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{{short description|Ethnic group}} {{short description|Arab tribe}}
{{Other uses|Bani Hasan (disambiguation)}}{{Infobox tribe|name=Beni Hassan<br>بني حسان|ethnicity=]|location=], ], ], ]|parent_tribe=]|language=]|religion=]|image=Hassaniya Arabic Map.svg|caption=Map of areas where ] is spoken}}
{{Other uses|Bani Hasan (disambiguation)}}
'''Beni Ḥassan''' ({{langx|ar|بني حسان}} "sons of Ḥassān") is a ] ] tribe which inhabits ], ], ] and ]. It is one of the four sub-tribes of the ] who ] in the 11th century from ] to the ] with the ] and ] Arab tribes.<ref>Ahmed Annaçéri's Handwritten "Talaàt Al Mouchtari" (died in 1717)</ref> In the 13th century, they took the ] territories in the southwest of the ].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Diccionario histórico-etnográfico de los pueblos de África {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/835983739 |access-date=2023-05-01 |website=www.worldcat.org |page=153, 350 |language=en}}</ref> In Morocco, they first settled, alongside their Maqil relatives, in the area between ] and the ]. The ] ] governor called upon them for help against a rebellion in the Sous, and they resettled in and around that region.<ref>{{Citation|last1=de Moraes Farias|first1=Paulo Fernando|title=Interview. Landscapes, Sources, and Intellectual Projects|date=2018-07-18|work=Landscapes, Sources and Intellectual Projects of the West African Past|pages=498–516|publisher=BRILL|isbn=978-90-04-38018-9|last2=Rossi|first2=Benedetta|doi=10.1163/9789004380189_026|s2cid=201566131}}</ref> They later moved to what is today Mauritania,<ref name="Muhammad Suwaed">{{cite book|author=Muhammad Suwaed|title=Historical Dictionary of the Bedouins |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P8yhCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA41|year=2015|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-1-4422-5451-0|pages=41}}</ref> and from the 16th century onwards, they managed to push back all black peoples southwards to the Senegal Valley river.<ref name="Pazzanita">{{cite book|author=Anthony G. Pazzanita|title=Historical Dictionary of Mauritania |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-KU_9MfXKKYC&pg=PA96|year=2008|publisher=Scarecrow Press |isbn=978-0-8108-6265-4|pages=6–97}}</ref> The Beni Hassan and other warrior Arab tribes dominated the ] ] tribes of the area after the ] of the 17th century. As a result, Arabs became the dominant ethnic group in Western Sahara and Mauretania. The Bani Hassan dialect of Arabic became used in the region and is still spoken, in the form of ]. The hierarchy established by the Beni Hassan tribe gave Mauritania much of its sociological character.<ref name="Pazzanita" /> That ideology has led to oppression, discrimination and even enslavement of other groups in Mauritania.<ref>*AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL, 7 November 2002, MAURITANIA, "A future free from slavery?" The formal abolition of slavery in 1981 has not led to real and effective abolition for various reasons, including a lack of legislation to ensure its implementation.
{{refimprove|date=September 2011}}
http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engAFR380032002!Open {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050107205340/http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engAFR380032002!Open |date=2005-01-07 }}</ref>
{{History of Morocco}}


== Origin ==
'''Beni Ḥassan''' (]: '''بني حسان''' "Children of Ḥassān") is a nomadic group of ]i origin, one of the four sub-tribes of the ] ] ]s who emigrated in the 11th century to the ] with the ] and ] tribes.<ref>Ahmed Annaçéri's Handwritten "Talaàt Al Mouchtari" (died in 1717)</ref>
Beni Hassan are one of the four sub-tribes of ] who emigrated to the ] in the 11th century. The exact origin of the Beni Maqil tribe is unknown,<ref name="pp78">{{cite book |last=Ibn Khaldun |first=Abderahman |title=تاريخ ابن خلدون: ديوان المبتدأ و الخبر في تاريخ العرب و البربر و من عاصرهم من ذوي الشأن الأكبر |publisher=دار الفكر |year=1377 |volume=6 |page=78 |authorlink=Ibn Khaldun}}</ref> although it has been established that they most likely originated in ] (]).<ref name=":02">{{Cite book |last1=Sabatier |first1=Diane Himpan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gjpvDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA110 |title=Nomads of Mauritania |last2=Himpan |first2=Brigitte |date=2019-03-31 |publisher=Vernon Press |isbn=978-1-62273-410-8 |pages=110–111 |language=en}}</ref> The Maqil claimed ] descent from ], while some Arabian genealogists categorized them as ].<ref name="pp78" /> ] said both of these versions are false and that Maqil is most likely an Arab nomadic group from Yemen.<ref name="pp78" />


