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TLEMCEN , a See also: town of See also: Algeria, the capital of an arrondissement in the department of See also: Oran, near the frontier of See also: Morocco, 68 m. by road and 102 by See also: rail S.W. of Oran
.
It stands 2500 ft. above the See also: sea, on the See also: north slope of the Lella Setta hills, which rise to a height of over 4000 ft
.
It is the chief town of a wide See also: district exporting See also: olive oil, See also: esparto, corn and See also: flour, wools and Algerian See also: onyx; and has a population of (1906) 24,060
.
From Tlemcen the railway is continued westward to the Moroccan frontier at Lalla Maghnia, a distance of 44 M
.
Among the cities famous in the See also: annals of Arab-See also: Berber, or Moorish, See also: art and See also: civilization, Tlemcen takes high See also: rank
.
In architectural merits its monuments, though not so extensive, are worthy of comparison with those of See also: Granada
.
The older walls and towers—there were three See also: ancient lines of fortifications—are in See also: great See also: part destroyed, but a See also: wall built by the French encircles the town
.
The various quarters are grouped around the See also: principal mosque—the Jewish to the See also: south-west, the Moorish to the south-See also: east, that of the merchants to the north-east, while the new town with the civic buildings lies to the north-west
.
Of the sixty-four mosques which existed at the See also: period of the French See also: conquest, several havedisappeared
.
The great mosque (Jamaa-el-Kebir) has a brick minaret 112 ft. high, adorned with marble columns, and cased with mosaic of the most varied designs; a fountain of alabaster—of the kind known as Algerian onyx—stands in the alabaster-paved inner See also: court; and 72 columns support the See also: arches of the interior
.
This mosque was built A.D
.
1136 to replace a much older See also: building
.
The See also: mihrab is finely ornamented with arabesques
.
The mosque of Sidi Ahmed See also: bel See also: Hassan, usually called Abul Hassan, built A.D
.
1298, now trans-formed into a museum of antiquities, has two series of arches, which rest on alabaster pillars
.
The courts are ornamented by sculptures of great beauty and richness; the delicately-carved See also: cedar ceiling bears traces of polychromatic See also: painting
.
The exterior has been altered in French taste
.
Among the antiquities preserved in the museum are the epitaph of Boabdil, the last See also: king of Granada, who died at Tlemcen in 1494, and the
See also: standard cubit measure—in marble —used in the Kissaria, bearing date A.H
.
728 (1328)
.
The mosque of El-Halawi (the Sweetmeat Maker), dating from 1353, is outside the walls of the town
.
It has eight magnificent columns of Algerian onyx, with richly sculptured capitals
.
The ceiling of cedar is richly carved, and there is a See also: fine See also: colonnade on each See also: side of the court
.
The minaret is decorated with mosaics
.
The military authorities occupy the Meshuar or citadel, built in 1145, which separates the Jewish and Moorish quarters and was formerly the palace of the rulers of Tlemcen
.
Only the minaret of the mosque, dating from the 14th century, and the battlemented wall, flanked by two towers, remain of its former magnificence . The vastSee also: basin (sahrij) under the old walls, now dry (720 ft. in length, 490 in width and 10 in See also: depth), was apparently made for See also: naval exhibitions
.
At one period barracks of the spahis occupied all that remains of the Kissario. the place of residence of See also: European merchants from See also: Pisa, Genoa, See also: Catalonia and See also: Provence
.
The barracks have been cleared away and a covered market made in the upper part of the Kissaria
.
The ancient See also: college (medressa) where many learned See also: Arabs taught—of whom See also: Ibn Khaldun, author of a See also: History of the See also: Berbers, may be mentioned—has entirely disappeared
.
The See also: church erected by the French is a fine building in the
See also: Byzantine See also: style
.
Besides the large See also: trade carried on there are native manufactories of See also: cloth, carpets and leathern articles
.
