Chronological information
about Moroccan dynasties
 

683-732 Dissemination of Islam in Morocco under Okba Ibn Nafi and Andalusia under Tarik Ibn Ziad

788 Emergence of the Idrissid Dynasty.

by the Arrival of Moulay Idriss I in Morocco and the
Establishment of the first Islamic State

 

808 Establishment of the city of Fez

Idriss Ist Ben Abdallah al-Kamil

788-791

Governening of Rachid

791-804

Governening of Abou Khalid Yazid

802-803

Idriss II Ben Idriss Ist

804-828

Mohammed ben Idriss II

828-836

Ali I st ben Mohammed

836-848

Yahia I st ben Mohammed

849-863

Yahia II ben Yahia

863-866

Ali II ben Omar

866-?

Yahia III ben Al Kassim

?-905

Yahia VI ben Idriss Ben Omar, Governor Fatimide and Moussa ben Abi l'Afiya

905-920

Al-Hassan Al-Hajjam ben Mohamed ben Al-Kasim

925-927

Al-Kassim Ganoune ben Mohammed ben Al-Kassim

937-948

Abou l'Aich Ahmed ben Al-Kassim Ganoune

948-954

Al-Hassan ben Al-Kassim Ganoune

954-974

1055- 1147 Reign of the Almoravides Dynasty,

originating from the Sahara.

Yahia ben Omar

1055-1057

Abou Bakr Ben Omar

1087-1088

Youssef Ben Tachfine

1062-1107

Ali Ben Youssef Ben Tachfine

1107-1144

Tachfine Ben Ali

1144-1145

Ibrahim Ben Tachfine

1145

Ishac Ben Ali

1145-1147

1070 Establishment of the City of Marrakech

Reign of the Almohads Dynasty,
originating from the Masmouda tribe (Atlas).

Abdel Moumen Ben Ali

1133-1163

Abou Yacoub Youssef

1163-1184

Abou Youssef Yacoub, became Al Mansour After the victory of Alarcos on the Castillans in 1195

1184-1199

Mohammed An-Nasser

1199-1213

Al Mostancir

1213-1224

Al Adil

1224-1227

Yahia

1227-1229

Al-Mamoun

1229-1232

Abou Mohammed Abdel Wahid Ar-Rachid

1232-1242

Ali As-Said (brother of 'Ar-Rachid) (Fèz is Mérinide)

1242-1248

Omar Al Mourtada

1248-1266

Abou Debbous (Marrakech is Mérinide)

1266-1269

 1258 - 1465 Reign of the Merinides Dynasty,

originating from the Sahara.

 

Abou yahya

1244-1258

Youssef

125-1286

Yacoub

1286-1307

Abou Rabia

1307-1308

Uthman

1308-1331

Abou Al hassan

1331-1351

Abou Inan

1351-1358

Sons and grandsons of Abou Inan

1358-1396

AbdAllah

1396-1398

The Wattasides

1399-1554

 

1520 - 1660 Reign of the Saadian Dynasty,
originating from Sakiet El Hamra (Sahara) and the Region of Draa.

 

Mohammed al-Cheikh Al Mahdi

1554-1557

Moulay Abdellah Al-Ghalib

1557-1574

Mohammed Al-Moutawakil

1574-1576

Abdel-Malik (ou Moulay Moulouk)

1576-1578

Ahmed Al Mansour Ad-Dahbi

1578-1603

Abou Fares Abdellah

1603-1608

Mohammed Al-Mamoune

1608-1613

Moulay Zaydane

1613-1618

Abdallah Al-Mamoune

1618-1623

Abdel Malik I

1623-1626

Abdel Malik II Ben Zaydane

1627-1631

Walid Ben Zaydane

1631-1636

Mohammed Ac-Cheikh (Al Asghar)

1636-1654

Ahmed al Abbas

1655-1660

 

1578 The Oued Al Makhazine Battle (or the Battle of The three Kings).

 

1660 - 1664 Advent of the Alaouite Cherifian Dynasty

Moulay Mohammed II

1640-1664

Moulay Rachid

1664-1672

Moulay Ismail

1672-1727

Moulay Abdellah

1728-1757

Sidi Mohammed III Ben Abdellah

1757-1790

Moulay Yazid

1790-1792

Moulay Slimane

1792-1822

Moulay Abderrahmane

1822-1859

Sidi Mohammed VI

1859-1873

Moulay Hassan

1873-1894

Moulay Abdelaziz

1894-1908

Moulay Hafid

1908-1912

Moulay Youssef

1912-1927

Sidi Mohammed V

1927-1961

Moulay Hassan II

1961-1999

Sidi Mohammed VI

1999

History of Morocco
before the arrival of Islam
 
 
 

Since the beginning of history there have been Berbers in North Africa end they were already well established when the Phoenicians made their first incursions in 1200 BC. Their origins are uncertain but thought to be Euro-Asiatic, The generic name Berbers, was imposed on them by the Arabs meaning those who were not Arabs.

