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Arab and
Berber Dynasties From the 7th to the 17th Century
Idriss I founded the first Muslim state in
Morocco in the late eighth century. His authority
extended over central and western Morocco, and he
fought against those Christians and Jews who
would not convert. The majority of Jews did not
recognize him as their sovereign. Jewish soldiers
fought three wars against Idriss in the Fez
region. Following his victory, most Jews moved
into the mountain and desert areas that were not
controlled by Idriss I.
His son, Idriss II, created the city of Fez in
the early ninth century, developing it from a
village that is believed to have been inhabited
by a Jewish tribe. He invited Jews to live there
together with Arabs. While he restricted the
freedom of the Jewish community in accordance
with Islamic law, he also created the economic
conditions that allowed some Jews to become
prosperous.
A Berber tribe from the Sahara desert, the
Almoravides, created an Islamic empire in Morocco
and Spain in the eleventh and twelfth centuries.
They founded their capital of Marrakesh near
Aghmat, a Berber Jewish settlement. Although Jews
were not allowed to enter Marrakesh at night,
they had sufficient freedom to move throughout
Morocco and Spanish Andalucia. Jewish scholars
migrated to the Almoravide empire, producing some
of the religious writings associated with the
"Golden Age" of the Jews.
In the twelfth century, the Almohads, a Berber
mountain people, developed a fundamentalist
Islamic doctrine and built an empire that spread
from Spain to western Libya. Unlike the
Almoravides, they did not take the Jews under
their protection. Instead, they expelled them
from Marrakesh and tried to eliminate their
presence from Morocco. Under the Almohad leader
Abdel Moumen, the Jews were persecuted to the
point that their communities in the oasis
communities of the Draa and Sijilmassa were
destroyed. Jews in these communities who did not
convert were killed. During this time, Maimonides
left Cordoba and spent several years in
Morocco. From 1159-1165, he lived in the old city
of Fez. Persecution of Jews was so intense
that Maimonides counseled all Jews to leave the
country. By 1224, there may have been no
synagogue left in Morocco.
The Almohads were overthrown in the
mid-thirteenth century by the Merenids, who gave
preferential treatment to the Jews. Resentment of
the Sultan and his close ties to the Jews incited
a pogrom in Fez in 1276. The Merenids then
established Fez-Jdid (New Fez) as their
capital,
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