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Abu Nour

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Abu Nour bin Abi Qara al-Ifrani (Arabic: أبو نور بن أبي قرة اليفرني; 1014–1058) was a Berber king of the Taifa of Ronda. He built the most important sites in Ronda.[1]

Life

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Abu Nour belonged to the Banu Ifran. The Banu Ifran were part of the Taifa of Malaga until the death of Yahya ibn Ali ibn Hammud al-Mu'tali. After that Abu Nour established a new kingdom, the Taifa of Ronda in 1039.[2] Abu Nour established alliances with the surrounding tribes. When Muhammad ibn Idris al-Mahdi Balah [ar] deposed his uncle, Idris al'Ali Ballah [ar], from the throne of the Taifa of Malaga in 1046, Abu Nour helped Idris regain the throne.[3]

In 1053, Abbad II al-Mu'tadid invited Abu Nour along with Muhammad bin Noh al-Darimi of Morón and Abadoun bin Khazaroun of Arcos to Seville. Al-Mu'tadid killed Muhammad and Abadoun and imprisoned Abu Nour.[4] Abu Nour's son Badis bin Abu Nour [ar] succeeded him as king of Ronda until 1057, when al-Mu'tadid released Abu Nour. Abu Nour returned to Ronda, put his son to death for misrule, and died shortly afterward, leaving the kingdom to his second son, Abu Nasr Fatouh [ar].[5]

Notes

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  1. ^ Ronda, José Paez Carrascosa
  2. ^ Anaj, Muhammad Abdallah (1997). دولة الإسلام في الأندلس [The Islamic State in Al-Andalus] (in Arabic). Vol. 2. Cairo: Maktaba al-Khanji. p. 152.
  3. ^ Ibn Idhari (1980). Al-Bayan al-Mughrib. Beirut: Dar al-Thaqafa. p. 217.
  4. ^ Ibn Idhari 1980, p. 271.
  5. ^ Ibn Adhari 1980, p. 313.