Mzab (Moroccan tribe)
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mzab_(Moroccan_tribe) an entity of type: Abstraction100002137
Le M'zab (en Arabe: مزاب) est une confédération de tribus au Maroc (Chaouia-Ouardigha) qui se trouve au milieu du plateau du Chaouia à une soixantaine de km de Casablanca, dont la capitale est la ville de Ben Ahmed.
* Portail du Maroc
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Mzab (Arabic: مزاب) is a tribal confederation south of Casablanca in Morocco, part of the Chaouia. Part of the Mzab are Arabized Berber tribes, while the rest are Arab tribes of Banu Hilal. The Moroccan Mzab are not to be confused with the Algerian Berber tribe that has the same name (see M'zab). Mzab is Arabic for the Mozabite people. Mzab is divided into many smaller tribes, the most important of which are:
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M'zab (Maroc)
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Mzab (Moroccan tribe)
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4403124
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1116584860
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Le M'zab (en Arabe: مزاب) est une confédération de tribus au Maroc (Chaouia-Ouardigha) qui se trouve au milieu du plateau du Chaouia à une soixantaine de km de Casablanca, dont la capitale est la ville de Ben Ahmed.
* Portail du Maroc
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Mzab (Arabic: مزاب) is a tribal confederation south of Casablanca in Morocco, part of the Chaouia. Part of the Mzab are Arabized Berber tribes, while the rest are Arab tribes of Banu Hilal. The Moroccan Mzab are not to be confused with the Algerian Berber tribe that has the same name (see M'zab). Mzab is Arabic for the Mozabite people. Located in the historical breadbasket of Morocco (the Chaouia), Mzab's land is mostly used for wheat production, but is also famous for sheep husbandry (Sardy is the most common sheep race). Mzab's land is also nicknamed Al-'Alwa (Arabic: العلوة) which means height in Arabic because it's a plateau, which is part of the phosphate plateau that produces most of Morocco's highly prized mineral phosphate ore. The capital of Mzab is Ben Ahmed. Mzab is divided into many smaller tribes, the most important of which are:
* Ben Ahmed (Capital)
* Sidi Hajjaj
* Hamdawa حمداوة
* Oulad Mrah
* Khzazra الخزازرة
* Oulad Jabi
* Oulad Fares اولاد فارس
* Beni Brahim بني براهيم
* Maarif المعاريف
* Mkhalkhliya المخلخلية
* Oulad Belbagi اولاد بلباجى
* Beni Arif بني عريف There was also a Jewish presence in Mzab, but all Jews left in the 1950s and 1960s, mostly to Israel. The Mellah الملاح and the Hajraat الحجرات (rocks in Arabic) still testify of this presence. Jewish tourists from amongst the Moroccan diaspora still visit the Hajraat sites every year. The site is a few kilometres from the Shrine of Sidi Mohamed El Fekkak, where an annual "Moussem" harvest festival is hosted.
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3310