Fihri OsireGlacier
Fihri OsireGlacier
Fihri OsireGlacier
net/publication/339184482
Fatima, al-Fihri
CITATIONS READS
0 198
1 author:
Osire Glacier
Bishop's University
26 PUBLICATIONS 6 CITATIONS
SEE PROFILE
All content following this page was uploaded by Osire Glacier on 17 April 2020.
Fatima al-Fihri (?-880), known also under the names of «Fatima al-Fihriya, » and
«oum al-banine, » (the mother of the kids,) founded the Qarawiyine University in Fez,
Morocco, the oldest operating university in the world.
Al-Fihris migrated from Qayrawan, located in present day Tunisia, to Fez in the
beginning of the 9th century, during the Idrisid reign, the first Muslim state to govern
Morocco. During this period, there was an important migration of people from Qayrawan
to Fez. As a result, the population of Fez grew rapidly, far outpacing the city’s existing
infrastructure. This left many neighborhoods lacking mosques, amongst other things.
When one of the members of the Qayrawan migrant community, Mohammed al-Fihri, an
affluent businessman died, he left an important fortune to his daughters Mariam and
Fatima. Both daughters were highly educated, and therefore well aware of the
community’s needs for public places. Thus, they decided to spend all their inheritance to
remedy the situation. While Mariam built the Andalus Mosque, Fatima vowed to build
Very little is known about Fatima al-Fihri and the life she led. However, if one
takes into consideration the legacy that she left to humanity, one can sense some of her
personal qualities, among which were generosity, intelligence and clairvoyance. Fez was
already one of the most affluent cities in the Muslim world; however, Fatima contributed
to the consolidation of its importance, transforming the city into one of the major cultural,
intellectual and spiritual centers in the Muslim world, as well as the Christian West.
Indeed, once the construction of the mosque had begun, Fatima conceived the project of
building a madrasah, an institution of learning as well. Thus, in 859, without knowing it,
Fatima al-Fihri founded the oldest operating university in the world, the Qarawiyine
1
University, known also under the names of al-Qaraouine, al-Karaouine and al-
Qairawiyin.
The Mosque that Fatima al-Fahri had initially built had a mihrab, four naves, a
small court and a relatively low minaret, however, along the centuries, the mosque got
bigger and gained importance. Since its foundation, the University Qarawiyine has
become one of the major educational and spiritual centers in the Muslim world. In
addition, between the 10th and 12th centuries, it became one of the leading institutions of
learning around the world. As such, it attracted some of the greatest thinkers in the world:
the geographer Charif al-Idrissi (1100-1165), the malekite jurist Abu Madhab al-Fasi, the
mystic poet Moheïddine Ibn al-Arabi (1165-1240), the philosopher, doctor, astronomer,
geometer, musician and poet Avempace (1085-1138), the philosopher, theologian, jurist,
mathematician and doctor Averroes (1126-1198), the astronomer and philosopher Nur
ad-Din al-Betrugi (?, 1204), the historian Lissan-Eddine Ibn al-Khatib (1313,1374), the
historian and philosopher Ibn Khaldoun (1332-1395), and the famous author Hassan al-
Wazzan (1494-1554?).
prominent role through the centuries, not only in the production and exchange of
knowledge, but in unifying the Muslim world around a cultural, educational and spiritual
identity. Numerous scholars taught at the institution as well as in other universities in the
Muslim world. Such luminaries as Abu Imran al-Fassi ( ?, 1038) taught malekite
jurisprudence in al-Qarawiyine, in Tunisia and in Egypt, and Abu Ali al-Kali taught his
2
Similarly, the scholarly work produced in al-Qarawiyine circulated widely in the
Muslim world. Sabiq al-Matmati’s poems were chanted in Damascus court, Abu Bakr
Ibn al-Arabi’s scholarly work (1076-1148) was taught in the Orient, and Ibn Ajroum’s (?,
1302) grammar book was interpreted in Cairo and Baghdad. Furthermore, when the
Merinid sultans traveled to the Orient, they surrounded themselves with scholars from al-
Qarawiyine, who engaged their Oriental peers in debates and exchanges of ideas. A case
in point, during a trip to Tunisia, around 1330, 400 Qarawiyine scholars accompanied the
knowledge between Europe and the Muslim world. This transfer of knowledge took on
various forms through the centuries: first, it was through the arrival of European scholars
who came to study at the Qarawiyine University, such as the scientist Gerbert d’Aurillac,
known under the name of Pope Sylvester II (946-1003), who introduced the Arabic
numerical system in Europe. Another is the Jewish philosopher and theologian, Ibn
Maimun (Maimonides) (1135-1204), who was Abdul Arab Ibn Muwashah’s disciple.
Secondly, it was through the arrival of European scholars who visited the Qarawiyine
University’s professor in Belgium, and the Dutch mathematician and orientalist Jacob
Golius (1596-1667), who brought back to Europe a copy of Ibn Baklarech’s book of
medicine. Lastly, it was through the export of Qarawiyine’s intellectual and scientific
production, particularly studies dealing with logic, medicine and astronomy, that were
translated from Arabic into Latin and other European languages at scientific and
3
Doctor Ibn Zuhr, known under the name of Avenzoar (1073, 1162), the doctor and
astronomer Avempace (1085-1138), the doctor and astronomer Abu Bakr Ibn Toufaïl
As a result, these transfers through the centuries between the Arab World
and Europe meant that the scientific and philosophical work of scholars affiliated with al-
Qarawiyine not only constituted an important foundation of human knowledge, but also
Some historians locate the beginning of the decline of the importance of the
University al-Qarawiyine during the Merinid reign, around the 15th century, era during
which the sultans limited its freedom of speech. During this period, the intellectual and
scientific production in al-Qarawiyine stagnated, while Fez started to lose its importance
Since then, several sultans have sought to restore the importance of the university
through attempted reforms of the Qarawiyine’s educational system. In 1789, the sultan
Sidi Mohamed ben Abdellah renewed the university’s corpus through a series of royal
decrees. Towards the end of the Nineteenth Century, the sultans Hassan I, Moulay
Abdelaziz, and Moulay Youssef (1882-1927) pursued further reforms. From the early to
reformist efforts. Finally, since 1975, to ensure that the Qarawiyine University integrates
the knowledge of its time, its statutes were modified to bring it into accordance with the
same royal decree that governs all other Moroccan universities. Today, the institution of
learning that Fatima al-Fihri founded in 859, offers undergraduate, graduate and doctoral
programs, and produces four periodicals: Revue al-Qaraouiyine, Revue d’al-logha al-
4
arabia-Marrakech, Revue d’ach-charia-Fez, Revue d’ach-charia-Agadir, and Revue
d’Ossouliddine-Tetouan.
Osire Glacier
Sources:
Latifa Lalaoui Mounir, L’Université Qarawiyyin de Fès (9ème-15ème siècle,) PhD
Dissertation, Education Sciences (Paris: Paris V University, 1989).
Hezreen Abdul Rashid, «Fatima al-Fihri, Founder of the Oldest University in the World,
» lasted accessed in January 20, 2010,
http://theurbanmuslimwomen.wordpress.com/2008/08/04/fatima-al-fihri-founder-of-the-
oldest-university-in-the-world/
«Culture and Communication Directorate ISESCO, » last accessed in January 25, 2010,
http://www.isesco.org.ma/english/culture/culturalPolicies/2007/fes/history.php