The tradition of Beni Hassan states that they were descendants of ], son of ], ]'s son-in-law and a leading figure in ], although the Beni Hassan were ].<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Suwaed |first=Muhammad |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P8yhCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA41 |title=Historical Dictionary of the Bedouins |date=2015-10-30 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-1-4422-5451-0 |language=en}}</ref> The ] nation includes the Beni Hassan as part of its founding peoples and ] as part of its national identity.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2013-03-29 |title=afrol News - Historia de Sáhara Occidental |url=http://www.afrol.com/es/especiales/13397 |access-date=2023-05-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130329013939/http://www.afrol.com/es/especiales/13397 |archive-date=2013-03-29 }}</ref><ref name=":2">{{Cite web |last=Velázquez Elizarrarás |first=Juan Carlos |date=December 2014 |title=Orígenes de la identidad del pueblo saharaui |url=http://erevistas.saber.ula.ve/index.php/humaniadelsur/article/view/6245}}</ref><ref name=":3">{{Cite web |title=Encyclopedia of African history and culture {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/647901896 |access-date=2023-05-01 |website=www.worldcat.org |page=237 |language=en}}</ref> There is also a Beni Hassan Bedouin tribe in northern ].<ref name=":1" />
In Morocco, they first settled, alongside their ] relatives, in the area between ] and the ]. The ] ] governor called upon them for help against a rebellion in the Sous, and they resettled in and around that region.{{citation needed|date=February 2013}}
Beni Hassan's descendants and other tribes that arrived from ] in the 13th century are considered among the clean-blooded Arab tribes. For example, the ] who trace their origin back to Beni Hassan are the most populous tribe in ] and consider themselves the cleanest blooded Arabs in the ].<ref name="Besenyő János">{{cite book |author=Besenyő János |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DlGfAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA28 |title=Western Sahara |publisher=Besenyő János |year=2009 |isbn=978-963-88332-0-4 |pages=28}}</ref> ] nation includes Beni Hassan as part of its founding people]]


== History ==
The Beni Hassan and other warrior Arab tribes dominated the ] ] tribes of the area after the ] of the 17th century. As a result, Arabian culture and language came to dominate, and the Berber tribes underwent some ]. The Bani Hassan dialect of Arabic became used in the region and is still spoken, in the form of ].
]

=== Migration to the Maghreb ===
Various sources point to the ] tribe as the origin from which the Beni Hassan tribe was formed. The Ma'qils entered the Maghreb during the wave of emigration of the Arabian tribes in the 11th century, and since then, they were situated in ] together with other Bedouin Arab tribes that migrated from the ] such as the ] and the ], with whom they shared great skill as warriors and a destructive capacity for the nations they attacked.<ref name=":3" />

