Almohads (c. 1121–1269)
The Almohad Caliphate (; or or from ) was a
North African
Berber Muslim empire founded in present day Morocco at the 12th century. At its height, it controlled much of the
Iberian Peninsula (
Al Andalus) and
North Africa (the
Maghreb). The
Almohad doctrine was founded by
Ibn Tumart among the Berber
Masmuda tribes, a
Berber tribal confederation of the
Atlas Mountains of southern Morocco. At the time,
Morocco, western
Algeria and Spain (
al-Andalus), were under the rule of the
Almoravids, a
Sanhaja Berber dynasty. Around 1120, Ibn Tumart first established a Berber state in
Tinmel in the
Atlas Mountains. He soon developed his own system, combining the doctrines of various masters. Ibn Tumart's main principle was a strict unitarianism (
tawhid), which denied the independent existence of the
attributes of God as being incompatible with His unity, and therefore a polytheistic idea. Ibn Tumart represented a revolt against what he perceived as
anthropomorphism in Muslim orthodoxy. His followers would become known as the
al-Muwaḥḥidūn ("Almohads"), meaning those who affirm the unity of God. Around 1124, Ibn Tumart erected the
ribat of
Tinmel, in the valley of the Nfis in the High Atlas, an impregnable fortified complex, which would serve both as the spiritual center and military headquarters of the Almohad movement. For the first eight years, the Almohad rebellion was limited to a guerilla war along the peaks and ravines of the High Atlas. In early 1130, the Almohads finally descended from the mountains for their first sizeable attack in the lowlands. It was a disaster. The Almohads swept aside an Almoravid column that had come out to meet them before
Aghmat, and then chased their remnant all the way to
Marrakesh. They laid siege to Marrakesh for forty days until, in April (or May) 1130, the Almoravids sallied from the city and crushed the Almohads in the bloody
Battle of al-Buhayra (named after a large garden east of the city). The Almohads were thoroughly routed, with huge losses. Half their leadership was killed in action, and the survivors only just managed to scramble back to the mountains.Ibn Tumart died shortly after, in August 1130. That the Almohad movement did not immediately collapse after such a devastating defeat and the death of their charismatic Mahdi, is likely due to the skills of his successor, Abd al-Mu'min. Ibn Tumart's death was kept a secret for three years, a period which Almohad chroniclers described as a
ghayba or "occultation". This period likely gave Abd al-Mu'min time to secure his position as successor to the political leadership of the movement. and thus an alien among the Masmuda of southern Morocco, Abd al-Mu'min nonetheless saw off his principal rivals and hammered wavering tribes back to the fold. Three years after Ibn Tumart's death he was officially proclaimed "Caliph".
Conquests Abd al-Mu'min then came forward as the lieutenant of the Mahdi Ibn Tumart. Between 1130 and his death in 1163, Abd al-Mu'min not only rooted out the Murabits (
Almoravids), but extended his power over all northern Africa as far as
Egypt, becoming amir of
Marrakesh in 1149.
Al-Andalus followed the fate of Africa. Between 1146 and 1173, the Almohads gradually wrested control from the Murabits over the Moorish principalities in Iberia. The Almohads transferred the capital of Muslim Iberia from
Córdoba to
Seville. They founded a great mosque there; its tower, the
Giralda, was erected in 1184 to mark the accession of Ya'qub I. The Almohads also built a palace there called Al-Muwarak on the site of the modern day
Alcázar of Seville. . The Almohad princes had a longer and more distinguished career than the Murabits. The successors of Abd al-Mumin,
Abu Yaqub Yusuf (Yusuf I, ruled 1163–1184) and
Abu Yusuf Yaqub al-Mansur (Yaʻqūb I, ruled 1184–1199), were both able men. Initially their government drove many Jewish and Christian subjects to take refuge in the growing Christian states of Portugal, Castile, and
Aragon. Ultimately they became less fanatical than the Murabits, and Ya'qub al-Mansur was a highly accomplished man who wrote a good
Arabic style and protected the philosopher
Averroes. His title of "
al-Manṣūr" ("the Victorious") was earned by his victory over
Alfonso VIII of Castile in the
Battle of Alarcos (1195). From the time of
Yusuf II, however, the Almohads governed their co-religionists in Iberia and central North Africa through lieutenants, their dominions outside
Morocco being treated as provinces. When Almohad emirs crossed the Straits it was to lead a
jihad against the Christians and then return to Morocco.
