Emeutes en kabylie

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Tags: Algérie  Assassin  Bouteflika  Emeutes  Kabylie  lepapichkabyl.skyblog.com  noir  Pouvoir  Printemps 

Après que Massinissa Guermah est été assassiné lachement par la gendarmerie, la solidarité kabyle s'est soulevée! Pas de pitié et de remords pour ce pouvoir assassin.

kabylie

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Tags: kabylie 

desciption of kabylie

kabylie matoub

  • Length: 3:0
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  • Author: prixnobel

Tags: bejaia  clip  kabylie  lounes  matoub  mokrane  photo  prixnobel 

un clip sur bejaia

Algerie kabylie

  • Length: 2:25
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  • Author: Safyou

Tags: Alger  Algerie  Bejaia  djazair  djezair  dz  Kabylie  Tizi 

Agérie d'Alger à Tipaza, en passant pa Tizi-OuzOu & Bejaia!

MAXIUMUS Present: la Kabylie

  • Length: 3:8
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Tags: agerie  algeria  algerien  animation  arabe  arabic  beur  clip  france  idir  kabyle  matoub  musique  oran  oriental  rai  usa  video 

Kabylie or Kabylia (Kabyle: Tamurt n leqbayel) is a cultural region in the north of Algeria. It corresponds more or less with the homeland of the Kabyle people. It is part of the Atlas Mountains and is located at the edge of the Mediterranean Sea. Kabylia covers several districts (wilayas) of Algeria: the whole of Tizi Ouzou and Bejaia (Bgayet), most of Bouira (Tubirett) and parts of the wilayas of Bordj Bou Arreridj, Jijel, Boumerdes, and Setif. The Fatimid dynasty of the 10th century originated in Petite Kabylie, where an Ismaili da'i found a receptive audience for his millennialist preaching, and ultimately led the Kutama tribe to conquer first Ifriqiya and then Egypt. After taking over Egypt, the Fatimids themselves lost interest in the Maghreb, which they left to their Berber deputies, the Zirids. The Zirid family soon split, with the Hammadid branch taking over Kabylie as well as much of Algeria, and the Zirids taking modern Tunisia. They had a lasting effect on not only Kabylie's but Algeria's development, refounding towns such as Bejaia (their capital after the abandonment of Qalaat Beni Hammad) and Algiers itself. After the Hammadids' collapse, the coast of Kabylie changed hands regularly, while much of the interior was often effectively unruled. Under the Ottoman Turks, most of Kabylie was inaccessible to the deys, who had to content themselves with occasional incursions and military settlements in some valleys. In the early part of the Ottoman period, the Belkadi family ruled much of Grande Kabylie from their capital of Koukou, now a small village near Tizi-Ouzou; however, their power declined in the 17th century. The area was gradually taken over by the French from 1857, despite vigorous local resistance by the local population led by leaders such as Lalla Fatma n Soumer, continuing as late as Cheikh Mokrani's rebellion in 1871. Much land was confiscated in this period from the more recalcitrant tribes and given to French pied-noirs. Many arrests and deportations were carried out by the French, mainly to New Caledonia. Colonization also resulted in an acceleration of the emigration into other areas of the country and outside of it. Algerian immigrant workers in France organized the first party promoting independence in the 1920s. Messali Hadj, Imache Amar, Si Djilani, and Belkacem Radjef rapidly built a strong following throughout France and Algeria in the 1930s and actively developed militants that became vital to the future of both a fighting and an independent Algeria. During the war of independence(1954-1962), Kabylie was one of the areas that was most affected, because of the importance of the maquis (aided by the mountainous terrain) and French repression. The FLN recruited several of its historical leaders there, including Hocine Aït Ahmed, Abane Ramdane, and Krim Belkacem. Tensions have arisen between Kabylia and the central government on several occasions, initially in 1963, when the FFS party of Hocine Aït Ahmed contested the authority of the single party (FLN). In 1980, several months of demonstrations demanding the officialization of the Berber language, known as the Berber Spring, took place in Kabylie. The politics of identity intensified as the Arabization movement in Algeria gained steam in the 1990s. In 1994--1995, a school boycott occurred, termed the "strike of the school bag." In June and July of 1998, the area blazed up again after the assassination of singer Matoub Lounes and at the time that a law generalizing the use of the Arabic language in all fields went into effect. In the months following April 2001 (called the Black Spring), major riots — together with the emergence of the Arouch, neo-traditional local councils — followed the killing of a young Kabyle (Masinissa Guermah) by gendarmes, and gradually died down only after forcing some concessions from the President, Abdelaziz Bouteflika. Since 23 March 2007, the Military of Algeria has conducted extensive searches in the Kabylie region in search of members of the GSPC. Two major roads, between Béjaïa and Amizour and between El-Kseur and Bouira, have been partially closed. The bombings in Alger on 11 April 2007 rendered this search all the more urgent, as the GSPC has recently become the Maghrebin arm of the Al-Qaida Network.

