women in
Tunisia in 1922
Ethnic groups The inhabitants of North Africa are roughly divided in a manner corresponding to the principal geographic regions of North Africa: the
Maghreb, the
Nile valley, and the
Sahel. The countries making up North Africa all have
Modern Standard Arabic as their official language. Additionally, Algeria and Morocco recognize
Berber as an official language alongside Arabic. French also serves as an administrative language in Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia. The most spoken dialects are
Maghrebi Arabic, a form of ancient Arabic dating back from the 8th century AD, and
Egyptian Arabic. The largest and most numerous ethnic group in North Africa are the
Arabs. In Algeria and Morocco,
Berbers make up a sizeable portion of the population. Arabs constitute 70% to 80% of the population of Algeria, 92% to 97% of Libya, 67% to 70% of Morocco and 98% of Tunisia's population. The Berbers comprise 20% of Libya, 35% of Morocco and 1% of Tunisia's population. The region is predominantly
Muslim with a
Jewish minority in
Morocco and
Tunisia, and significant Christian minority—the
Copts—in
Egypt,
Algeria, Morocco, Libya, and Tunisia. In 2001, the number of Christians in North Africa was estimated at 9 million, the majority of whom live in Egypt, with the remainder live in
Maghreb countries. The inhabitants of the Spanish
Canary Islands are of mixed Spanish and North African Berber ancestry, and the people of
Malta are of primarily Southern Italian/Sicilian, as well as, to a lesser extent, North African and Middle Eastern ancestry and speak a
derivative of Arabic. However, these areas are not generally considered part of North Africa, but rather Southern Europe, due to their proximity to mainland Europe and their European-based cultures and religion.
Haratins are considered the descendants of ancient inhabitants of the northern
Sahara; with admixture from Berbers, groups of Haratin families are scattered across North African, Saharan Arab and Berber tribes. Haratins account for 40-45% of
Mauritania's population, situated in the wider
north-western African region and are present in core North African countries which include
Morocco,
Algeria and
Tunisia.
Nubians are present in the
Upper Nile Valley, an estimated 3-5 million population in Egypt with notable communities in the
Aswan Governate.
Beja people have existed in Sudan and Egypt and long assimilated Arab populations. There are 2.2 million Beja living in Egypt alongside other
north-eastern African countries, chiefly the
Sudan and
Eritrea. In Egypt, Beja live in the south-eastern region and
Eastern Desert.
Historic movements The Maghreb or western North Africa on the whole is believed to have been inhabited by
Berbers and their ancestors since at least 10,000 B.C., while the eastern part of North Africa or the
Nile Valley has mainly been home to the
Egyptians and
Nubians. Ancient Egyptians record extensive contact in their Western desert with people that appear to have been Berber or proto-Berber. As the
Tassili n'Ajjer and other rock art findings in the Sahara have shown, the
Sahara also hosted various populations before its rapid
desertification in 3500 B.C and even today continues to host small populations of
nomadic trans-Saharan peoples. Laboratory examination of the
Uan Muhuggiag child mummy and Tin Hanakaten child, suggested that the Central Saharan peoples from the
Epipaleolithic,
Mesolithic, and
Pastoral periods possessed dark skin complexions. The archaeological evidence from the Holocene period has shown that
Nilo-Saharan speaking groups had populated the central and southern Sahara before the influx of
Berber and
Arabic speakers, around 1500 years ago, who now largely populate the Sahara in the modern era. n (in yellow) and
Greek colonies (in red) about 8th to 6th century BC After
migrating to North Africa in the 1st millennium BC,
Semitic Phoenician settlers from the
Levant established over 300 coastal colonies throughout the region and built a
powerful empire that controlled most of the region from the 8th century BC until the middle of the 2nd century BC. Several waves of
Arab migrations to the Maghreb began in the 7th century, including the migration of the
Banu Hilal and the
Banu Sulaym westward into the Maghreb in the eleventh century, which introduced Arab culture and language to the countryside. Historians mark their movement as a critical moment in the Arabization of North Africa. As Arab nomads spread, the territories of the local Berber tribes were moved and shrank. The
Zenata were pushed to the west and the
Kabyles were pushed to the north. The Berbers took refuge in the mountains whereas the plains were Arabized. This heavily shifted the demographics of the Maghreb. The
trans-Saharan slave trade resulted in increased levels of sub-Saharan African ancestry in North Africa. The
Haratin are commonly perceived as an endogamous group of former
slaves or descendants of slaves. Other sources have attributed their origin to ancient populations that inhabited the Saharan region.