A See also: special manufacture is that of red shawls, used throughout the department of Oran by Jewish See also: women when in mourning
.
In the immediate neighbourhood of the See also: modern Tlemcen are numerous remains of the fortifications of Agadir (vide infra), and
the minaret of the mosque, a beautiful tower dating SidiBu
from the 13th century, the See also: lower part of which is built See also: media. of large hewn stones from the See also: Roman Pomaria
.
More noteworthy, however, are the ruins of Sidi Bu Medin and of See also: Mansura
.
Sidi Bu Medin (more properly El Eubbad) is a little over a mile south-east of Tlemcen
.
It was founded A.D
.
1337 by See also: Ali V., the first of the Beni-Marin (Marinide) sultans who ruled Tlemcen, and commonly called the Black Sultan
.
The ruins of a small building, conjectured to be a palace of Sultan Ali, which commands a beautiful view, were excavated in 1881
.
The kubba or See also: tomb of Sidi Bu Medin, near the palace, is held in great veneration by the Arabs
.
The roof and walls are covered with arabesques, and the See also: legend El-Mulk Lillah, " the See also: kingdom is See also: God's," is repeated again and again
.
The See also: saint himself was See also: born at Seville A.D
.
1126, and died near Tlemcen in his 75th See also: year; his See also: disciple Sidi Abd-es-Selam of See also: Tunis lies near him
.
The adjacent mosque is a beautiful specimen of Moorish art
.
The large See also: double doors of cedar See also: wood, covered with See also: bronze showing a geometric interlaced See also: pattern, have been compared with those of See also: Ghiberti at the Baptistery of Florence
.
The mosque is divided by columns into five aisles
.
Delicate lacework extends from the spring of the arches to the roof
.
The tile mosaics are believed to have come from Morocco
.
The medressa is a building resembling the mosque
.
Mansura, which is about 11 m. west of Tlemcen, owes its foundation to the attempts of the Beni-Marin rulers of Morocco to extend theirSee also: sovereignty
.
The Amir See also: Abu Yakub Yusef be- Mansura. sieged Tlemcen in the early years of the 14th century
The siege lasted eight years, and Yusef turned his See also: camp into a walled city
.
The siege being raised, El Mansura (the victorious), as the new city was called, was abandoned
.
It was reoccupied when (1335) Ali V. renewed the siege, which this See also: time proved successful
.
On the expulsion of the Marinides in 1359 Mansura was finally deserted
.
Besides the walls and towers, and the minaret of the mosque, little remains of Mansura, of which Ibn Khaldun has See also: left a contemporary and graphic sketch
.
The minaret, notwithstanding that one side and parts of two other sides have perished, is one of the finest mosque towers in existence
.
It is 125 ft. high, and is built of hewn See also: stone
.
The arches are circular or pointed
.
The upper part of the tower is ornamented with
See also: green and blue tiles and the entrance See also: arch is beautifully carved
.
An inscription records that the tower was built by See also: order of Abu Yakub Yusef
.
Of the rest of the mosque only the See also: outer walls remain
.
It is about 320 ft. long by 200 wide and was divided by magnificent marble columns into thirteen aisles . Excavations made by the French brought toSee also: light some of these columns, which are now in the museums of Tlemcen and Algiers
.
History.—A Roman town, Pomaria, occupied a site east of the See also: present town
.
It derived its name from the abundance and
luxuriance of the See also: apple, See also: pear and other fruit trees in the neighbourhood
.
The Roman town was ruined in the period following the Vandal invasion, and at the time of the Arab conquest appears to have been deserted
.
Many inscriptions of the Christian era have been found, some as See also: late even as the 7th century
.
The site was See also: purchased from the See also: Zenata Berbers, in the 8th century, by Idris-See also: bin-Abdallah, who began the building of a new city named Agadir (Berber, the fortress)
.
