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Sidi Mohamed takes the opportunity to play with the neighbor’s children. Lalla Aicha tells her friend about her husband’s misfortunes with his partner Abdelkader. The next day, the mother retells the story to her husband, which prompts young Sidi Mohamed to remember the grocer Abdellah who would tell him stories.
Sidi Mohammed ben Abdallah Museum. The Sidi Mohammed ben Abdallah Museum (French: "Musée Sidi Mohammed ben Abdallah") is a history museum in the city of Essaouira, Morocco. It was named after the founder of the city, Mohammed ben Abdallah. It is located in 19th century mansion, Rue Laâlouj, a central street of the city of Essaouira. [1]
In the place of this Muslim cemetery, in 1830 during the French conquest of Algeria, there was only the mausoleum of Sidi M'hamed Bou Qobrine and a few graves among the wild olive trees. [2] It was then that the burials of the Muslim dead in Algiers were more and more numerous in the El Kettar cemetery from 1834, and in the Sidi M'hamed ...
La Boîte à merveilles (Le Seuil, 1954) : the city of Fez, as seen through the eyes of the little Mohammed. This novel about traditions and life in the city was a milestone for Moroccan literature. La maison de servitude (SNED, Algérie, 1973) Le jardin des sortilèges ou le parfum des légendes (L'Harmattan, 1989).
The zawiya is a complex of structures and facilities which provide for a number of services and functions. Their architecture is similar to that of other Saadian religious complexes in the late 16th century such as the Mouassine Mosque and Bab Doukkala Mosque, as well as the later Zawiya of Sidi Bel Abbes.
Sidi Mohammed ben Abdallah al-Khatib (Arabic: سيدي محمد بن عبد الله الخطيب), known as Mohammed III (Arabic: محمد الثالث), born in 1710 in Fes and died on 9 April 1790 in Meknes, [1] was the Sultan of Morocco from 1757 to 1790 as a member of the 'Alawi dynasty. He was the governor of Marrakesh around 1750. He was ...
Sidi Mohammed was the Garad (chief) of the Hadiya Sultanate in the beginning of the seventeenth century. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] He is considered a descendant of some of the Silt'e clan originators as well as the founder of Halaba ethnic group.
Charles Duveyrier was a follower of the utopian philosophical movement started by Henri de Saint-Simon. [2] In 1857 and 1858, Duveyrier spent some months in London, where he met Heinrich Barth, then preparing an account of his travels in the western Sudan. [1] Exploration book of Henri Duveyrier, 6–28 August 1859, Archives nationales.