The Bedouin tribes were sent into the Maghreb by the ] to punish the ] for switching allegiance to the rival ]. They were compared to ] warriors centuries later.<ref name=":3" /> They adapted perfectly to the climatic desert conditions of the Maghreb, discovering the same way of life as in the Arabian Peninsula.<ref name=":03">{{Cite book |last1=Sabatier |first1=Diane Himpan |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gjpvDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA110 |title=Nomads of Mauritania |last2=Himpan |first2=Brigitte |date=2019-03-31 |publisher=Vernon Press |isbn=978-1-62273-410-8 |pages=110–111 |language=en}}</ref> The Banu Sulaym opposed the Maqil's arrival and fought them off.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Robinson |first=David |title=Les sociétés Musulmanes Africains |year=2010 |pages=140}}</ref> The Maqil later allied with the Banu Hilal and entered under their protection, which enabled them to wander in the Moroccan desert between the ] and ] oases.<ref name="pp772">{{cite book |last=Ibn Khaldun |first=Abderahman |title=تاريخ ابن خلدون: ديوان المبتدأ و الخبر في تاريخ العرب و البربر و من عاصرهم من ذوي الشأن الأكبر |publisher=دار الفكر |year=1377 |volume=6 |page=77 |authorlink=Ibn Khaldun}}</ref>

In the 13th century, they occupied southern ] and dominated the oases of ] and Gourara. For some authors, at this point, the Maqil group had already disintegrated into different populations in the Maghreb and had given rise to the Beni Hassan along with other related groups.<ref name=":0" />

=== Conquest of the Sanhaja ===
The Beni Hassan continued their expansion to the southwest and occupied ] lands in the 13th century after invading and defeating this ] confederation with the ], ], Djuddala, Gazula, Banu Warith, Lamta and ], in a group known as the Baranis in Western Sahara.<ref name=":0" />

The Sanhaja has long had to pay tribute to the nomadic Bedouin Hassani invaders.<ref name=":0" /> The invasion was quick and effective and happened around the year 1250, by the end of the ], and also dominated the valleys of the ], ], ], as well as the ] oasis region.<ref name=":4">{{Cite web |title=Historical dictionary of Morocco {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/954999015 |access-date=2023-05-01 |website=www.worldcat.org |page=232 |language=en}}</ref>

=== Migration to Morocco ===
] is a sub-tribe of Beni Hassan]]
By the mid-15th century, the Beni Hassan controlled a large part of the oases and Western Sahara. They crossed into the ] after taking advantage of the weakening ] around 1460 and then they dominated the ] region of ] by the beginning of the 16th century. At the same time, a part of the Beni Hassan made its way to ]. Other groups migrated north through ] to ] or up the ] and ] rivers, where some settled south of ].<ref name=":4" />

The Hassanis were represented in the Haouz of Marrakech by the ], who were brought north to respond to the military needs of the ] in the early 16th century. Two of the prominent Hassani communities during the late ] period were the Jaysh al-Udaya and the Shabbanat. The former were invited by the sultan of Morocco ] (1672–1727), while the latter controlled Marrakesh when sultan ] arrived to conquer it.<ref name=":4" />

=== Char Bouba War ===
Historical accounts report that these Hassani communities enriched themselves by collecting tolls from trade caravans and extorting farming and herding villages settled in the oases. They were accused of subjecting these territories to two centuries of looting and intermittent wars, but at the same time they point out that their families settled in the same towns that they attacked and subjugated.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Guía del mundo 2005-2006 : el mundo visto desde el sur {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/1232454288 |access-date=2023-05-01 |website=www.worldcat.org |page=388 |language=en}}</ref><ref name=":3" /> This took place during the ] from 1644 to 1674, which after decades of confrontations ended up completely Arabizing the native Berber population, destroying their language and culture and giving rise to the contemporary ].<ref name=":3" /><ref name=":5">{{Cite web |title=Encyclopedia of the peoples of Africa and the Middle East {{!}} WorldCat.org |url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/166382606 |access-date=2023-05-01 |website=www.worldcat.org |page=470 |language=en}}</ref><ref name=":2" />

The Char Bouba War was led by Sidi Ibrahim Al Aroussi, son of the famous Cheikh Sidi Ahmed Al Aroussi (died in 1593, near to ], in Western Sahara). Al Aroussi, with his two sons Shanan Al Aroussi and Sidi Tounsi Al Aroussi, led a powerful force of the Beni Hassan, the Aroussi Army, to conquer the Berber Imarat in modern day Mauritania and gain access to ] ("''the Land of the Blacks''", in Senegal and Mali).

