- M'zab
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For other uses, see Mzab.
M'zab Valley * UNESCO World Heritage SiteCountry Algeria Type Cultural Criteria ii, iii, v Reference 188 Region ** Arab States Inscription history Inscription 1982 (6th Session) * Name as inscribed on World Heritage List
** Region as classified by UNESCOThe M'zab or Mzab, (Tumzabt Aghlan, Arabic: مزاب), is a region of the northern Sahara, in the Ghardaïa wilaya, an administrative division similar to a province, of Algeria. It is located 500 km (310 mi) south of Algiers and there are approximately 360,000 inhabitants (2005 estimate).[1][2]
Contents
Geology
The Mzab is a limestone plateau, centred around the Wad Mzab (Oued Mzab) valley.
History
The Mozabites ("At Mzab") are a branch of a large Berber tribe, the Iznaten, which lived in large areas of middle southern Algeria. Many Tifinagh letters and symbols are engraved around the Mzab Valley.
After the Islamic conquest, the Mozabites became Muslims of the Mu'tazili school. After the fall of the Rostemid state, the Rostemid royal family with some of their citizens chose the Mzab Valley as their refuge. However, the Rostemids were Ibāḍī and sent a preacher (Abu Bakr an-Nafusi) who successfully converted the indigenous Mozabites.
France occupied Algeria in 1830 and removed it from Ottoman domination, the M'zab was annexed to France only in 1882 and reverted to Algerian indigenous rule in summer 1962 upon its national independence. Ghardaia is the main town and capital of the M'zab, while el-Ateuf is the oldest settlement in the region. Beni Isguene is the most sacred Berber Islamic town. It prohibits all non-M'zabites from various sections of this town and all foreigners from spending the night within its walls. Melika is populated by black Africans and contains spacious cemeteries, while Guerrera and Berriane have been part of the M'zab since the 17th century.[3]
Architecture
There are five qsur "walled villages" (ksour) located on rocky outcrops along the Wəd Mzab collectively known as the Pentapolis. They are Ghardaïa Tagherdayt, the principal settlement today; Beni Isguen At Isjen; Melika At Mlishet; Bounoura At Bunur; and El-Ateuf Tajnint. Adding the more recent settlements of Bérianne and El Guerara, the Mzab Heptapolis is completed.[4]
The combination of the functional purism of the Ibāḍī faith with the oasian way of life has led to a strict organization of land and space. Each citadel has a fortress-like mosque, whose minaret served as a watchtower. Houses of standard size and type were constructed in concentric circles around the mosque. The architecture of the M'zab settlements was designed for egalitarian communal living, with respect for family privacy. The Mzab building style is of Libyan-Phoenician type, more specifically of Berber style and has been replicated in other parts of the Sahara.[5]
In the summer, the Mzabites migrated to 'summer citadels' centred around palm grove oases. This is one of the major oasis groups of the Sahara Desert, and is bounded by arid country known as chebka, crossed by dry river beds.
The Mzab Valley was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982, as an intact example of traditional human habitat perfectly adapted to the environment.[6]
Society
The insular nature of the Ibāḍiyya has preserved the area, and Ibāḍī Σezzaba continue to dominate the social life of the area. A federal council, Majlis Ammi Said, unites representatives of the seven settlements as well as Ouargla, an ancient town located 200 km South-East of the Mzab valley. This council forms a federative body for religious, social and, increasingly, cultural matters. This religious federal council represents an “Islamic type of government” unique today.
Numerous details of Ibāḍiyya social life are ruled by this Islamic government, such as the weight of gold given as a dowry to a woman (maximum 60 grams) to the length of wedding celebrations (three days). The council makes decisions on details such as dowries, celebrations, dress. It used to impose punishments including exile, and a form of tabriyya "quarantine", where the offender may not interact with his fellow citizens. However, with economic, social and political integration to Algeria, these sanctions are less effective, and tend to have more impact on women.[dubious ]
The local language of the Mzab is Tumzabt, a branch of the Zenati group of Berber languages.
Ghardaya is also one of the four large military and administrative territories into which southern Algeria is divided and the only one of the five cities that has admitted Europeans, Jews, Arabs and other foreign elements.[7]
Notable people
- Muhammad Atfiyyash, Mzab scholar [8]
- Moufdi Zakaria, Algerian poet, author of the National Anthem
References
- ^ http://lexicorient.com/e.o/mzab.htm
- ^ http://www.globosapiens.net/travel-information/Ghardaia-2369.html
- ^ http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0014_0_14425.html
- ^ http://www.worldheritagesite.org/sites/mzabvalley.html
- ^ Houtsma, Martijn Theodoor (1987). "Mzab". E.J. Brill's first encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913-1936. 2. BRILL. pp. 167. ISBN 9004082654. http://books.google.com/books?id=GpQ3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA167.
- ^ http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/188/
- ^ http://www.jstor.org/pss/2843999
- ^ Ghazal, Amal N. (2010). Islamic reform and Arab nationalism: expanding the crescent from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean (1880s-1930s). Taylor & Francis. p. 37. ISBN 0415779804. http://books.google.com/books?id=i8Gt6twbabEC&pg=PA37.
See also
World Heritage Sites in Algeria Al Qal'a of Beni Hammad · Djémila · Kasbah of Algiers · M'Zab Valley · Tassili n'Ajjer · Timgad · Tipasa
Categories:- World Heritage Sites in Algeria
- Geography of Algeria
- Berber
- Ghardaïa Province
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