(Redirected from Mauritanian Thirty-Year War)The 'Char Bouba war' (variously transliterated as Sharr Bubba, Shar Buba, etc) or the 'Mauritanian Thirty Years War', took place between 1644-74 in the
tribal areas of what is today
Mauritania and
Western Sahara. It was fought between the
Sanhadja Berber tribes resident in the area, led by
Lamtuna Imam Nasr ad-Din, and the
Maqil Arab immigrant tribes, foremost of which was the
Beni Hassan.
[1]
The war ended in defeat for the Berber tribes, and they were from that point on forced to surrender their arms and submit to the warrior Arab tribes, to whom they paid the
horma tributary tax. They would remain in roles as either exploited semi-sedentary
agriculturalists and
fishermen (
znaga tribes), or, higher up on the social ladder, as religious (
marabout or
zawiya) tribes. This division between
Hassane Arab warriors and Berber marabouts, plus the subordinate znaga, existed in Mauritania up until the
French colonization, when France imposed itself militarily on all tribes, and so broke the power of the Hassane. Still, the traditional roles of the tribes remain important socially in these areas.
[2]
Even more important was that the Arab victory brought about widespread cultural and linguistic
arabization, with Berber tribes surrendering their
Tamazight and other Berber tongues to the Arabic language, in the form of the
Hassaniya dialect of the Beni Hassan. It is still spoken as the main language in
Moorish Mauritania and Western Sahara, as well as in parts of
Morocco and
Algeria.
See also
★
Moors and
Sahrawi
★
Mauritania
★
Western Sahara
References and notes
1. Mauritania - Arab Invasions
2. Mauritania - Moors