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HAMMUDIDS, dynasty which reigned over various towns in Muslim Spain from 407/1016 till 450/1058. Sulayman al-Musta'm , on his second succession to the caliphal throne in
Shawwal 4O3/ May 1013, had to distribute large fiefs among the Berbers who had raised him to power. He allotted to 'Ali b. Hammud
225:
the governorship of Ceuta and to his brother al-Kasim that of
Algeciras, Tangier, and Arzila. The two were genuine Idrisids , their great-grandfather Hammud being the great-grandson of Idris II.
129:. The Hammudids thus gained control of the traffic across the Straits of Gibraltar, suddenly becoming a powerful force. Claiming to act on behalf of the dethroned
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of
Granada, who had previously been the Hammudids' most important supporters. The Hammudi family was then forced to settle in Ceuta.
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356:
309:
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264:
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524:
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Viguera-Molins, María (2010). "Al-Andalus and the
Maghrib (from the fifth/eleventh century to the fall of the Almoravids)". In
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carved out
Andalusian land for his Berber allies, two members of the Hammudid family were given the governorship of
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The New
Cambridge History of Islam, Volume 2: The Western Islamic World, Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries
114:
406:
389:
476:
90:
74:
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The
Mohammadan Dynasties: Chronological and Genealogical Tables with Historicals Introductions
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For the North
African dynasty which became independent of the Zirids, see
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To this list we might add the enclave of the
Berberised Arab Hammudids...
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28:
17:
372:
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The Fall of the
Caliphate of Cordoba: Berbers and Andalusis in Conflict
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marched upon Córdoba in the year 1016, where he was crowned Caliph.
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The dynasty is named after their ancestor, Hammud, a descendant of
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The New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual
122:
78:
163:
161:
59:
106:
327:. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 19–47.
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In 1056, the last Hammudid Caliph was dethroned, losing
259:. Vol. II. BRILL. pp. 38–109 & 142–182.
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Altamira, Rafael (1999). "Il califfato occidentale".
53:
292:..or were Berberised Arabs like the Hammudids...
280:. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 14–16.
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8:
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157:
109:and grandson of the Islamic prophet,
7:
43:
274:Bosworth, Clifford Edmund (2004).
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348:Caliphs and Kings: Spain 796-1031
205:. Vol. II. pp. 477–515.
133:, the Hammudid governor of Ceuta
65:family that briefly ruled the
1:
304:. Constable. pp. 23–25.
298:Lane-Poole, Stanley (1894).
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510:11th century in al-Andalus
220:The Encyclopaedia of Islam
203:Storia del mondo medievale
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474:
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505:11th-century Arab people
477:Taifa kings of Algeciras
97:and great-grandchild of
530:Dynasties in al-Andalus
345:Collins, Roger (2012).
191:Lane-Poole (1894), p.21
135:Ali ibn Hammud al-Nasir
77:and nominal control in
253:Scales, Peter (1994).
520:Arabs from al-Andalus
429:Taifa kings of Málaga
115:Sulayman ibn al-Hakam
525:Caliphate of Córdoba
453:Taifa kings of Ceuta
218:, A. Huici Miranda,
67:Caliphate of Córdoba
396:Caliphs of Córdoba
351:. Wiley-Blackwell.
168:Viguera-Molins 2010
91:Idris ibn Abdallah
69:and the taifas of
540:Hasanid dynasties
493:
492:
416:
404:Succeeded by
334:978-0-521-83957-0
170:, pp. 26–27.
93:, founder of the
52:
16:(Redirected from
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535:Hammudid dynasty
487:Taifa of Seville
439:Taifa of Granada
409:
387:Preceded by
380:Hammudid dynasty
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36:Hammudid dynasty
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485:Annexed to the
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407:Umayyad dynasty
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95:Idrisid dynasty
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545:Shia dynasties
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247:Bibliography
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35:
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373:Royal house
85:The dynasty
55:Banū Ḥammūd
499:Categories
481:1039–1058
463:Barghawāṭa
457:1009–1055
433:1026–1057
401:1025–1027
152:References
471:New title
447:New title
423:New title
399:1016–1023
216:Hammudids
131:Hisham II
119:Algeciras
101:, son of
75:Algeciras
58:) was an
49:romanized
18:Hammudids
413:Restored
111:Muhammad
44:بنو حمود
29:Hammadid
323:(ed.).
144:to the
127:Tangier
113:. When
103:Fatimah
51::
355:
331:
308:
284:
263:
146:Zirids
142:Málaga
71:Málaga
63:Muslim
40:Arabic
123:Ceuta
99:Hasan
79:Ceuta
353:ISBN
329:ISBN
306:ISBN
282:ISBN
261:ISBN
125:and
105:and
73:and
60:Arab
34:The
107:Ali
501::
371:—
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160:^
121:,
81:.
46:,
42::
415:)
411:(
375:—
361:.
314:.
269:.
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38:(
31:.
20:)
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