The Origins of the Islamic State/Part 5/Chapter 6

The Origins of the Islamic State, Part V (1916)
by Aḥmad ibn Yaḥyá al-Balādhurī, translated by Philip Khuri Hitti
Chapter VI—The Conquest of Ṭanjah [Tangiers]
Aḥmad ibn Yaḥyá al-Balādhurī3650248The Origins of the Islamic State, Part V — Chapter VI—The Conquest of Ṭanjah [Tangiers]1916Philip Khuri Hitti

CHAPTER VI

The Conquest of Ṭanjah [Tangiers]

According to al-Wâḳidi, ʿAbd-al-ʿAzîz ibn-Marwân made Mûsa ibn-Nuṣair,[1] a freedman of the banu-Umaiyah and who came originally from ʿAin at-Tamr (some say he belonged to the clan of Arâshah, a branch of the Bali; others say, to the clan of Lakhm) governor over Ifrîḳiyah. According to others, Mûsa ruled over it in the time of al-Walîd ibn-ʿAbd-al-Malik, in the year 89. He reduced Ṭanjah and occupied it, he being the first to occupy and mark it in lots for the Moslems. His horsemen went as far as as-Sûs al-Adna,[2] which was over twenty days' journey from as-Sûs al-Aḳṣa [the farther as-Sûs == modern Morocco]. Thus he subjugated as-Sûs al-Aḳṣa, carrying many captives from the inhabitants and receiving homage. His ʿâmil collected from them ṣadaḳah. Later he assigned Ṭârik ibn-Ziyâd, his freedman, over it [Ṭanjah and environs] and departed to Ḳairawân Ifrîḳiyah.


Footnotes edit

  1. ʿAdhâri, vol. i, pp. 24 seq.
  2. Ibid., vol. i, p. 27.