182:. Although they failed to take any of the three towns, the Moors amassed a large quantity of booty from the surrounding countryside. They were on their way back to their own territory, laden down with loot, when they were ambushed by Castilian forces. The Moorish force was massacred, losing some 10,000 men killed or captured. Abu Malik was caught without armour or a horse and hid beside a stream, playing dead. He was killed when a Castilian soldier saw him move and ran him through with a spear.
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and
Algeciras agreed a four-year truce with Alfonso as part of the peace agreement that ended the siege. It did not go into effect as Muhammed IV, who was also a party to the agreement, was assassinated the day after signing it by two Granadan nobles who feared that he had converted to Christianity.
89:
Sultan of
Granada, for assistance against Castile by sending his son and an army to help the Granadans. During 1332, Abu Malik oversaw the transportation of a force of some 7,000 men from Morocco to Algeciras. They marched on the Castilian-held fortified town of Gibraltar the following February and
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The truce expired in 1338, by which time the
Moroccans had suppressed the Tlemcen revolt. Abu Malik returned to his capital at Ronda along with a substantial force – possibly as many as 5,000 cavalry with as many foot soldiers – sent to the Iberian Peninsula by his father. The kingdoms of Castile,
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between June and August 1333 in an effort to regain it. Although the
Castilians inflicted a significant defeat on Abu Malik's forces, killing around 500 men during a failed attempt by the Moors to ambush the Castilian army in the
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north of
Gibraltar, neither side was strong enough to prevail. The Castilians had to withdraw due to political problems at home and resupply difficulties, leaving Abu Malik's forces in continued control of Gibraltar.
132:) revolted against Moroccan rule. Abu Malik, Hassan, Yusuf I and Alfonso XI reached a fresh truce agreement in 1334 and Abu Malik was recalled to Morocco to aid his father against Tlemcen.
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124:. It might have developed into a wider war backed by Abu Malik's father Abu al-Hasan, but any intentions to expand the campaign had to be abandoned when the
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the following year. He was killed by
Castilian forces in 1339 after being ambushed on the way back from a raid against the Castilian-held town of
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Agrait, Nicolás (2012). "The Battle of Salado (1340) Revisited". In Rogers, Clifford; DeVries, Kelly; France, John (eds.).
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Abu Malik Abd al-Wahid's role in Al
Andalus began in 1332 when the newly crowned Abu al-Hasan responded to an appeal from
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Abu Malik responded by mounting an invasion of
Castilian territory, leading a raid against
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in June 1333 and participated in his father's campaign against rebels in the
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joined forces to deal with the renewed
Moorish threat and blockaded the
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before laying siege to Jerez de la Frontera. His forces also attacked
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to obstruct the Marinid build-up. Alfonso XI mounted a series of
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Abu Malik resumed hostilities against Castile, aided by the new
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arrived too late to save the garrison but mounted the
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294:Agrait, Nicolás (2010). Rogers, Clifford (ed.).
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315:Journal of Medieval Military History: Volume X
111:Abu Malik, who by now called himself King of
410:Moroccan military personnel killed in action
16:Son of Marinid sultan of Morocco (died 1339)
334:Rock of Contention: A history of Gibraltar
425:Military history of the Marinid Sultanate
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53:and the Marinids' principal general in
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336:. London: Robert Hale & Company.
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298:. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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420:Moroccan people with disabilities
317:. Woodbridge, UK: Boydell Press.
128:kingdom of Tlemcen (now part of
351:Jackson, William G. F. (1986).
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28:أبو عبدالملك عبدالواحد المريني
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353:The Rock of the Gibraltarians
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136:Invasion of Castile and death
30:) (died 1339) (also known as
390:14th-century Moroccan people
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47:Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn Othman
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385:14th-century Berber people
405:People of the Reconquista
400:Royalty from Fez, Morocco
100:Fourth Siege of Gibraltar
92:Third Siege of Gibraltar
332:Hills, George (1974).
20:Abu Malik Abd al-Wahid
176:Arcos de la Frontera
77:Capture of Gibraltar
71:Jerez de la Frontera
151:Strait of Gibraltar
34:) was a son of the
67:Kingdom of Tlemcen
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380:1339 deaths
279:Agrait 2012
210:Agrait 2010
156:chevauchées
83:Muhammed IV
374:Categories
267:Hills 1974
237:Hills 1974
222:Hills 1974
186:References
96:Alfonso XI
55:Al Andalus
32:Abomelique
165:Archidona
161:Antequera
59:Gibraltar
51:Algeciras
147:Portugal
126:Zayyanid
120:Sultan,
180:Lebrija
130:Algeria
122:Yusuf I
63:Castile
43:Morocco
36:Marinid
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143:Aragon
118:Nasrid
87:Nasrid
85:, the
39:sultan
24:Arabic
113:Ronda
61:from
357:ISBN
338:ISBN
319:ISBN
300:ISBN
178:and
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41:of
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22:(
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