Early 16th-century: Founding The Mokrani rulers of the Kingdom of Beni Abbas originated from Little Kabylia. In the second half of the 15th century the emir or prince Abderrahmane left Djebel Ayad and eventually settled in the Kalaa of Ait Abbes. and the kingdom of Ait Abbas (Labes) according to a Spanish map of the sixteenth century, preserved in the archives of
Simancas In 1510, as part of the
Reconquista, the
Spanish Empire seized
Bejaïa, which was in the hands of dissident
Hafsid emirs, and organized raids in the
hinterland from this position. The
Berbers of the region sought protection in the interior and took as their new capital the
Kalâa of the Beni Abbas, in the heart of the
Bibans mountains. This city was an ancient fortified place of the
Hammadid era and a staging point on the '''', the commercial route going from
Hautes Plaines (High Plains) to Béjaïa. Abderahmane chose the site for security reasons. His son Ahmed became famous for his religious status with the Kabylian and Arab tribes in the region who settled in the Kalâa, fleeing the relative chaos in the country. Benefiting from growing support among the surrounding tribes, he proclaimed himself "Sultan of the Kalâa". He was buried in , a village in the vicinity of the
Kalâa. The reign of his grandson Abdelaziz El Abbes brought the name of the Kalâa to wider attention: at its peak, the city had 80,000 inhabitants. The Kalâa was equipped with weapons factories with the help of Christian renegades as well as some of the inhabitants of Bejaïa driven out by the Spanish occupation, including Andalusians and Muslims, as well as a Jewish community welcomed for its know-how.
Alliance with Algiers Following successive annexations of territory, the Kingdom of Ait Abbas under Abdelaziz extended to the south and the surrounding mountains. The
Spaniards, who had fallen back into
Bejaïa, offered him an alliance, and he temporarily ignored the establishment of the
Regency of Algiers led by the
Barbarossa brothers because his kingdom was not oriented towards the sea. The Barbarossa brothers, wishing to isolate the Spaniards, attacked Abdelaziz and met him around Bejaïa in 1516. Faced with the technical superiority of their firearms, Abdelaziz submitted to them and preferred to break the alliance with the Spaniards, rather than confront the
Turks immediately with inadequate resources. In 1542, the
Regency of Algiers made the lord of the Kalâa, his
khalifa (representative) in the
Medjana. Abdelaziz used his reign and periods of peace with the Regency to fortify the Kalâa and to extend his influence further to the south. His infantry became a regular corps of 10,000 men, and he bought two regular cavalry corps. He built two
borjs around the Kalâa, each with a
khalifa (representative), who was in charge of patrolling through his territory. This increasing power of the Sultan of the Kalâa worried the Turks of the Regency of Algiers, who in 1550 twice sent troops that Abdelaziz repulsed.
Hassan Pasha therefore concluded a treaty with him and obtained his aid in his expedition against
Tlemcen (1551), then occupied by Sherif
Saadi. According to the contemporary Spanish writer
Luis del Mármol Carvajal, Abdelaziz commanded an infantry corps of 6,000 men for the Tlemcen expedition. According to historian Hugh Roberts, the Kabyle contingent amounted to 2,000 men. in the Mausoleum of Sultan Ahmed The arrival of
Salah Raïs at the head of the
Regency of Algiers confirmed the alliance with Abdelaziz, and they jointly led the
Touggourt Expedition (1552). Abdelaziz sent 180
arquebusiers and 1,600 horsemen, in addition to the 3,000 arquebusiers of Salah Raïs. The Berbers of Abdelaziz dragged cannons, hoping to learn how to maneuver them and know how to hoist them up to the fortress of the Kalâa.
