Overview
The Hammadid dynasty (Arabic: الحماديون, romanized: Al-Hāmmādiyūn, lit. 'children of Hammad'), also known as the Hammadid Emirate or the Kingdom of Bejaia, was a medieval Islamic kingdom in the central Maghreb, encompassing what is now Algeria. It was established at the beginning of the 11th century when Hammad ibn Buluggin declared himself emir, thus splitting the Zirid domains into two separate dynasties. Under the reign of Emir Al Nasir, the emirate briefly became the most important state in the Maghreb, and reached its greatest territorial extent, stretching from Tlemcen in the west to Tunis in the east, and from the Mediterranean Sea in the north to the desert oasis of Ouargla and Oued Righ in the south. While they briefly.
Historical Periods
Hammadid Dynasty (1018–1055)
1018 CE – 1055 CE
Capital: Qal'at Bani HammadArea: 165,043 km²
Hammadid Dynasty (1056–1065)
1056 CE – 1065 CE
Capital: Qal'at Bani HammadArea: 165,098 km²
Hammadid Dynasty (1066–1071)
1066 CE – 1071 CE
Capital: Qal'at Bani HammadArea: 32,833 km²
Hammadid Dynasty (1072–1138)
1072 CE – 1138 CE
Capital: Qal'at Bani HammadArea: 32,733 km²
Hammadid Dynasty (1139–1146)
1139 CE – 1146 CE
Capital: Qal'at Bani HammadArea: 32,726 km²
Hammadid Dynasty (1147–1151)
1147 CE – 1151 CE
Capital: Qal'at Bani HammadArea: 32,726 km²