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Badis

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5-509: Badis may refer to: Badis (town) , a ruined town in Morocco Badis (fish) , a genus of fishes in the family Badidae See also [ edit ] Badi (disambiguation) Badie (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Badis . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change

10-663: The Wattasid sultan Abu Hassun , dethroned by his brother, received as a feud the Rif , with his seat at Badis (for this reason he was called al-Badisi). In 1554 he ceded the city and island to his Ottoman allies in Algiers who made it a nest for pirates operating in the Strait of Gibraltar . The Saadid sultan Abdallah al-Ghalib saw this activity and the Ottoman presence with a very bad eye, as it could be

15-480: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Badis&oldid=1153104083 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Badis (town) Badis was a town in Morocco , 110 km southeast of Tétouan , between

20-747: The territory of the Ghomara and the Rif ; the Banu Yattufat (Ait Yitufut) live in the area. Badis was part of the Kingdom of Nekor , and after the Idrisids , Almoravids , Almohads , and Marinids ; the last three dynasties used it as a naval base. It had some importance under the Marinid sultan Abu Said ( r.  1310–1331 ) and paid the same taxes—1000 dinars —as Melilla and Larache . Badis had an arsenal and shipyards. The population engaged in fishing and piracy and

25-528: Was the seat of the governor of the Rif that embraced the entire coast and some inland tribes (Bukkuya, Banu Mansur, Banu Khalid, Banu Yadir). In his visit to the town, Leo Africanus described it as having 600 households. About 100 meters, there are two rocky islets, the largest called Hajar Badis , which the Spaniards call Peñón de Vélez , and which they occupied in 1508 , an occupation that lasted until 1520. In 1526

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