Volunteers of the Faith | |
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Arabic: الغزاة المجاهدين, romanized: al-ghuzāt al-mujāhidīn | |
Active | 13th and 14th centuries |
Countries | Marinid Morocco (origin) |
Allegiance | Emirate of Granada |
Main HQ | Fuengirola[1] |
Engagements | Reconquista |
Commanders | |
Notable commanders |
The Volunteers of the Faith (Arabic: الغزاة المجاهدين, romanized: al-ghuzāt al-mujāhidīn, lit. 'warriors of the jihad'[2];) was a military institution of the Emirate of Granada, composed by soldiers recruited from Zenata Berbers who were exiled from the Marinid Sultanate, to defend the Emirate against the Christian kingdoms of the Iberian Peninsula.[2][3]
Many of them volunteered because they saw the defense of Muslims as their religious duty.[4] Although North African volunteers appear in the Iberian peninsula already in the 11th century under the term ghuzāt,[2][5] recruitment was expanded during the last years of Muhammad I of Granada (r. 1238–1273),[5] and they were institutionalised and further expanded by his son Muhammad II al-Faqih (r. 1273–1302). Over time, the Volunteers eclipsed Granada's indigenous troops and became its main military force, numbering 10,000 by the end of Muhammad II's rule.[6]
Their leader, the shaykh al-ghuzat, held an influential position in the emirate's politics, as did regional ghuzat commanders appointed in major cities such as Guadix, Ronda, and Malaga.[5][7]