In 1673, ] began invaded ] and the various ] states beyond the ]. By focusing on the states south of the Senegal, Nasr al-Din avoided an early confrontation with the powerful Beni Hassan. Nasr al-Din's focus on these states gained him control of the ] for the gum trade along the Senegal. French trade on the Senegal had seen large growth since the beginning of the century, and thus control of the entrepôts strengthened Nasr al-Din financially, whilst offsetting the Hassan control of the trade to the ports on the Saharan coast.<ref name="Cambridge 200">{{cite book |last1=Fage |first1=J.D. |url=https://archive.org/details/cambridgehistory04fage/page/200 |title=The Cambridge History of Africa, Volume 4 |last2=Gray |first2=Richard |last3=Oliver |first3=Roland Anthony |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2003 |isbn=0-521-20413-5 |page=}}</ref>

The Beni Hassan were united in their opposition to Nasr al-Din.<ref name="Cambridge 200" /> Most of the burden of fighting fell to the ], although the Emirate of Brakna sent Trarza reinforcements and helped immobilise ] in their own regions to prevent them from joining the forces of Nasr. Most Zawaya of the Southern Sahara sided with Nasr, although some remained neutral, and others supported the Beni Hassan, with a Zawaya scholar from ] issuing a fatwa against Nasr, stating that he was not a Caliph and had no right to impose the ]. This fatwa led to Hãdi, the Trarza chief, sending troops to seize animals that had already been sent as zakat.<ref name="Cambridge 200" />

In 1674, the Beni Hassan defeated the ] Berbers, and after achieving political and military hegemony in the area, they founded the ], ], ], ] and Hodh. The marabouts were Berbers who followed the Islamic doctrine of ] imposed in ] in the mid-17th century.<ref name=":0" /> The war ended in defeat for the Berber tribes, and they were from that point on forced to surrender their arms and submit to the warrior Arab tribes, to whom they paid the ] tributary tax. They would remain in roles as either exploited semi-sedentary ] and ] (] tribes), or, higher up on the social ladder, as religious (] or ]) tribes. This division between ] Arab warriors and Berber marabouts, plus the subordinate znaga, existed in Mauritania up until the ] colonization, when France imposed itself militarily on all tribes, and so broke the power of the Hassane. Still, the traditional roles of the tribes remain important socially in these areas.<ref>{{cite web |title=Mauritania - Moors |url=http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd/cstdy:@field(DOCID+mr0050) |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041030112857/http://lcweb2.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?frd%2Fcstdy%3A%40field%28DOCID+mr0050%29# |archive-date=2004-10-30 |access-date=2007-06-08 |work=Library of Congress Country Studies}}</ref>

=== Before French colonization ===
Following the pre-Islamic tradition of tribal warfare between clans in the Arabian Peninsula, the new Hassani emirates repeatedly went to war with each other.<ref name=":0" /> Throughout the 18th century, they harassed the ] in Senegal. Throughout this period, they spread their dialect and culture throughout the desert area of Western Sahara.<ref name=":0" /> In the 19th century, they led the consolidation of the process of cultural and linguistic ] of Mauritania. By the end of the 19th century, the ] Berber language was completely annihilated.<ref name=":5" />


== Beni Hassan sub-tribes == == Beni Hassan sub-tribes ==
*The descendants of Hasan ben Mokhtar ben Mohamed, son of the forefather of the Maqils *The descendants of Hassan ben Mokhtar ben Mohamed, son of the forefather of the Maqils
*The Shebanat: descendants of Shebana, brother of Hassan, and son of Mokhtar ben Mohamed *The Shebanat: descendants of Shebana, brother of Hassan, and son of Mokhtar ben Mohamed
*The Reguitat: descendants of Jallal, Salem and Uthman, brothers of Mokhtar and sons of Mohamed *The Reguitat: descendants of Jallal, Salem and Uthman, brothers of Mokhtar and sons of Mohamed


Several other Arab tribes joined the Maqils and became part of the Beni Hassan tribe. Several other Arab tribes joined the Maqils and became part of the Beni Hassan tribe.

