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Morocco
/ History / During the 12th Century
The native people of Morocco are the Berbers, an ancient race
who, throughout history, have seen their country invaded by a
succession of foreign powers.
In the 12th
century BC the first of these foreign invaders were the Phoenicians,
who established trading posts at several points along the North
African coast. The Carthaginians later took over these Phoenician
colonies and expanded them as part of the mighty Carthaginian
Empire.
When the
city of Carthage fell to Rome in the second century BC, the African
Mediterranean coast was under Roman dominance for almost six hundred
years.
When the
Roman Empire in turn fell into decline, the area was invaded first
by the Vandals in AD429 and later by Byzantium in AD533. An Arab
invasion of Morocco in AD682 marked the end of Byzantine dominance,
and the first Arab rulers, the Idrisid dynasty, ruled for 150
years. Christian and pagan inhabitants of the land converted to
Islam during this period.
Arab and
Berber dynasties succeeded the Idrisids; notably the Almoravids
(1062-1147) and the Almohads (1147-1258). The Almohad Empire declined
after the defeat of the Moroccans by the Spanish at the Battle
of Las Navas de Tolosa in 1212.
By 1250 its
power had completely collapsed and the country was plunged into
bitter civil war between Arab and Berber factions, each of whom
struggled for brief periods of supremacy.
The reign
of Ahmed I al-Man-sur in the first Sharifian dynasty stabilised
and unified the country between 1579 and 1603. Moors and Jews
expelled from Spain settled in Morocco during this time and the
country flourished and prospered. It became a centre for the arts
and this period was known as Morocco's golden age.
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