Holding years In 1212, the Almohad Caliph
Muhammad 'al-Nasir' (1199–1214), the successor of al-Mansur, after an initially successful advance north, was defeated by an alliance of the three Christian kings of
Castile,
Aragón and
Navarre at the
Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa in the
Sierra Morena. The battle broke the Almohad advance, but the Christian powers remained too disorganized to profit from it immediately. Before his death in 1213, al-Nasir appointed his young ten-year-old son as the next
caliph Yusuf II "al-Mustansir". The Almohads passed through a period of effective
regency for the young caliph, with power exercised by an oligarchy of elder family members, palace bureaucrats and leading nobles. The Almohad ministers were careful to negotiate a series of truces with the Christian kingdoms, which remained more-or-less in place for next fifteen years (the
loss of Alcácer do Sal to the
Kingdom of Portugal in 1217 was an exception). In early 1224, the youthful caliph died in an accident, without any heirs. The palace bureaucrats in
Marrakesh, led by the
wazir Uthman ibn Jam'i, quickly engineered the election of his elderly grand-uncle,
Abd al-Wahid I 'al-Makhlu', as the new Almohad caliph. But the rapid appointment upset other branches of the family, notably the brothers of the late al-Nasir, who governed in
al-Andalus. The challenge was immediately raised by one of them, then governor in
Murcia, who declared himself Caliph
Abdallah al-Adil. With the help of his brothers, he quickly seized control of al-Andalus. His chief advisor, the shadowy Abu Zayd ibn Yujjan, tapped into his contacts in Marrakesh, and secured the
deposition and assassination of Abd al-Wahid I, and the expulsion of the al-Jami'i
clan. This
coup has been characterized as the pebble that finally broke al-Andalus. It was the first internal coup among the Almohads. The Almohad clan, despite occasional disagreements, had always remained tightly knit and loyally behind dynastic precedence. Caliph al-Adil's murderous breach of dynastic and constitutional propriety marred his acceptability to other Almohad
sheikhs. One of the recusants was his cousin, Abd Allah al-Bayyasi ("the
Baezan"), the Almohad governor of
Jaén, who took a handful of followers and decamped for the hills around Baeza. He set up a rebel camp and forged an alliance with the hitherto quiet
Ferdinand III of Castile. Sensing his greater priority was Marrakesh, where recusant Almohad
sheikhs had rallied behind Yahya, another son of al-Nasir, al-Adil paid little attention to this little band of misfits.
Reconquista In 1225, Abd Allah al-Bayyasi's band of rebels, accompanied by a large Castilian army, descended from the hills, besieging cities such as
Jaén and
Andújar. They
raided throughout the regions of
Jaén,
Cordova and
Vega de Granada and, before the end of the year, al-Bayyasi had established himself in the city of
Cordova. Sensing a power vacuum, both
Alfonso IX of León and
Sancho II of Portugal opportunistically ordered raids into Andalusian territory that same year. With Almohad arms, men and cash dispatched to Morocco to help Caliph al-Adil impose himself in Marrakesh, there was little means to stop the sudden onslaught. In late 1225, with surprising ease, the Portuguese raiders reached the environs of
Seville. Knowing they were outnumbered, the Almohad governors of the city refused to confront the Portuguese raiders, prompting the disgusted population of Seville to take matters into their own hands, raise a militia, and go out in the field by themselves. The result was a veritable massacre – the Portuguese men-at-arms easily mowed down the throng of poorly armed townsfolk. Thousands, perhaps as much as 20,000, were said to have been slain before the walls of Seville. A similar disaster befell a similar popular levy by
Murcians at
Aspe that same year. But Christian raiders had been stopped at
Cáceres and
Requena. Trust in the Almohad leadership was severely shaken by these events – the disasters were promptly blamed on the distractions of Caliph al-Adil and the incompetence and cowardice of his lieutenants, the successes credited to non-Almohad local leaders who rallied defenses. But al-Adil's fortunes were briefly buoyed. In payment for Castilian assistance, al-Bayyasi had given Ferdinand III three strategic frontier fortresses:
Baños de la Encina, Salvatierra (the old
Order of Calatrava fortress near
Ciudad Real) and