Sanhaja, Masmoda, and Zenata are the three tribes constituting the Berbers .

The Sanhaja, from which sprang the Almoravide dynasty (the founders of Marrakesh) were nomads who in the 11C conquered the desert and much of the region to the south of it for Islam; the Masmouda were quiet farming people who lived in the north and west and in the High and Anti Atlas mountains and it was they who gave rise (from out Tin Mal , S of Marrakesh to the Almohade Dynasty which displaced the Almoravides; the Zenata a sub-group of which the - Beni Marin- swept in from the empty region between the Tafilalet and Algeria to become the great Merinide dynasty, were tough, horse-riding nomads of the cold high plateaux of the interior.

Joined to the Arabs only by Islam, the Berhers have always held themselves proudly separate in all other matters, especially in the rural and mountain areas. There is no standard form of Berber language since each tribal group has always used its own version, and there is no recognized Berber script or literature. Their strongest form of self-expression is music and dancing, which is rhythmic but with little harmony, compelling, loud and often quite intoxicating.

The Phoenicians and Carthaginians:

The first invaders are believed to have been the Phoenicians, coming from the land known then as Caanan in the Eastern Mediterranean in the 12C BC. Gradually they established trading posts along the north coast of Africa and traces at their occupation have been found at Lixus (Liks), which was probably the earliest, Tangier (Tangis)Mellilia (Russadir) Chellah part of Rahat and Tamuda (near Tetouan). These traces are usually in the form of fish-salting factories and are often heavily overlaid by Roman remains. The Phoenicians were essentially a maritime people, not interested in conquering or colonizing, and paying scant attention to he primitive berber tribes and poor agricultural land of the interior; therefore, their colonies were little more than enclaves along the coast, separated by great open spaces of wasteland which they did not need. Their main center of influence was Carthage (Tunisia). When Carthage became an independent state, the more civilized Carthaginians arrived and turned the north coast settlements into prosperous towns:they are known to have developed the fish salting and preserving into quite a major industry and their anchovy paste, called "garum" was widely exported. They also grew wheat and probably introduced the grape.

 

The Carthaginians exercised a considerable cultural influence on the Berbers even long after the Sack of Carthage in 146 BC; indeed, it probably increased at that time as hundreds of Carthagians fled westwards and took refuge from the Romans in the friendly enclaves along the coast .

The Romans:

After they had taken Carthage, the Romans moved westwards into the Berber kingdoms of Mauritania and Numidia(Algeria now) which became part of the Roman Empire. In 13 BC the Emperor Octavius granted the kingdom of Mauritania to the young Berber prince, Juba, son of Juba I of Numidia who had committed suicide 13 years earlier after the defeat by the Romans at the battle of Thapsus. In 25 8(2 they added the whole of Numidia to his realm. Educated in Rome and married to the daughter of Mark Antony and Cleopatra, known as Cleopatra -Stlene, hts pedigree was unpeccabte dnd he ruled wisely, probably living in Volubilis. This had already become a h3erher town of sonic statiding betore the Rornans arrived, due in part to the natural fertility of the region surrounding it and in part to the te~ching of the Carthaginians enabling the Berbers to get the best out ol the land.

The next 400 years formed Morocco ‘s Dark Age and very little is known about this period. The Vandals and Goths who were sweeping through Spain may have touched the northern tip of Morocco on their way eastwards to Carthage but there are no traces that they have stayed. The Berbers in the mountains and the desert continued life much as before. The Romnanised, part-Christian, Berber Mauritanians of the cities of Volubilis, Sala Colonia,(Chella) Tingis and others held on to their mixed cultural heritage and maintained a degree of civilization, as evidenced by one or two Latin inscriptions, found in several places, which date from as late as the mid 7C. But the weak and divided nature of the country was to prove no match at all for the next wave of invaders.

 

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