Al-Mansur ibn al-Nasir


Al-Mansur ibn al-Nasir was the sixth ruler of the Hammadids in Algeria.

Biography

Al-Mansur ibn al-Nasir succeeded his father Al-Nasir in 1088. In 1090 he left the kal'a, the traditional capital of the Hammadids to settle in Béjaïa with his troop and His court, which he considered less accessible to the nomads. He left the region because of the destruction caused by the arrival of the banu Hilal. His father had already prepared this transfer by transforming a fishing port into a city he calls An-Nasiriya but which was to assume the name of Bougie, the name of a tribe that inhabit this region. Al-Mansur has built public buildings, palaces, a water distribution network and gardens in Bejaia. The Hammadid kingdom thus becomes a sedentary kingdom and not nomadic one. the Kal'a was not completely abandoned by al-Mansur and he even embellished it with a number of palaces. The Hammadids had therefore at this time two capitals joined by a royal road.