ʿUqbah ibn Nāfiʿ | Arab general | Britannica (original) (raw)
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conquest of North Africa
In North Africa: From the Arab conquest to 1830 ʿUqbah ibn Nāfiʿ (Sīdī ʿUqbah) commanded the Arab army that occupied Tunisia in 670. Before his recall in 674, ʿUqbah founded the town of Kairouan, which became the first centre of Arab administration in the Maghrib. Read More
In Al-Andalus: Initial Muslim conquests From there ʿUqbah ibn Nafiʿ (Sīdī ʿUqbah) led an expedition to Morocco (c. 680-682). ʿUqbah was killed on the return journey, and it was not until 705 that the caliph al-Walid appointed a new governor, Mūsā ibn Nuṣayr. Mūsā annexed the entirety of North Africa as far… Read More
establishment of Kairouan Great Mosque
In Kairouan Originally built by Sīdī ʿUqbah in the 7th century, the present mosque is the fifth mosque built on the site and dates from Aghlabid times. Outside the town is the zāwiyah (seat of a religious fraternity) of Sīdī Sahab, containing the tomb of one of the companions of… Read More
role in Umayyad Caliphate
In Islamic world: The second fitnah That occupation was begun by ʿUqbah ibn Nāfiʿ, the founder of al-Qayrawān (Kairouan, in modern Tunisia) and, as Sīdī (Saint) ʿUqbah, the first of many Maghribi Muslim saints. It eventually resulted in the incorporation of large numbers of pagan or Christianized Amazigh (plural: Imazighen; Berber) tribes, the first large-scale forcible… Read More