Muhammad al-Nasir

Muhammad al-Nasir (Arabic: الناصر لدين الله محمد بن المنصور, al-Nāṣir li-dīn Allāh Muḥammad ibn al-Manṣūr, c.1182 – 1213) was the fourth Almohad Caliph from 1199 until his death. Contemporary Christians referred to him as Miramamolin.

Muhammad al-Nasir
Caliph of the Almohads
Ruler of the Almohad Caliphate
Reign1199–1213
PredecessorAbu Yusuf Yaqub al-Mansur
SuccessorYusuf II, Almohad caliph
Bornc. 1182
Died1213 (aged c. 30–31)
SpouseQamar
IssueYusuf II
DynastyAlmohad
FatherAbu Yusuf Yaqub al-Mansur
MotherAmmet Allah bint Abu Isaac
ReligionIslam

On 25 January 1199, al-Nasir's father Abu Yusuf Yaqub al-Mansur died; al-Nasir was proclaimed the new caliph that very day. Al-Nasir inherited from his father an empire that was showing signs of instability. Because of his father's victories against the Christians in the Iberian Peninsula (Al-Andalus), he was temporarily relieved from serious threats on that front and able to concentrate on combating and defeating Banu Ghaniya attempts to seize Ifriqiya (Tunisia). Needing, after this, to deal with problems elsewhere in the empire, he appointed Abu Mohammed ibn Abi Hafs as governor of Ifriqiya, so unwittingly inaugurating the rule of the Hafsid dynasty there, which lasted until 1574.

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