Genetic history DNA studies of
Iberomaurusian peoples at
Taforalt, Morocco dating to around 15,000 years ago have found them to have a distinctive Maghrebi ancestry formed from a mixture of
Near Eastern and African ancestry, which is still found as a part of the genome of modern Northwest Africans. A 2025 study sequenced individuals from
Takarkori (7,000 YBP) and discovered that most of their ancestry was from an unknown ancestral North African lineage, related to the African admixture component found in Iberomaurusians. According to the study, the Takarkori people were distinct from both contemporary sub-Saharan Africans and non-Africans/Eurasians. They had "only a minor component of non-African ancestry" but did "not carry sub-Saharan African ancestry, suggesting that, contrary to previous interpretations, the
Green Sahara was not a corridor connecting northern and sub-Saharan Africa." The genetic marker
E1b1 was identified to have wide distribution across Egypt, with "P2/215/M35.1 (E1b1b), for short
M35, likely also originated in eastern tropical Africa, and is predominantly distributed in an arc from the Horn of Africa up through Egypt". Historian
Christopher Ehret, cited genetic evidence which had identified the
Horn of Africa as a source of a genetic marker "
M35/
215" Y-chromosome lineage for a significant population component which moved north from that region into Egypt and the Levant. Ehret argued that this genetic distribution paralleled the spread of the Afrasian language family with the movement of people from the Horn of Africa into Egypt and added a new demic component to the existing population of Egypt 17,000 years ago. According to a recent study, the
Arab migrations to the Maghreb was mainly a demographic process that heavily implied gene flow and remodeled the genetic structure of the Maghreb, rather than a mere cultural replacement as claimed by older studies. Another study found out that the majority of
J-M267 (Eu10) chromosomes in the Maghreb are due to the recent gene flow caused by the Arab migrations to the Maghreb in the first millennium CE as both southern
Qahtanite and northern
Adnanite Arabs added to the heterogenous
Maghrebi ethnic melting pot. The Eu10 chromosome pool in the Maghreb is derived not only from early
Neolithic dispersions from Western Asia but to a much greater extent from recent expansions of
Arab tribes from the
Arabian Peninsula. While acknowledging the genetic impact of Arabization of Northwest Africa during the Islamic period, other authors have suggested that earlier migration processes, such as the arrival of
Neolithic Revolution era famers from
Western Asia and
Southern Europe together with
Bronze Age and
Iron Age input from
Mesopotamia and the
Levant were ultimately more genetically impactful. David Schoenbrun, Christopher Ehret, Steven A. Brandt and Shomarka Keita (2025) have highlighted the problematic categorisation of genetic haplogroups characterised as ‘
African’ and ‘
Eurasian' in North African genome studies. In reference to the van de Loosdrecht et al. 2018 study on the epipalaeolithic Taforalt remains from
Morocco, which identified the
EM35 (primarily
EM78) common in north-eastern Africa but characterised the
mtDNA (female lineage haplogroups) of
U6 and
M1 as 'Eurasian', the authors questioned the classification of these maternal haplogroups despite their localised and long-established presence in ancient African populations. In their view, identifying a range of African populations may still remain an issue “since the idea of ‘African’ still gets stereotyped or restricted. (Accepting the
southwestern Asian/
Levantine geographical continuity with Africa eliminates a conceptual barrier related to racio-typological thinking permitting an
Africasian construct analogous to Eurasian.)”. Later during the
Neolithic, from around 7,500 years ago onwards, there was a migration into Northwest Africa of
European Neolithic Farmers from the Iberian Peninsula (who had originated in
Anatolia several thousand years prior), as well as pastoralists from the
Levant, both of whom also significantly contributed to the ancestry of modern Northwest Africans. The
proto-Berber tribes evolved from these prehistoric communities during the late
Bronze- and early
Iron ages. ==Culture==