Riff languages

Last updated
Riff
Riffian
Geographic
distribution
North Africa
Linguistic classification Afro-Asiatic
Glottolog None
Percent of Tarifit speakers in Morocco by census 2004 Based on data found Here Percent of Tarifit speakers in Morocco by census 2004.png
Percent of Tarifit speakers in Morocco by census 2004 Based on data found Here

In some classifications, the Riff (Rif) languages are a branch of the Zenati Berber languages (Northern Berber), of the Rif area of Morocco, that includes Riffian, one of the major Berber languages.

Blench (2006) considers Riff to be a dialect cluster, consisting of the following varieties: [1]

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RIF or Rif may refer to:

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Gurara (Gourara) is a Zenati Berber language spoken in the Gourara (Tigurarin) region, an archipelago of oases surrounding the town of Timimoun in southwestern Algeria. Ethnologue gives it the generic name Taznatit ("Zenati"), along with Tuwat spoken to its south; however, Blench (2006) classifies Gurara as a dialect of Mzab–Wargla and Tuwat as a dialect of the Riff languages.

The history of Bible translation into the Berber language is fairly recent. The six major Berber language/dialects are spoken by 90% of the total Berber-speaking population: Tashelhit Berber, Kabyle Berber, Central Atlas Tamazight, Riffian Berber, Shawiya Berber, and Tuareg Berber.

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Jebli (Jebelia) is a pre-Hilalian Arabic dialect spoken in the mountains of northwestern Morocco.

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Jaysh al-Rifi, described in 18th-century correspondence with the British as 'the Army of all the People of the Rif', was the name of an influential Moroccan army corps in the 17th and the 18th centuries. The army was formed by Moulay Ismail out of Riffian tribesmen from the eastern Rif. Their rise coincided with the formation of the Black Guard, also by Moulay Ismail. They came to play an important role in the 17th century Moroccan wars against Spanish colonization. Cities like Tangier, Ksar el-Kebir, Mehdya, Asilah were reconquered by the Jaysh al-Rifi. One of its generals was Ali bin Abdallah al-Riffi, a native of Temsamane, who became governor of Tangier, Asilah and Tetouan. His descendants, the al-Rifi family, would govern those towns and most of the Gharb with a large degree of autonomy until 1912.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ait Touzine</span> Riffian tribe in Oriental, Morocco

Ait Touzine is one of the biggest Riffian tribes from the central Rif region in Morocco. Cities such as Midar, Tsaft, Ijermaouas and Kassita belong to this tribe. Many Ait Touzine can also be found in cities such as Imzouren, Al Hoceima and Tangier. The name Ait Touzine in its Berber original form is 'Ait Uzgn' meaning "The Children of the Half" perhaps implying a mixed ancestry.

References

  1. AA list, Blench, ms, 2006