== Notable people ==

* ]
* ]


==See also== ==See also==
Line 29: Line 69:
* *


{{Arab tribes of Morocco}} {{Arab tribes of Morocco}}{{Arab tribes in Algeria}}
{{Moroccan tribes}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Hassan}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Hassan}}
]
]
] ]
]
] ]
] ]

Latest revision as of 12:41, 1 January 2025

Arab tribe For other uses, see Bani Hasan (disambiguation).
Beni Hassan
بني حسان
Map of areas where Hassaniya Arabic is spoken
EthnicityArab
LocationWestern Sahara, Mauritania, Morocco, Algeria
Parent tribeBeni Maqil
LanguageHassaniya Arabic
ReligionSunni Islam

Beni Ḥassan (Arabic: بني حسان "sons of Ḥassān") is a Bedouin Arab tribe which inhabits Western Sahara, Mauritania, Morocco and Algeria. It is one of the four sub-tribes of the Banu Maqil who emigrated in the 11th century from South Arabia to the Maghreb with the Banu Hilal and Banu Sulaym Arab tribes. In the 13th century, they took the Sanhaja territories in the southwest of the Sahara. In Morocco, they first settled, alongside their Maqil relatives, in the area between Tadla and the Moulouya River. The Sous Almohad governor called upon them for help against a rebellion in the Sous, and they resettled in and around that region. They later moved to what is today Mauritania, and from the 16th century onwards, they managed to push back all black peoples southwards to the Senegal Valley river. The Beni Hassan and other warrior Arab tribes dominated the Sanhaja Berber tribes of the area after the Char Bouba war of the 17th century. As a result, Arabs became the dominant ethnic group in Western Sahara and Mauretania. The Bani Hassan dialect of Arabic became used in the region and is still spoken, in the form of Hassaniya Arabic. The hierarchy established by the Beni Hassan tribe gave Mauritania much of its sociological character. That ideology has led to oppression, discrimination and even enslavement of other groups in Mauritania.

Origin

Beni Hassan are one of the four sub-tribes of Beni Maqil who emigrated to the Maghreb in the 11th century. The exact origin of the Beni Maqil tribe is unknown, although it has been established that they most likely originated in South Arabia (Yemen). The Maqil claimed Hashemite descent from Ja'far ibn Abi Talib, while some Arabian genealogists categorized them as Hilalians. Ibn Khaldun said both of these versions are false and that Maqil is most likely an Arab nomadic group from Yemen.

The tradition of Beni Hassan states that they were descendants of Hasan ibn Ali, son of Ali ibn Abi Talib, Muhammad's son-in-law and a leading figure in Shia Islam, although the Beni Hassan were Sunni Muslims. The Sahrawi nation includes the Beni Hassan as part of its founding peoples and Hassaniya Arabic as part of its national identity. There is also a Beni Hassan Bedouin tribe in northern Jordan.

Beni Hassan's descendants and other tribes that arrived from Yemen in the 13th century are considered among the clean-blooded Arab tribes. For example, the Oulad Delim who trace their origin back to Beni Hassan are the most populous tribe in Western Sahara and consider themselves the cleanest blooded Arabs in the Sahel.

The Sahrawi nation includes Beni Hassan as part of its founding people

History

Saharan family in the 1970s

Migration to the Maghreb

Various sources point to the Maqil tribe as the origin from which the Beni Hassan tribe was formed. The Ma'qils entered the Maghreb during the wave of emigration of the Arabian tribes in the 11th century, and since then, they were situated in North Africa together with other Bedouin Arab tribes that migrated from the Arabian Peninsula such as the Banu Hilal and the Banu Sulaym, with whom they shared great skill as warriors and a destructive capacity for the nations they attacked.

