Overview
The Marinid dynasty (Arabic: المرينيون, romanized: al-Marīniyyūn) was a Sunni Muslim dynasty that controlled present-day Morocco from the mid-13th to the 15th century and intermittently controlled other parts of North Africa (Algeria and Tunisia) and of the southern Iberian Peninsula (Spain) around Gibraltar. They were a culturally Arabized dynasty of Berber origin. The dynasty takes its name from the Banu Marin (Arabic: بنو مرين; Berber languages: Ayt Mrin), the Zenata Berber tribe from which it originated. After being at their service for a brief period, the Marinids waged war during the 13th century to overthrow the Almohads, who ruled the western Maghreb, eventually succeeding in 1269 with the capture of Marrakesh. At the height of their power in the mid-14th.
Historical Periods
Marinid Sultanate (1250–1259)
1250 CE – 1259 CE
Capital: FezArea: 388,669 km²
Marinid Sultanate (1344–1351)
1344 CE – 1351 CE
Capital: FezArea: 514,801 km²
Marinid Sultanate (1352–1362)
1352 CE – 1362 CE
Capital: FezArea: 737,542 km²
Marinid Sultanate (1363–1414)
1363 CE – 1414 CE
Capital: FezArea: 388,541 km²
Marinid Sultanate (1415–1462)
1415 CE – 1462 CE
Capital: FezArea: 388,366 km²
Marinid Sultanate (1463–1467)
1463 CE – 1467 CE
Capital: FezArea: 388,366 km²