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The Zayyanids ((アラビア語:زيانيون), ''Ziyānyūn'') or Abd al-Wadids ((アラビア語:بنو عبد الواد), ''Bānu ʿabd āl-Wād'') are a Berber Zenata dynasty that ruled the Kingdom of Tlemcen, an area of northwestern Algeria, centered on Tlemcen, whose territory stretched from Tlemcen to the Chelif bend and Algiers, and reached at its zenith the Moulouya river to the west, Sijilmasa to the south and the Soummam river to the east.〔(The Abdelwadids (1236–1554) ), on qantara-med.org〕〔(L'Algérie au passé lointain – De Carthage à la Régence d'Alger, p175 )〕 Their rule lasted from 1235 to 1556.〔Phillip Chiviges Naylor, ''North Africa: a history from antiquity to the present'', (University of Texas Press, 2009), 98.〕 ==History== (詳細はYaghmurasen Ibn Zyan.〔〔Delfina S. Ruano (2006), ''Hafsids'', in Josef W Meri (ed.), ''Medieval Islamic Civilization: an Encyclopedia''. Routledge., p. 309.〕 Ibn Zyan was able to maintain control over the rival Berber groups, and when faced with the outside threat of the Marinids, he formed an alliance with the Sultan of Granada and the King of Castile, Alfonso X.〔 After ibn Zyan's death, the Marinid sultan, Abu Yaqub Yusuf besieged Tlemcen for 8 years and finally captured it from (1337–48), by Abu al-Hasan 'Ali After a period of self-rule it was captured again by the Marinids from 1352–59, by Abu Inan Faris.〔 The Marinids reoccupied it periodically, particularly in 1360 and 1370.〔http://www.qantara-med.org/qantara4/public/show_document.php?do_id=603&lang=en〕 In both cases, the Marinids found that they were unable to hold the region against local resistance.〔I. Hrbek (1997), The disintegration of political unity in the Maghrib, in Joseph Ki-Zerbo & Djibril T Niane (eds.) (1997), General History of Africa, vol. IV: Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century (abridged ed.) UNESCO, James Curry Ltd., and Univ. Calif. Press., pp. 34–43.〕 but these episodes appear to have marked the beginning of the end of the Zayyanids. In the 15th century, expansion eastward was attempted, but proved disastrous, as consequences of these incursions they were so weakened that over the following two centuries, the Zayyanid kingdom was intermittently a vassal of Hafsid Ifriqiya, Marinid Morocco, or Aragon.〔 When the Spanish took the city of Oran from the kingdom in 1509, continuous pressure from the Berbers prompted the Spanish to attempt a counterattack against the city of Tlemcen (1543), which was deemed by the Papacy to be a crusade. The Spanish failed to take the city in the first attack, although the strategic vulnerability of Tlemcen caused the kingdom's weight to shift toward the safer and more heavily fortified corsair base at Algiers. In 1554, the kingdom of Tlemcen became a protectorate of the Ottoman Empire, which later deposed the Zayyanids and annexed the country to the Regency of Algiers. The failure of this kingdom from ever being a formidable foe can be linked to a number of reasons. First, they had no geographical or cultural unity. They also constantly faced internal issues, and they did not have fixed frontiers, and finally most important was the fact that they depended on Arab nomads for their military.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Zayyanid dynasty」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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