Marinid dynasty

Marinid dynasty
Imrinen /المرينيون (ar)

1215–1465
Flag Emblem
The Marinid empire at its greatest extent (1347–1348)
Capital Fes
Religion Sunni Islam
Government Sultanate
Sultan
 - 1215-1217 Abd al-Haqq I
 - 1420-1465 Abd al-Haqq II
History
 - Established 1215
 - Disestablished 1465
Currency Dinar
Today part of  Algeria
 Gibraltar
 Morocco
 Spain
Western Sahara
Marinid Dynasty
Country Morocco
Ancestral house Banu Marin
Founder Abd al-Haqq I
Founding 1215
History of Morocco

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Ancient Morocco
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connected articles
The Anglicised name used for this article derives from the Arabic Banu Marin which derives from the Berber Ayt Mrin.

The Marinid dynasty or Benemerine dynasty (Arabic: مرينيون marîniyûn or بنو مرين banû marîn) was a Zenata Berber dynasty of Morocco.[1] The Marinid dynasty overtook the Almohads controlling Morocco in 1244.[2] They controlled most of the Maghreb from the mid-14th century to the 15th century and supported the Kingdom of Granada in Al-Andalus in the 13th and 14th centuries. The last Marinid fortress in the Iberian Peninsula fell to Castile in 1344. They were replaced in turn by the Wattasids in 1465.

Contents

History

The Marinids were a nomadic Zenata Berber tribe from the area between Tlemcen and Tahert.[3] They advanced through the Moulouya basin east of Morocco. As early as 1145, the Marinids engaged in several battles with the Almohads, the ruling dynasty at the time, who regularly defeated them until 1169. In that year, the Marinids began a dedicated pursuit to take Morocco from the Almohads. Following their expulsion from the south, the Marinids moved northwards under the command of Abu Yahya ibn Abd al-Haqq and took Fes in 1244, making it their capital. This date marks the beginning of the Marinid dynasty.

The Marinid leadership installed in Fes declared war on the Almohads, fighting with the aid of Christian mercenaries. Abu Yusuf Yaqub (1259–1286) captured Marrakech in 1269 and took control of most of the Maghreb towards the end of 1268, including what is now Morocco, Algeria and part of Tunisia. After the Nasrids ceded Algeciras to the Marinids, Abu Yusuf went to Al-Andalus to support the ongoing struggle against the Kingdom of Castile.

The Marinid dynasty then tried to extend its control to include the commercial traffic of the Strait of Gibraltar. To this end, they declared jihad on the Christians and successively occupied the cities of Rota, Algiers and Gibraltar, surrounding Tarifa for the first time in 1294.

Internal power struggles among the Marinids followed, but they did not prevent Abu Said Uthman II (1310–1331) from undertaking substantial construction work in Fez. Several madrassas for the education of public servants were founded as part of a drive to centralize public administration and to reduce the influence of the unreliable marabuts in his realm.

The Marinids also strongly influenced the policy of the Emirate of Granada, from which they enlarged their army in 1275. In the 13th century, the Kingdom of Castile made several incursions into Morocco. In 1260, Castilian forces raided Salé and, in 1267, initiated a full-scale invasion of Morocco, but the Marinids repelled them.

Under Abu al-Hasan (1331–1348) another attempt was made to reunite the Maghreb. In 1337 the empire of the Abdalwadids in (what is now) Algeria was conquered, followed in 1347 by the defeat of the Hafsidempire in Ifriqiya. However in 1340 the Marinids suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of a Portuguese-Castilian coalition in the Battle of Río Salado, and finally had to withdraw from Andalusia. Abu l-Hasan was deposed by his son Abu Inan Faris (1348–1358), who tried to reconquer Algeria and Tunisia. Despite several successes, the dynasty began to decline after the murder of Abu Inan Faris, who was strangled by his own vizir in 1358.

Unruly Arab Bedouin tribes increasingly spread anarchy in Morocco, which accelerated the decline of the empire. The Marinids reduced their funding of the marabuts in the wake of a financial crisis in the 15th century, and the marabouts' political support for the Marnids waned. The empire fractured into multiple small kingdoms and city-states.

Marinid rulers after 1358 came under the control of the Wattasids, who as vizirs exercised the real power in the empire. They rotated Marinid sultans, who were often still children, in quick succession to ensure a strong viziership. The Wattasids were equally unable to consolidate the empire, so that in 1415 Portugal was able to occupy the town of Ceuta and by 1513 had gained control over all important harbours on the Atlantic coast of Morocco. After Abdalhaqq II (1421–1465) tried in vain to break the power of the Wattasids, he finally toppled the Marinid dynasty.

Chronology of events

Marinid rulers

Marinid vizirs

Wattasid dynasty

See also

External links

Line notes

  1. ^ http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/365388/Marinid-dynasty
  2. ^ (French)"Les Merinides" on Universalis
  3. ^ "Nuzhat al-Mushtaq" by Muhammad al-Idrisi (12th century)
  4. ^ E.J. Brill's first encyclopaedia of Islam, M. Th Houtsma
  5. ^ Battle of Rio Salado

Bibliography

Preceded by
Almohad Dynasty
Marinid Dynasty
1244–1465
Succeeded by
Wattasid Dynasty