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where Sultans
could provide the nearby Jews with greater
security. During the 14th century, when the
Merenids had relatively firm control of Morocco,
Jews and Muslims coexisted with few problems. By
1438, the Merenids could not easily control the
country or protect Jews living in urban areas. In
Fez-Jdid, they forced the Jews to move into a
fortified area adjoining the royal palace, to
ensure their safety. This was the first Jewish
quarter in Morocco. Because it was built on an
old salt mine, this and all subsequently
constructed Moroccan Jewish quarters were called
mellahs, based on the Arabic word for salt.
The Merenids lost power to the Wattasids, a weak
dynasty that ruled for eighty years beginning in
1472. The Watassids were unable to prevent the
Portuguese from establishing forts and trading
posts in towns all along the Atlantic coast. The
Wattasids neither encouraged nor prevented tens
of thousands of Jewish refugees from Spain and
Portugal from entering Morocco in the late
fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. Queen
Isabella of Spain had issued the Edict of
Expulsion on March 31, 1492, three months after
the fall of Muslim Grenada. The edict gave four
months for the 165,000 Spanish Jews to either
convert or leave the country. Although many of
them entered Morocco, only about 20,000 made the
country their new home, while the rest continued
on to the Ottoman Empire.
The Saadian dynasty, which took over in the 16th
and 17th centuries, suffered from political
instability and military attacks throughout its
reign. To finance military activities, Saadian
Sultans taxed the Jewish community heavily. To
ensure that the Jews had adequate resources to
pay these taxes, Sultans gave Jewish traders the
monopoly over sugar exports. These traders were
also responsible for a large percentage of the
imports of European cloth and guns. Jews played a
key role in the caravan trade with Sub-Saharan
Africa, financing the exchanges of European cloth
and Moroccan cereals for gold, ostrich feathers,
gum arabic, and ivory.
Under the Saadians, Spanish and Portuguese
Marranos moved to Morocco's coastal cities, where
they could work for the Portuguese traders and
reconvert to Judaism. In 1578, the Saadians
defeated the Portuguese in a famous battle near
Ksar el Kabir, a coastal settlement near Tangier.
Since three kings died in the battle, some
Moroccan Jewish communities established a special
Purim holiday, the Purim of the Three Kings, that
was celebrated until recently.
Home
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The Alaouite Dynasty
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