Zawiya Dila'iya
The Zawiya Dila'iya[1] (Arabic: الزاوية الدلائية, Berber languages: Ait Idilla) or Zawiya of Dila was a Sufi brotherhood, centred in the Middle Atlas range of Morocco.
Zawiya of Dila الزاوية الدلائية (Arabic) | |||||||||
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1637–1668 | |||||||||
![]() State of fragmentation of Morocco after the assassination of the last Saadian sultan (Zawia of Dila in yellow) | |||||||||
Capital | Dila | ||||||||
Common languages | Arabic Berber | ||||||||
Religion | Sunni Islam | ||||||||
Government | Tribal confederacy | ||||||||
• 1637 | Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad al-Majjati al-Sanhaji | ||||||||
• 1659 | Mohammed al-Hajj ibn Abu Bakr al-Dila'i | ||||||||
Historical era | Middle Ages | ||||||||
• Rebellion | 1637 | ||||||||
• 'Alawite annexation | 1668 | ||||||||
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History of Morocco |
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Origin
It was founded by Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad al-Majjati al-Sanhaji (1537–1612),[2] a Sanhaja Berber of the Mjjat tribe,[3] a branch of the Ait Idrassen confederation.[4] He was a follower of the famous mystic Muhammad al-Jazuli. The ruins of the town of Dila are situated just south of the city of Khenifra.
Under the leadership of Muhammad ibn Abu Bakr, the brotherhood was able to establish itself in the Berber territory of the Middle Atlas and High Atlas mountain ranges.[5] From 1637 onwards, the brotherhood started with the conquest of large parts of northern Morocco. By 1641, they had conquered Meknes, Fes and the port of Salé; from where a rival marabout, al-Ayashi, was expelled, and assassinated on 30 April 1641.[6][7] In Fes, the Saadi family was expelled and Muhammad al-Hajj (1635–1688) was proclaimed sultan.[8]
Rise in power
At the beginning of Zawiya following the period of anarchy which followed the death of the Sultan Ahmad al-Mansur in 1603 and the accession to the throne of Mawlay Zaydan in 1613 , several regions of Morocco escape the control of the central Saadian power:[9]
- the Sus, until Draa River, under the control of the Zaouia of Illigh by Abu al-Hassan Ali ben Mohammed al-Susi Essemlali;
- the plains of the northwest, from the Atlantic coast to Taza, controlled by the marabout al-Ayachi;
- the Republic of Salé, erected as an independent state by the Moriscos;
- Tetuan, city-state governed by the Naqsis family;
- the Tafilalet, under the control of the Alawites.
The zawiya of Dila then appears, under the impetus of Muhammad al-Hajj,since its foundation, as a movement combining spirituality and politics, mixing the ideology of holiness and sherifism with aspirations for power by the Berbers. It will take advantage of the weakness of Saadian power and the fragmentation of the country to extend its influence and control over several towns and regions in the north and center of Morocco.[10]
Peak
The Zawiya of Dila reached its peak in the middle of the 17th century, after having ordered the assassination[11] of al-Ayashi in 1641, expanding its influence on the cities of Fez, Tetuan and Ksar el-Kebir and on Republic of Salé, as well as on the plains of the north-west and the corridor of Taza to the Moulouya.[12]
Mohammed al-Hajj, head of the Zawiya, thus governs Fez since 1641[13] and was proclaimed Sultan there in 1659, following the death of the last Saadian Sultan Ahmad al-Abbas. The Zawiya of Dila lost Fez in 1661 following the putch of Caid Al Doraidi. It was dismantled in 1668 by the Alawites, who took the ascendancy and undertook the reunification of Morocco.[14]
Collapse
The Dila'ites would rule over central and northern Morocco until 1668, when Dila itself was annexed by the Shurafa Alawites, after their initial conquest of Fez.[15]
References
- Gottreich, Emily (2020). Jewish Morocco. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-78076-849-6.
- Dartois, Marie-France (2008). Agadir et le sud marocain: à la recherche du temps passé, des origines au tremblement de terre du 29 février 1960 (in French). Courcelles. p. 271. ISBN 9782916569307.
- Hajji, M. (1988). Al-Zawiya al-Dila'iyya [The Zaouia of Dila] (in Arabic) (2nd ed.). Rabat. p. 28.
- Chiapuris, John (1979). The Ait Ayash of the High Moulouya Plain: Rural Social Organization in Morocco. University of Michigan Press. pp. 17. ISBN 978-0-932206-83-1.
- Gandini, Jacques (2006). Pistes du Maroc à travers l'histoire (in French). SERRE EDITEUR. p. 1000. ISBN 9782864104391.
- Coindreau, Roger (2006). Les corsaires de Salé (in French). Eddif. p. 52. ISBN 9789981896765.
- Peyron, Michael (1995). "Dila'". In Camps, Gabriel (ed.). Encyclopédie berbère. Vol. 15 | Daphnitae – Djado. Aix-en-Provence: Edisud. ISBN 978-2857448082.
- Lugan, Bernard (2 June 2016). Histoire de l'Afrique du Nord: Des origines à nos jours (in French). Editions du Rocher. p. 272. ISBN 9782268085340.
- Harakat, Brahim (1973). "Le makhzen sa'adien". Revue des mondes musulmans et de la Méditerranée. 15 (1): 43–60. doi:10.3406/remmm.1973.1226.
- Jlok, Mustapha (2003). "The holiness and worship of saints". In Maisonneuve and Larose (ed.). Moroccan cultural heritage. Paris. p. 357-374. ISBN 2-7068-1696-1.
- de Epalza, Mikel (1992). Mapfre (ed.). Los Moriscos antes y después de la expulsión (in Spanish). Madrid. p. 106. ISBN 84-7100-249-3.
- Harakat, Brahim (1973). "Le Makhzen sa'adien". Review of the Muslim West and the Mediterranean. No. 15–16. p. 43-60.
- Akutse Mojuetan, Benson (1995). "The sa'adian state of Ahmad al-Mansur and the aftermath". In Lit International / International African Institute (ed.). History and Underdevelopment in Morocco: the Structural Roots of Conjuncture. Münster / Londres. p. 64-76. ISBN 3-89473-697-6.
- Peyron 1995
- Publications de l'Institut des hautes études marocaines (in French). E. Leroux. 1949. p. 285.