sijilmasa in Morocco. Ibadi Kharijite
refugees from Tahirt fled south to the oasis at Ouargla
beyond the Atlas Mountains, whence in the eleventh century
they moved southwest to Oued Mzab. Maintaining their
cohesion and beliefs over the centuries, Ibadi religious
leaders have dominated public life in the region to this
day. For many
years, the Fatimids posed a threat to Morocco, but their
deepest ambition was to rule the East, the Mashriq, which
included Egypt and Muslim lands beyond. By 969 they had
conquered Egypt. In 972 the Fatimid ruler Al Muizz
established the new city of Cairo as his capital. The
Fatimids left the rule of Ifriqiya and most of Algeria to
the Zirids (972-1148). This Berber dynasty, which had
founded the towns of Miliana, Mèdèa, and
Algiers and centered significant local power in Algeria for
the first time, turned over its domain west of Ifriqiya to
the Banu Hammad branch of its family. The Hammadids ruled
from 1011 to 1151, during which time BejaÔa became the
most important port in the Maghrib. This
period was marked by constant conflict, political
instability, and economic decline. The Hammadids, by
rejecting the Ismaili doctrine for Sunni orthodoxy and
renouncing submission to the Fatimids, initiated chronic
conflict with the Zirids. Two great Berber
confederations--the Sanhaja and the Zenata--engaged in an
epic struggle. The fiercely brave, camelborne nomads of the
western desert and steppe as well as the sedentary farmers
of the Kabylie to the east swore allegiance to the Sanhaja.
Their traditional enemies, the Zenata, were tough,
resourceful horsemen from the cold plateau of the northern
interior of Morocco and the western Tell in
Algeria. In
addition, raiders from Genoa, Pisa, and Norman Sicily
attacked ports and disrupted coastal trade. Trans-Saharan
trade shifted to Fatimid Egypt and to routes in the west
leading to Spanish markets. The countryside was being
overtaxed by growing cities. Contributing
to these political and economic dislocations was a large
incursion of Arab beduin from Egypt starting in the first
half of the eleventh century. Part of this movement was an
invasion by the Banu Hilal and Banu Sulaym tribes,
apparently sent by the Fatimids to weaken the Zirids. These
Arab beduin overcame the Zirids and Hammadids and in 1057
sacked Al Qayrawan. They sent farmers fleeing from the
fertile plains to the mountains and left cities and towns in
ruin. For the
first time, the extensive use of Arabic spread to the
countryside. Sedentary Berbers who sought protection from
the Hilalians were gradually arabized. Islam
and the Arabs
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Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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