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Battle of Salé

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Attack on the Moroccan city by King Alfonso For the French naval attack in 1851, see Bombardment of Salé.
Battle of Salé
Salé is located in MoroccoSaléSaléSalé (Morocco)
Date10 – 23 September 1260
(2 – 15 Shawwal 658 AH)
LocationSalé, Morocco
Result Marinid victory
Belligerents
Marinid dynasty Kingdom of Castile
Commanders and leaders
Abu Yusuf Yaqub ibn Abd Al-Haqq Ruy López de Mendoza
Units involved
Unknown 37 battleships
Unknown number of soldiers
Casualties and losses
  • Several killed
  • 3,000 captured and taken as slaves in Seville
  • Several parts of the city burned
Heavy losses to the soldiers
Battles in the Reconquista
8th century
9th century
10th century
11th century
12th century
13th century
14th century
15th century
Post-Reconquista Rebellions

North Africa

The Battle of Salé was a raid of the Moroccan city of Salé by King Alfonso X of Castile in 1260, when the city was governed by the Marinid dynasty. The city remained under Castilian occupation for two weeks, during which they captured 3,000 residents and took them as slaves. However, the Marinid dynasty regained control of the city after Sultan Yacoub ben Abdelhaq ordered his troops to march to the city gates.

Background

According to historian Ibn Khaldun, when the Marinid dynasty took control over Salé from the Almohad Caliphate, Yacoub ben Abdellah Marinid rebelled against his uncle Abu Yusuf Yaqub ibn Abd Al-Haqq, and sought the assistance of King Alfonso X. Ruy López de Mendoza, Admiral of Castile formed an armada to assist the Castilian crusades on the North African coast. Salé was an important strategic and commercial centre, and also the gateway to Azghar, the region of northern Morocco.

Battle

The day before Eid al-Fitr in year 658 of the Hijra (September 1260), thirty-seven warships were sent to Salé by King Alfonso X. On 2 Shawwal, Castilian warriors landed in Salé and took the opportunity to perform the largest massacre in the history of the city. Citizens of Salé were busy celebrating Eid al-Fitr, and the Castilians killed many of them. The warriors plundered properties and destroyed everything in their path. Women, children, and the elderly were rounded up into the Great Mosque of Salé, where 3,000 of them were taken as slaves to Seville.

For two weeks, Salé remained under the occupation of the Castilians, before Sultan Yacoub ben Abdelhaq rushed to the aid of the city, and quickly ordered his troops to march to the gates of the city. He ordered that all Castilian soldiers were to be killed, but some were able to escape the attack after ransacking houses, and looting and burning shops. Following the liberation of the city, the Sultan ordered the construction of the Borj Adoumoue and a wall opposite the Bou Regreg.

After the failure of the battle, Ruy López de Mendoza fled to Portugal in fear of King Alfonso X.

Notes

  • No ships were recorded to have been lost by the Castilians.

References

  1. ^ Dufourcq, Charles-Emmanuel (1966). Un projet castillan du XIIIe siècle : la croisade d'Afrique (in French). Faculty of Arts. p. 28. OCLC 491894706.
  2. ^ Bertrand, Georges A.; Henni, Abdelhakim; Martiniani-Reber, Marielle (2009). Traces: mémoires musulmanes en coeur de France (in French). Neuchâtel. ISBN 9782970068204. OCLC 607484818.
  3. "L'histoire du Maroc4 - Les Almohades(1128 - 1266 / 1269)" (in French). Cosmovisions. 2005. Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  4. ^ Mrini, Driss; Alaoui, Ismaïl (1997). Salé: Cité Millénaire (in French). Editions Eclat, Rabat. pp. 45–46. ISBN 9981-9995-0-4.
  5. "Arsenal de Salé" (in French). Qantara. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  6. Ali Ibn Abi Zar'a (1973). Al-anis al-moutrib baroud al-qartass fi akhbar moulouk al-maghrib wa tarikh madinat fas. Dar al-Mansour, Rabat. pp. 313–349.

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