Idris, founder of the Iclrisite dynasty of See also: Fez, left his See also: brother See also: Suleiman in possession of Agadir, and the city was ruled by the Beni-Suleiman until 931, when it See also: fell into the hands of the See also: Fatimites
.
From the Fatimites it passed into the possession of the Beni-Yala, of the Beni-Ifren branch of the Zenata Berbers, who held it as vassals of the Omayyad rulers of See also: Spain
.
In ro8o the Almoravide See also: sovereign Yusef ibn Tashfin, after besieging and sacking Agadir, built a new town on the site of his camp
.
The new town, called Tagrart, became the colnmercial quarter, whilst Agadir remained the royal residence
.
The two towns when See also: united received the name of Tlemcen
.
The Almoravides reigned sixty-five years, when, after holding Agadir four years against the enemy, they were overcome by theSee also: Almohades, who massacred the inhabitants, rebuilt, enlarged and repeopled the ruined town, and built a wall (1161) surrounding the double town
.
In 1248 Tlemcen was captured The by Abu Yahia Yarmorasen (Ghamarasan) who was sultanate of chief of the Zenata tribe of Berbers and claimed Tlemcen- descent from the See also: Caliph Ali
.
Yarmorasen, who died in 1282, founded the dynasty of the Abd-el-Wahid, who ruled the greater part of what now constitutes Algeria
.
Under their sway Tlemcen flourished exceedingly
.
The presence of Jews and Christians was encouraged and the Christians possessed a church
.
The See also: bazaar of the Franks (kissaria) was a large walled enclosure, the See also: gates of which were closed at sunset
.
As many as 5000 Christians lived peaceably in Tlemcen, and the Sultan included in his army a Christian bodyguard
.
In 1337 the power of the Abd-el-Wahid was temporarily extinguished by the Marinide sultans of Morocco
.
They left some fine monuments of the period of their ascendancy, which lasted twenty-two years
.
Once more, under the Abd-el-Wahid, now known as the Beni-Zeiyan, from 1359 to 1553, Tlemcen enjoyed prosperity
.
It had a population reputed to number 125,000, an extensive trade, a brilliant court and a powerful army
.
The See also: Spanish occupation of Oran (15o9) struck a fatal See also: blow at the European commerce of the town
.
The Beni-Zeiyan, after the capture of Algiers in 1516 by the corsairSee also: Barbarossa (q.v.) gradually lost their territory to the See also: Turks, while Tlemcen itself for See also: forty years became tributary to the Spanish governor of Oran
.
In 1518 the town was held for a See also: short time by Arouj Barbarossa, but Arouj was killed in a fight with the Spaniards
.
It is said that, while master of the town, Arouj caused twenty-two of the Zeiyan princes to be drowned in the sahrij
.
In 1553 the Turks under Salah Rais, See also: pasha of Algiers, captured Tlemcen and the Sultanate of Tagrart, as it was still frequently called, came to an end
.
Under the Turks the town ceased to be of any importance
.
When the French entered Algeria the sultans of Morocco were disputing the possession of Tlemcen with the Kuluglis, who fought first for themselves and after-wards for See also: France
.
In 1835 Abd-el-Kader, on whose appearance the Moors retired, sought to re-establish the ancient See also: empire of Tlemcen, but he retreated before General Clausel in 1836
.
The treaty of the Tafna (1837) gave Tlemcen to Abd-el-Kader, but, war being renewed in 1842, Tlemcen was definitely occupied by the French, under whom it has prospered
.
The commune of Tlemcen, which includes a number of villages near the city, had a population (1906) of 39,757, and the arrondissement, which includes nine communes, 149,467
.
See See also: Les Monuments arabes de Tlemcen, by See also: William Marcais and Georges Marcais (
See also: Paris, 1903)
.
This accurate and finely-illustrated See also: work, one of the publications of the Service See also: des monuments historiques de l'Algerie, cites the principal See also: works dealing with Tlemcen, and gives a critical estimate of their value
.
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