Abu'l Abbas Ahmad of Morocco
Mulay Ahmed ed Dhahabi (also spelt Moulay Ahmad ad Dahabi or Mawlay Ahmad adh-Dhahabi, ed Dehbi), known fully as 'Abul Abbas Mulay Ahmad ud-Dhahabi bin Ismail as-Samin (1677 – 5 March 1729), was the Sultan of Morocco in 1727–1728 and 1728–1729.
Moulay Ahmad ad Dhahabi | |
---|---|
Sultan of Morocco | |
Reign | 1728 – 1727 |
Predecessor | Ismail Ibn Sharif |
Successor | Abdalmalik |
Reign | 1728 – 1729 |
Predecessor | Abdalmalik |
Successor | Abdallah |
Born | 1677 Meknes, Morocco |
Died | 5 March 1729 Meknes, Morocco |
House | Alaouite dynasty |
Father | Ismail Ibn Sharif |
He was born at Meknes in 1677, as a son of Ismail Ibn Sharif. Between 1699 and 1700 he was the Khalifa of Tadla.[1][2] He ascended the throne on 22 March 1727, after his father's death.
He was deposed in 1728 by Abdalmalik of Morocco, yet he was restored briefly afterwards at Oued Beht. He was deposed once more, on the day of his death on 5 March 1729 at Meknes. He was succeeded by his half-brother Abdallah of Morocco.[3]
Preceded by Ismail Ibn Sharif |
Sultan of Morocco 1727–1728 |
Succeeded by Abdalmalik of Morocco |
Preceded by Abdalmalik of Morocco |
Sultan of Morocco 1728–1729 |
Succeeded by Abdallah of Morocco |
References
- Division, Great Britain Naval Intelligence (1942). Morocco. Naval Intelligence Division. p. 47.
- Africa, Unesco International Scientific Committee for the Drafting of a General History of (1 January 1999). Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century. James Currey. p. 118. ISBN 9780852550953.
- Hamel, Chouki El (27 February 2014). Black Morocco: A History of Slavery, Race, and Islam. Cambridge University Press. p. 213. ISBN 9781139620048.
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