Capilla. But Capilla refused to hand them over, forcing the Castilians to lay a long and difficult siege. The brave defiance of little Capilla, and the spectacle of al-Bayyasi's shipping provisions to the Castilian besiegers, shocked Andalusians and shifted sentiment back towards the Almohad caliph. A popular uprising broke out in Cordova – al-Bayyasi was killed and his head dispatched as a trophy to Marrakesh. But Caliph al-Adil did not rejoice in this victory for long – he was assassinated in Marrakesh in October 1227, by the partisans of Yahya, who was promptly acclaimed as the new Almohad caliph
Yahya "al-Mu'tasim". The Andalusian branch of the Almohads refused to accept this turn of events. Al-Adil's brother, then in Seville, proclaimed himself the new Almohad caliph
Abd al-Ala Idris I 'al-Ma'mun'. He promptly purchased a
truce from Ferdinand III in return for 300,000
maravedis, allowing him to organize and dispatch the greater part of the Almohad army in Spain across the
straits in 1228 to confront Yahya. That same year, Portuguese and
Leonese renewed their raids deep into Muslim territory, basically unchecked. Feeling the Almohads had failed to protect them, popular uprisings took place throughout al-Andalus. City after city deposed their hapless Almohad governors and installed local strongmen in their place. A Murcian strongman,
Muhammad ibn Yusuf ibn Hud al-Judhami, who claimed descendance from the
Banu Hud dynasty that had once ruled the old
taifa of Saragossa, emerged as the central figure of these rebellions, systematically dislodging Almohad garrisons through central Spain. In October 1228, with Spain practically all lost, al-Ma'mun abandoned Seville, taking what little remained of the Almohad army with him to Morocco. Ibn Hud immediately dispatched emissaries to distant
Baghdad to offer recognition to the
Abbasid Caliph, albeit taking up for himself a quasi-caliphal title, 'al-Mutawwakil'. The departure of al-Ma'mun in 1228 marked the end of the Almohad era in Spain. Ibn Hud and the other local Andalusian strongmen were unable to stem the rising flood of Christian attacks, launched almost yearly by
Sancho II of Portugal,
Alfonso IX of León,
Ferdinand III of Castile and
James I of Aragon. The next twenty years saw a massive advance in the Christian
reconquista – the old great Andalusian
citadels fell in a grand sweep:
Mérida and
Badajoz in 1230 (to Leon),
Mallorca in 1230 (to Aragon),
Beja in 1234 (to Portugal),
Córdoba in 1236 (to Castile),
Valencia in 1238 (to Aragon),
Niebla-
Huelva in 1238 (to Leon),
Silves in 1242 (to Portugal),
Murcia in 1243 (to Castile),
Jaén in 1246 (to Castile),
Alicante in 1248 (to Castile), culminating in the fall of the greatest of Andalusian cities, the ex-Almohad capital of
Seville, into Christian hands in 1248. Ferdinand III of Castile entered Seville as a conqueror on 22 December 1248. The Andalusians were helpless before this onslaught. Ibn Hudd had attempted to check the Leonese advance early on, but most of his Andalusian army was destroyed at the
battle of Alange in 1230. Ibn Hud scrambled to move remaining arms and men to save threatened or besieged Andalusian citadels, but with so many attacks at once, it was a hopeless endeavor. After Ibn Hud's death in 1238, some of the Andalusian cities, in a last-ditch effort to save themselves, offered themselves once again to the Almohads, but to no avail. The Almohads would not return. With the departure of the Almohads, the
Nasrid dynasty ("
Banū Naṣr", ) rose to power in
Granada. After the great Christian advance of 1228–1248, the
Emirate of Granada was practically all that remained of old
al-Andalus. Some of the captured citadels (e.g. Murcia, Jaen, Niebla) were reorganized as tributary vassals for a few more years, but most were annexed by the 1260s. Granada alone would remain independent for an additional 250 years, flourishing as the new center of al-Andalus.
Collapse in the Maghreb In their African holdings, the Almohads encouraged the establishment of Christians even in
Fez, and after the
Battle of Las Navas de Tolosa they occasionally entered into alliances with the kings of
Castile. They were successful in expelling the garrisons placed in some of the coast towns by the
Norman kings of
Sicily. The history of their decline differs from that of the
Almoravids, whom they had displaced. They were not assailed by a great religious movement, but lost territories, piecemeal, by the revolt of tribes and districts. Their most effective enemies were the Banu Marin (
Marinids) who founded the next dynasty. The last representative of the line,
Idris II, 'al-Wathiq', was reduced to the possession of
Marrakesh, where he was murdered by a slave in 1269. ==Marinids dynasty (c. 1244–1465)==