Conflicts between the Regency of Algiers and Morocco

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Conflicts between
the Regency of Algiers and Morocco

The troops of the Regency of Algiers, allied to
the kingdom of Ait Abbes, marching towards Oranie
Date1550–1795
Location
Morocco, Western Algeria
Belligerents
Regency of Algiers Regency of Algiers
Zayyanids
       (16th century)
Kingdom of Beni Abbas
Saadi dynasty
       (1559–1660)
Alaouite dynasty
       (1559–1795)
Spanish Empire Spanish Empire

Conflicts between the Regency of Algiers and the Cherifian dynasties or Algerian-Sherifian conflicts[1] opposed Morocco to the Ottoman Empire and its dependencies in a series of wars between the Regency of Algiers and its allied local sultanates and tribal confederations, and on the other hand, the Sharifian Saadian and Alawite dynasties that had ruled Morocco since the 16th century.

The origins of these conflicts are multiple and overlapping. The integration into the Ottoman Empire of the state-owned enterprise of the Regency of Algiers in the central Maghreb as a new political center integrated in 1520 into the Ottoman Empire was at the expense of the Zayyanids of Tlemcen to its west. Recurrent conflicts at the beginning of the sixteenth century with the Regency on the one hand and the Spaniards on the other saw Tlemcem absorbed into the Regency.[1] Their weakening stirred Saadian lusts. Although the Regency of Algiers confirmed its control over Tlemcen and Orania, it did not have the means to launch the.long campaigns in the Sahara that it delegated to various tribal confederations like the Ouled Sidi Cheikh.[2] The Saadians were blocked to the north by the Spanish Empire but the Regency of Algiers then found a South-Saharan outlet for the expansion of their Empire.

These conflicts and resulting agreements foreshadowed the borders and delimitations between the modern nation-states of the Maghreb.[3]

Establishment of the regency of Algiers (16th century)[edit]

Collapse of the Zayyanids of Tlemcen[edit]

The weakening of the Zayyanids of Tlemcen, playing on their alliances with Spain, the Turks of Algiers and the Wattasids to maintain themselves, opened up a political void in western Algeria.[1] The founding of the Regency of Algiers (1512–1529) then its integration into the Ottoman Empire was done at the expense of the Zayyanids in the west and the Hafsids in the east.[2] The regency of Algiers, directed by the exogenous Turkish element of its militia, extended its influence to the west through the play of maraboutic alliances and brotherhoods. However, the advent of the Sharifian dynasties in Fez, with the Saadians in 1550, upset this game of alliances. Indeed, the Regency of Algiers could not count on the support of the maraboutics against sovereigns claiming a Cherifian origin (i.e. descending from Muhammad). Negotiations therefore began concerning the territories formerly under Zayyanids suzerainty, which were not successful.[1]

Saadian attempts in Oran[edit]

In 1545, the Saadians allied themselves with the Spaniards. The Cherifian army took Tlemcen without fighting in 1550 and decided to march on Algiers. The beylerbeys of the Regency of Algiers and the Sultan of the Beni Abbas then concluded the pact of Aguemoun Ath Khiar.[4] They retook Oranie and the city of Tlemcen in 1551;[5] The victory was exploited politically by the Turks of Algiers and played a role in the formation of Algeria (prefiguring its borders). This conflict opened a period of Algerian-Cherifian hostility which only ceased in 1585 with the intervention of the Ottoman sultan. From then on, for about a century, the Moulouya border was respected.[3]

On the other hand, the fall of the Zayyanids of Tlemcen opened the way for the Saharan conquests of the Saadians who were anxious to control the trans-Saharan axes that had been left vacant. The Regency could not engage in distant Saharan expeditions. However a troop was sent from Algiers to the Gourara towards the end of the 16th century at the request of the Ksourians in the face of rezzous from Tafilalt.[6] The Touat and the Gourara were then subjected to a temptation of local withdrawal and were independent in fact.[2]

Notable battles[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d Boyer 1966, pp. 11–49.
  2. ^ a b c Bellil 1999, p. 125.
  3. ^ a b Chenntouf 1999, pp. 191–206.
  4. ^ Institut de recherches et d'études sur le monde arabe et musulman; Chaker, Salem (2005), Encyclopédie berbère. 27, Kairouan-Kifan Bel-Ghomari, vol. 27, Edisud, p. 4112, retrieved 2021-05-09
  5. ^ Féraud, Laurent-Charles (2011). Histoire des villes de la province de Constantine: Sétif, Bordj-Bou-Arréridj, Msila, Boussaâda (in French). L'Harmattan. ISBN 978-2-296-54115-3.
  6. ^ Bellil, Rachid (2001). Les oasis du Gourara, Sahara algérien: Fondation des ksour. II [The Oases of the Gourara, Algerian Sahara: Founding of the Ksour] (in French). Peeters Publishers. ISBN 978-90-429-0924-3.

Bibliography[edit]