Examples of 'marinids' in a sentence

Meaning of "marinids"

Marinids (noun) - refers to the Marinid dynasty, a Berber Muslim dynasty that ruled Morocco and parts of western North Africa from the 13th to 15th centuries
Show more definitions
  • plural of Marinid

How to use "marinids" in a sentence

Basic
Advanced
marinids
It was the last madrasa to be built by the Marinids.
The Marinids were quick to return the favour.
The Almohads attempt a retaliatory strike against the Marinids but it is not successful.
Marinids take possession of Rif and seemed to want to remain there.
The madrasa is considered one of the best monument the Marinids have left.
Marinids take possession of the Rif and seem to want to remain there.
They followed the Marinids and were followed by the Saadis.
Observe the city from the El Qolla Hill and see the tombs of the Marinids.
The Marinids suffer defeat in the battle fought on the banks of the Sibu river.
Abdul Haq is killed and the Marinids evacuate Morocco.
The Marinids had suffered a decisive defeat and moved back to Africa.
According to some he was a pilgrim of Maghrib al-Aksa, descendant of the Marinids or a sharif.
The ruins of the Marinids Tombs offer a panorama of the entire city.
Remnants of the city of al-Mansoura constructed by the Marinids during their siege of Tlemcen.
During this time the Marinids united all of the Maghrib under one government.

See also

The region was occasionally briefly unified, as under the Almohads, and briefly under the Marinids.
The Marinids are ejected from Iberia.
The two families were related, and the Marinids recruited many viziers from the Wattasids.
The Marinids starved the Portuguese siege camp at Tangier into submission.
In response, Muhammad II immediately tried to repair relations with the Marinids.
The Marinids under their leader Abdul Haq occupy north eastern part of Morocco.
This hill was known as al-Qula, and today simply as the " Hill of the Marinids.
The Marinids then took Sijilmasa, but most of the trade continued to flow through Tlemcen.
In Granada, the Banu Ashqilula, under a renewed Nasrid assault, had also appealed to the Marinids.
After this failure, the Marinids decided to withdraw to North Africa.
The Marinids took their name from their ancestor, Marin ibn Wartajan al-Zenati.
During 1217, the Berber nomads and tribes clashed with the Marinids around Fes but were defeated.
The Marinids had been fighting the Almohads for supremacy over Morocco since the 1210s.
A Zenata clan originating from Ifriqiya, the Marinids arrived in Taza in the 1210s.
By the 1260s, the Marinids had reduced the Almohads to the southern districts around Marrakesh.

Search by letter in the English dictionary