The Bedouin tribes were sent into the Maghreb by the Fatimids to punish the Zirids for switching allegiance to the rival Abbasid Caliphate. They were compared to Mughal warriors centuries later. They adapted perfectly to the climatic desert conditions of the Maghreb, discovering the same way of life as in the Arabian Peninsula. The Banu Sulaym opposed the Maqil's arrival and fought them off. The Maqil later allied with the Banu Hilal and entered under their protection, which enabled them to wander in the Moroccan desert between the Moulouya River and Tafilalt oases.

In the 13th century, they occupied southern Algeria and dominated the oases of Tuat and Gourara. For some authors, at this point, the Maqil group had already disintegrated into different populations in the Maghreb and had given rise to the Beni Hassan along with other related groups.

Conquest of the Sanhaja

The Beni Hassan continued their expansion to the southwest and occupied Sanhaja lands in the 13th century after invading and defeating this Berber confederation with the Lamtuna, Masmuda, Djuddala, Gazula, Banu Warith, Lamta and Tuareg, in a group known as the Baranis in Western Sahara.

The Sanhaja has long had to pay tribute to the nomadic Bedouin Hassani invaders. The invasion was quick and effective and happened around the year 1250, by the end of the Almohad Caliphate, and also dominated the valleys of the Moulouya, Draa, Sous, as well as the Tafilalt oasis region.

Migration to Morocco

Oulad Delim is a sub-tribe of Beni Hassan

By the mid-15th century, the Beni Hassan controlled a large part of the oases and Western Sahara. They crossed into the Atlas after taking advantage of the weakening Marinid Sultanate around 1460 and then they dominated the Haouz region of Marrakesh by the beginning of the 16th century. At the same time, a part of the Beni Hassan made its way to Mauritania. Other groups migrated north through Tafilalt to Fez or up the Sebou and Bou Regreg rivers, where some settled south of Rabat.

The Hassanis were represented in the Haouz of Marrakech by the Rahamna, who were brought north to respond to the military needs of the Saadian Sultanate in the early 16th century. Two of the prominent Hassani communities during the late 'Alawi period were the Jaysh al-Udaya and the Shabbanat. The former were invited by the sultan of Morocco Ismail Ibn Sharif (1672–1727), while the latter controlled Marrakesh when sultan Al-Rashid arrived to conquer it.

Char Bouba War

Historical accounts report that these Hassani communities enriched themselves by collecting tolls from trade caravans and extorting farming and herding villages settled in the oases. They were accused of subjecting these territories to two centuries of looting and intermittent wars, but at the same time they point out that their families settled in the same towns that they attacked and subjugated. This took place during the Char Bouba War from 1644 to 1674, which after decades of confrontations ended up completely Arabizing the native Berber population, destroying their language and culture and giving rise to the contemporary Sahrawi people.

The Char Bouba War was led by Sidi Ibrahim Al Aroussi, son of the famous Cheikh Sidi Ahmed Al Aroussi (died in 1593, near to Smara, in Western Sahara). Al Aroussi, with his two sons Shanan Al Aroussi and Sidi Tounsi Al Aroussi, led a powerful force of the Beni Hassan, the Aroussi Army, to conquer the Berber Imarat in modern day Mauritania and gain access to Bilad as-Sudan ("the Land of the Blacks", in Senegal and Mali).

In 1673, Nasr al-Din began invaded Futa Tooro and the various Wolof states beyond the Senegal river. By focusing on the states south of the Senegal, Nasr al-Din avoided an early confrontation with the powerful Beni Hassan. Nasr al-Din's focus on these states gained him control of the entrepôts for the gum trade along the Senegal. French trade on the Senegal had seen large growth since the beginning of the century, and thus control of the entrepôts strengthened Nasr al-Din financially, whilst offsetting the Hassan control of the trade to the ports on the Saharan coast.

