Online Encyclopedia

TIARET (Tahert)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 912 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TIARET (Tahert)  , a
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town of Algeria, in the Tell
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Atlas, department of Oran, 122 M . S.E. of
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Mostaganem by
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rail . It occupies an important strategic position on a pass through the mountains at an
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elevation of 3552 ft . Pop . (1906), 5778, of whom 3433 were Europeans . The
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Wadi Tiaret flows through the town in a series of cascades . The upper town, the residential quarter, is on the right
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bank of this stream . The citadel occupies a
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separate hill on the other side of the wadi . The chief business centre is the
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lower town where are also the
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principal public buildings . On another hill opposite the citadel is the native town . The citadel occupies the site of a
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Roman station believed to be that of Tingurtia . Tiaret (
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Berber for " station ") was a town of note at the time of the Arab invasion of North Africa in the 7th century and is stated by
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Ibn Khaldun to have offered a stubborn resistance to Sidi-Okba .

In 761 it was taken by Abdurrahman ibn Rostem, the founder of the

dynasty of the Beni Rustam (Rostem) . Their
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empire, which during the reign of Abdurrahman (761-784) and his son Abdul Wahab (784-823) extended over the greater
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part of the
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modern Algeria, was known as the Ibadite Empire from Abdallah ibn Ibad, the founder of the heretical
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sect to which Abdurrahman belonged . The Ibadites represented the moderate section of the Kharijites (see
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MAHOMMEDAN RELIGION) . Seven princes of the Rustamite house succeeded Abdul Wahab at Tiaret, but in 909 the dynasty was overthrown by the Fatimite general al Shi'i . Two years later Tiaret was captured by Massala ibn Habbus of the Miknasa dynasty of
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Morocco, and after his
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death in 924 two other princes of the same house maintained their independence, but in 933 the Fatimites again gained the mastery . The Ibadites, after being expelled from the Tell, took
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refuge in
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Wargla . They were driven thence in the 11th century and migrated to Mzab, where their descendants still profess the Ibadite doctrines (see
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MZABITES) . After its second capture by the Fatimites, Tiaret ceased to be the capital of a separate state . For a long period it was included in the sultanate of
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Tlemcen, and in the 16th century fell to the
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Turks . It was one of the chief towns of Abd el Kader, but was occupied by the French in 1843 . At Takdempt, 6 m. west of Tiaret, Abd el Kader had his principal
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arsenal . About a mile from Takdempt are ruins of a town supposed to be the remains of the Ibadite capital .

Eighteen

miles S.S.W. of Tiaret are the sepulchral monuments known as the Jedars (see ALGERIA: § Archaeology) .

End of Article: TIARET (Tahert)
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TIARA (Gr. -papa)
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