The 'Maqil' or 'Maquil' were a collection of
Arab Bedouin tribes of
Yemeni origin who migrated westwards via
Egypt during the
13th century. The
Beni Hassan tribes claim to be descendants of Maqil, once living in Tunisia. Maqil had two sons Suhair and Mohammed. This Mohammed was the father of Muhtar, who was the father of Sabbana and Hassan, the Hassan from which the
Beni Hassan took their name.
The Maqil strongly contributed to the
arabization and
islamization of the western
Maghreb, which was until then dominated by
Berber tribes, which were in many areas only superficially converted, despite the arrival of
Islam already in the
7th century.
One of the largest Maqil tribes was the
Beni Hassan, a tribe that came to form the ruling
nomad warrior class in the
Saharann territories of
Mauritania and
Western Sahara, and to have a great cultural impact upon their populations. These, the
Moors and
Sahrawis, still speak
Hassaniya, the
Arabic dialect of the Beni Hassan. Almost all of these tribes, after the war of
Char Bouba (1644-74), consider themselves descendants of the Maqil, even if scientific evidence suggest a
Sanhaja Berber background for most, and strongly mixed
bloodlines in any case. A few of the ancient Maqil tribes (such as the
Oulad Delim, a
subtribe of the Beni Hassan), still exist under their proper name in the area, even if
intermarriage and cultural diffusion has added a Berber element to their Arab origins.
References
★ Almsaodi, Abdulaziz. Modern history of Yemen
★
Power and Interest News Report
See also
★
Bani Hilal