The Beni Hassan were united in their opposition to Nasr al-Din. Most of the burden of fighting fell to the Emirate of Trarza, although the Emirate of Brakna sent Trarza reinforcements and helped immobilise Zawaya in their own regions to prevent them from joining the forces of Nasr. Most Zawaya of the Southern Sahara sided with Nasr, although some remained neutral, and others supported the Beni Hassan, with a Zawaya scholar from Shinqit issuing a fatwa against Nasr, stating that he was not a Caliph and had no right to impose the zakat. This fatwa led to Hãdi, the Trarza chief, sending troops to seize animals that had already been sent as zakat.

In 1674, the Beni Hassan defeated the Marabout Berbers, and after achieving political and military hegemony in the area, they founded the emirates of Trarza, Brakna, Tagant, Adrar and Hodh. The marabouts were Berbers who followed the Islamic doctrine of Nasr al-Din imposed in Senegal in the mid-17th century. The war ended in defeat for the Berber tribes, and they were from that point on forced to surrender their arms and submit to the warrior Arab tribes, to whom they paid the horma tributary tax. They would remain in roles as either exploited semi-sedentary agriculturalists and fishermen (znaga tribes), or, higher up on the social ladder, as religious (marabout or zawiya) tribes. This division between Hassane Arab warriors and Berber marabouts, plus the subordinate znaga, existed in Mauritania up until the French colonization, when France imposed itself militarily on all tribes, and so broke the power of the Hassane. Still, the traditional roles of the tribes remain important socially in these areas.

Before French colonization

Following the pre-Islamic tradition of tribal warfare between clans in the Arabian Peninsula, the new Hassani emirates repeatedly went to war with each other. Throughout the 18th century, they harassed the Wolof in Senegal. Throughout this period, they spread their dialect and culture throughout the desert area of Western Sahara. In the 19th century, they led the consolidation of the process of cultural and linguistic Arabization of Mauritania. By the end of the 19th century, the Zenaga Berber language was completely annihilated.

Beni Hassan sub-tribes

  • The descendants of Hassan ben Mokhtar ben Mohamed, son of the forefather of the Maqils
  • The Shebanat: descendants of Shebana, brother of Hassan, and son of Mokhtar ben Mohamed
  • The Reguitat: descendants of Jallal, Salem and Uthman, brothers of Mokhtar and sons of Mohamed

Several other Arab tribes joined the Maqils and became part of the Beni Hassan tribe.

Notable people

See also

References

  1. Ahmed Annaçéri's Handwritten "Talaàt Al Mouchtari" (died in 1717)
  2. ^ "Diccionario histórico-etnográfico de los pueblos de África | WorldCat.org". www.worldcat.org. p. 153, 350. Retrieved 2023-05-01.
  3. de Moraes Farias, Paulo Fernando; Rossi, Benedetta (2018-07-18), "Interview. Landscapes, Sources, and Intellectual Projects", Landscapes, Sources and Intellectual Projects of the West African Past, BRILL, pp. 498–516, doi:10.1163/9789004380189_026, ISBN 978-90-04-38018-9, S2CID 201566131
  4. Muhammad Suwaed (2015). Historical Dictionary of the Bedouins. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 41. ISBN 978-1-4422-5451-0.
  5. ^ Anthony G. Pazzanita (2008). Historical Dictionary of Mauritania. Scarecrow Press. pp. 6–97. ISBN 978-0-8108-6265-4.
  6. *AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL, 7 November 2002, MAURITANIA, "A future free from slavery?" The formal abolition of slavery in 1981 has not led to real and effective abolition for various reasons, including a lack of legislation to ensure its implementation. http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/engAFR380032002!Open Archived 2005-01-07 at the Wayback Machine
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  8. Sabatier, Diane Himpan; Himpan, Brigitte (2019-03-31). Nomads of Mauritania. Vernon Press. pp. 110–111. ISBN 978-1-62273-410-8.
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  17. ^ "Historical dictionary of Morocco | WorldCat.org". www.worldcat.org. p. 232. Retrieved 2023-05-01.
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  21. "Mauritania - Moors". Library of Congress Country Studies. Archived from the original on 2004-10-30. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
Arab tribes in Morocco
Part of Arab tribes
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