Nasr ad-Din (Lamtuna)
Imam Nasr ad-Din was a Lamtuna Berber religious and military leader, who from 1644 to 1674 led an alliance of Sanhadja Berber tribes against the Maqil Arabs of the western Sahara desert (mainly today's Mauritania, southern Morocco and Western Sahara).
Nasr ad-Din was killed in battle in 1674 and the Char Bouba war (or 30-years war) was lost by the Berber tribes. They were reduced to subordinate roles in the elaborate tribal hierarchy that was then developed by the Arabo-Berber Moorish people that resulted from the fusion between indigenous and immigrant peoples.
References[]
- Douglas Thomas; Temilola Alanamu (31 December 2018). African Religions: Beliefs and Practices through History. ABC-CLIO. p. 182. ISBN 978-1-61069-752-1.
See also[]
Categories:
- 17th-century Berber people
- History of Mauritania
- History of Western Sahara
- Berbers in Mauritania
- Berbers in Western Sahara
- Lamtuna
- African ethnic group stubs
- African military personnel stubs
- Mauritanian people stubs
- Western Sahara stubs
- African people stubs