War with Algiers Two hypotheses explain the eventual rupture with Algiers, according to Spanish historiography. The first is that Salah Raïs tried to arrest Abdelaziz during his time in Algiers, suspecting him of wanting to raise the country against the
Regency of Algiers. The second is that Abdelaziz was suspicious of the Turks and their ability to attack distant cities like
Touggourt. He feared that their ambition to control the country would end up making his kingdom a target and considered it a political mistake to have favored them through the two expeditions. The narratives of the Aït Abbas report that the rupture was linked to an attempt by the Regency of Algiers to have Abdelaziz assassinated by
Zouaouas auxiliaries. They refused to murder a chief of the same region and warned him instead. Allied with the Zouaoua, the troop of Sultan Abdelaziz defeated the
janissaries, who had to retreat to Algiers. Salah Raïs, for fear the reputation of Sultan Abdelaziz would increase, launched an expedition in late 1552 and reached the Boni Mountains near the Kalâa by winter. Abdelaziz's brother, Sidi Fadel, died in battle, but the snow prevented the Turks from advancing further and exploiting their victory. In 1553, the son of Salah Rais, Mohamed-bey led an offensive on the
Kalâa of the Beni Abbes which resulted in defeat and many losses among the Turks. Their reputation was tarnished by this battle because they avoided a disaster only with to the support of the Arab tribes. Abdelaziz also repelled an expedition commanded by
Sinan Reis and Ramdan Pasha near Wadi el Hammam, towards
M'sila. The capture of Béjaïa by Salah Rais in 1555 confirmed Abdelaziz's fears about the power of the
Regency of Algiers and he continued to strengthen his positions in the mountains. However, Salah Raïs died and the return of
Hassan Pasha allowed a return to peace for a year. Hassan Pasha delivered the town of M'sila and its defenses, including three pieces of artillery to Abdelaziz, while maintaining control over tax contributions. Abdelaziz was therefore in possession of the city of M'sila and raised an army of 6,000 men among the surrounding tribes in order to levy the tax normally intended for the Turks of the Regency. Hassan Pasha declared war on him in 1559, took M'sila without difficulty and fortified the bordj of
Medjana and the
Bordj Zemoura. These two forts and their garrisons were immediately destroyed by a counter-attack by Abdelaziz who also took the artillery pieces to improve the defense of the Kalâa. Hassan Pasha, married to the daughter of the
King of Kuku, formed an alliance with the latter to put an end to the sultan of Kalâa. He brought him to
battle in front of the Kalâa in 1559, without being able to take it and suffered many losses. However, his rival, Sultan Abdelaziz, died on the second day of the fighting and his brother Sultan , his chosen successor, drove back the Turkish and Kuku forces. This decisive victory of the Kalâa made Hasan abandon his ambitions for a time; he consoled himself by carrying the head of Abdelaziz to
Algiers as a trophy. Ahmed Amokrane then turned his attention to the territory of the
Ouled Naïl, which he took from
Bou Saâda to
Djelfa. The date of these expeditions is generally held to be around 1573. This period marks the high point of the kingdom in terms of its governance and the administration of its territories. Ahmed Amokrane was bold enough to send his own son to Algiers in 1580 to welcome the newly arrived Jaafar Pasha. By 1590, his influence was such that whole tribes paid tribute to him rather than to Algiers. went back to war with him and laid siege to the Kalâa for two months, but was unable to take it. Instead, he pillaged the surrounding countryside, razing its villages. Hostilities were eventually ended following mediation by a
marabout, which involved Ahmed Amokrane paying a tribute of 30,000
douros to secure Khizr Pasha's withdrawal and recognition of his independence. In 1598, Ahmed Amokrane laid siege to Algiers: with the help of the townspeople. He managed to force the gate at
Bab Azoun and break into the city, though he could not maintain his hold there. The siege lasted eleven days.
17th and 18th centuries In 1600, Ahmed Amokrane marched against the forces of , Pasha of Algiers, which were trying to enter
Kabylie. He defeated them and destroyed , built in 1595 at
Bouira, but he was killed in the fighting. He left as his legacy to his descendants the family name "Amokrane" (meaning "great" or "leader" in
kabyle) which was later Arabised as "Mokrani". His successor was Sidi Naceur Mokrani, who was very religious and surrounded himself with scholars and students of Islam, neglecting the affairs of his kingdom. This provoked the anger of his military commanders and of the merchants of Aït Abbas. Sidi Naceur was ambushed and assassinated in 1620. His children survived however, and his oldest son, Betka Mokrani, was taken in by the Hashemite tribe and raised among them. They helped him regain his princely rank by marrying him to the daughter of the chief of the
Ouled Madhi. Si Betka took part in the
battle of Guidjel on 20 September 1638), at which the tribes fought together with the armies of