Beautés de la Kabylie 7

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Tags: 7  Beautés  de  Kabylie  la 

Beautés de la Kabylie 7

Takfarinas "Inid Ih"Clip de Kabylie(années 90)

  • Length: 5:21
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  • Author: djamkabyle

Tags: ALGERIE  BAROUDI  KABYLE  KABYLIE  TAKFARINAS 

Le clip "Inid Ih" de Takfarinas ,extrait de l'album:"Tajmilt Newen"de 1995.Avec Arezki Baroudi a la batterie. _

Ratissage en Kabylie

  • Length: 1:30
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  • Author: drwatsonaaf

Tags: Algeria  algerian  algerie  algerien  army  forces  gspc  islamiste  kabylie  military  specials  terror  terroriste  war 

video d'un ratissage en Kabylie

Mbs & Alilou --- www.la-kabylie.com --- musique kabyle + rap

  • Length: 5:29
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  • Author: zed0016

Tags: algerie  alilou  amazigh  bejaia  berbere  cecilia  entv  kabyle  kabylie  mbs  music  musique  ouzou  tizi 

Le groupe de rap MBS (le micro brise le silence) en featuring avec le chanteur kabyle alilou.

MAXIUMUS Present: Kabylie, Algeria

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Tags: ait  alger  algeriaekabyle  amazigh  arabe  berber  beur  canada  france  imazighen  menguelette  music  musique  ouzou  rai  tizi  usa 

La Kabylie est une région montagneuse (entourée de plaines et par la mer) du nord de l'Algérie. Ses habitants l'appellent Tamurt n Leqbayel (« La terre des Kabyles »). Le pays des montagnes représente le Djurdjura occidental que les anciens appelaient Aït Wadda (« Ceux d'en-bas ») et le Djurdjura oriental qu'ils appelaient Aït Oufella (« Ceux d'en-haut »). La Kabylie possède une côte qui s'étend sur plusieurs centaines de kilomètres. Elle fait partie de l'Atlas et se situe donc en bordure de la Méditerranée qui lui fournit ce que l'on appelle « la corniche kabyle », située entre Bejaïa et Jijel, dans ce qui était appelé durant, la période coloniale, la « Petite Kabylie ». Pour l'historien Ibn Khaldoun, elle représente la portion du territoire qui s'appelait la province de Bejaïa ; ce que les anciens kabyles appelaient Tamawya taqbaylit (ou Tamawya), « fédération kabyle ». La Kabylie couvre plusieurs circonscriptions ou wilayas de l'Algérie : Tizi Ouzou et Béjaïa (Bgayet, anciennement Bougie), la majeur partie de Bouira (Tubiret) et Bordj Bou Arreridj, et une partie des wilayas de Sétif, Boumerdes, Jijel et de M'Sila (Tamsilt). Suite à l'insurrection de 1871, la France coloniale décida de diviser cette province en deux : la Grande et la Petite Kabylie, également appelées Haute et Basse Kabylie. Ces deux Kabylies faisaient partie de l'ancien département d'Alger pour la Grande et du département de Constantine pour la Petite Kabylie. Béjaïa, la capitale de la petite Kabylie, est décrite par des historiens tels que Charles-André Julien ou Ibn Khaldoun. Les Kabyles l'appellent « Bgayet n Lejdud » (« Bougie des Ancêtres »). Tizi-Ouzou, la capitale de la Grande appelé autrefois « le village », existe depuis l'époque coloniale. La Grande Kabylie, ou Haute Kabylie, va de Thenia jusqu'à Tigzirt. Elle représentait le territoire situé au nord du Djurdjura. