The
Almoravid movement developed early in the eleventh century
among the Sanhaja of the western Sahara, whose control of
trans-Saharan trade routes was under pressure from the
Zenata Berbers in the north and the state of Ghana in the
south. Yahya ibn Ibrahim al Jaddali, a leader of the Lamtuna
tribe of the Sanhaja confederation, decided to raise the
level of Islamic knowledge and practice among his people. To
accomplish this, on his return from the hajj (Muslim
pilgrimage to Mecca) in 1048-49, he brought with him Abd
Allah ibn Yasin al Juzuli, a Moroccan scholar. In the early
years of the movement, the scholar was concerned only with
imposing moral discipline and a strict adherence to Islamic
principles among his followers. Abd Allah ibn Yasin also
became known as one of the marabouts, or holy persons (from
al murabitun, "those who have made a religious
retreat." Almoravids is the Spanish transliteration
of al murabitun--see Marabouts,
page 6). The
Almoravid movement shifted from promoting religious reform
to engaging in military conquest after 1054 and was led by
Lamtuna leaders: first Yahya, then his brother Abu Bakr, and
then his cousin Yusuf ibn Tashfin. With Marrakech as their
capital, the Almoravids had conquered Morocco, the Maghrib
as far east as Algiers, and Spain up to the Ebro River by
1106. Under the Almoravids, the Maghrib and Spain
acknowledged the spiritual authority of the Abbasid
caliphate in Baghdad, reuniting them temporarily with the
Islamic community in the Mashriq. Although
it was not an entirely peaceful time, North Africa benefited
economically and culturally during the Almoravid period,
which lasted until 1147. Muslim Spain (Andalus in Arabic)
was a great source of artistic and intellectual inspiration.
The most famous writers of Andalus worked in the Almoravid
court, and the builders of the Grand Mosque of Tilimsan,
completed in 1136, used as a model the Grand Mosque of
Córdoba.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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