Constantine against the Pasha of Algiers. This led to the Beys of Constantine becoming effectively independent of Ottoman rule from Algiers. Si Betka Mokrani simply never recognised the authority of Algiers, and managed to reconquer the lands of his grandfather. However, instead of styling himself "Sultan of the Kalâa" he assumed the title "Sheikh of the Medjana'". He defeated the Aït Abbas tribe several times, but refused to return to his ancestral seat at the Kalaa. He died in 1680 at his fortress of "Borj Medjana", leaving four sons – Bouzid, Abdallah, Aziz and Mohammed-el-Gandouz. The oldest son, Bouzid Mokrani, known as sultan Bouzid, ruled from 1680 to 1735 on the same terms as his father, entirely free from the authority of Algiers. After a period of dissent from hs brothers, he managed to maintain family stability. He twice fought against the Regency of Algiers, which wanted him to allow its armies to cross his territory in order to link Algiers with Constantine, particularly through the strategic pass known as "the iron gates" in the Biban mountains. Having defeated Algiers, he reinstituted the "ouadia", a system which required Algiers to pay him if it wished to move its troops across his land. This arrangement remained in place until the fall of the Regency of Algiers in 1830. , probably from the
Djidjelli Expedition (1664), found at the
Kalâa of Ait Abbas Despite this arrangement, the Mokranis refused to allow Algerian troops to cross their land when the French attacked the coast in 1664 during the
Djidjelli Expedition. Ali,
king of Kuku likewise refused passage to the armies of Algiers. Nevertheless, they did join a jihad with Algiers and Constantine to repel the
duke of Beaufort,
Louis XIV's commander. The Berbers sought to negotiate with the duke of Beaufort, who was dug in around Djidjelli, but he rejected their peace proposals. The expedition ended with victory for the Berbers and Turks and a major defeat for Louis XIV, whose armies abandoned their artillery. The Mokranis took the cannon away to the Kalaa as trophies, with their
fleur de lys decorations. Other French-type cannons were also found at the Kalaa later, and most probably these date from the time of
Louis XII, and were presented by
Francis I of France to Tunis as part of his
alliance with the Ottoman Empire. They were then captured by
Charles V when he
took Tunis in 1535, and transported to
Béjaïa, which was a Spanish possession until 1555. From there, it appears that they were passed on to the Aït Abbas when they were Spanish allies. A smaller cannon, also found in the Kalaa, indicates that there was a local foundry for small-bore guns, operated by a Spanish renegade.
Dissent and relations with the Beylik of Constantine After the death of Bouzid Mokrani in 1734, his son El hadj Bouzid Mokrani came to power after his older brother Aderrebou Mokrani renounced the succession. He was opposed by two other brothers, Bourenane and Abdesselam Mokrani and by his cousin Aziz ben Gandouz Mokrani, son of Mohammed-el-Gandouz. Aziz created a "soff" (faction) of dissidents who aligned themselves with the Turks, who were known as the Ouled Gandouz. The Turks in Algiers wanted revenge for a massacre in 1737, when an entire column of their troops and its commander had been slaughtered by the "Sheikh of the Medjana" in retaliation for a crime of honour. Allied with the Ouled Gandouz and exploiting divisions between Bourenane et Abdesselam Mokrani, they inflicted defeat on them in 1740. The Aït Abbas had to abandon the Medjana and take refuge in the mountains, with El hadj Bouzid sheltering at the
Kalaa. This was the second period of domination by Algiers after the first in 1559. The Turks rebuilt the fort of
Bordj Bou Arreridj, and left a garrison of 300
janissaries there. They also installed their ally Aziz ben Gandouz Mokrani as caïd, at the head of the
Ouled Madhi tribe. The feuding Mokrani brothers were eventually reconciled by a leader of the
Shadhili order so that they could form a united front against the Turks. They defeated them, demolished the fort at Bordj Bou Arreridj and sent the surviving janissaries back to Algiers with a letter affirming Mokrani independence. El hadj Bouzid Mokrani resumed authority over the Medjana and the Regency of Algiers recognised his independence, renouncing their claim that the tribes under Mokrani control needed to pay taxes to Algiers. Each year, the "Sheikh of the Medjana" was to receive a kaftan of honour from Algiers together with gifts recognising his independence. This diplomatic solution allied the Turks to find pretexts for intervening in Mokrani affairs or demanding support for a faction favourable to them. The territory of El Hadj Bouzid was a state-within-a-state of the Ottoman domains. Before his death in 1783, El hadj Bouzid Mokrani married his daughter Daïkra to the Bey of Constantine, Ahmed el Kolli. He was succeeded by his brother, Abdessalam Mokrani, while his eldest son became heir apparent. The Ouled Bourenane and Ouled Gandouz rebelled however, and this provided a pretext for the Bey to involve himself in a Mokrani affairs. Without intervening militarily, he succeeded in getting all the Mokrani clans to weaken each other, recognising as Sheikh whichever of them was able to send him tribute. Ben el Harche, a religious leader, defeated the army of Osman Bey, who died in battle. He based himself in the Djebel Megris, but died fighting in 1806 after two battles against the Mokranis, supported by a column of Turkish troops from the Bey. Ben Abdallah Mokrani had two lieutenants, Ahmed Mokrani and his cousin Abdesselem Mokrani. He entrusted the latter with collecting taxes for him in the
Bibans. This lucrative task was coveted by Ahmed Mokrani, making it the starting point of a rivalry which lasted until the arrival of the French. The two lieutenants joined the forces of Ahmed Bey which went to the assistance of the Dey of Algiers in 1830. == The fall of the Mokranis, 1830-1872 ==