- of the
local buildings were made from
slabs of salt by the
slaves of the
Masufa tribe, who cut the salt in
thick slabs for
transport by camel.
Taghaza was...
- of
Adrar and Tagant.
During the 11th century, the Lamtuna, Godala, and
Masufa tribes were
united under the
Lamtuna leader, Abu
Abdallah Muhammad ibn Tifat...
-
expansion of the
Sanhaja eastwards appears to have been led by the
Almoravid Masufa, a
group with
strong marriage and
maternal connections to the Lamtuna, who...
- camp,
along with some of the
previously Almoravid-aligned
leaders of the
Masufa tribe. This
allowed them to
defeat Tashfin decisively and
capture Tlemcen...
- of the
local buildings were made from
slabs of salt by the
slaves of the
Masufa tribe, who cut the salt in
thick slabs for
transport by camel.
Taghaza was...
-
Christian mercenaries and the
Saharan tribes of the Gudala,
Lamtuna and
Masufa,
which enabled him to
expand the empire,
crossing the
Atlas Mountains onto...
-
Sankore was a
dwelling place many scholars,
especially those belonging to the
Masufa "Sankore Mosque".
Google Arts & Culture. Aradeon,
Susan B. (1989). "Al-Sahili:...
-
Yasin now
formed the
Almoravid alliance from the
tribes of the Lamtuna, the
Masufa and the Godala, with
himself as
spiritual leader and
Yahya ibn Umar taking...
-
roofs of the
buildings were made of salt
which was
mined by
slaves of the
Masufa, a
Berber tribe, and
exported to the
Sudan by a
caravan that came once a...
- Mauritania. Over four
centuries before that,
Arabs mixed with
Bafur and
Berber Masufa in Wadan, in present-day
Western Sahara. A
group known as Idaw al-Hajj ("sons...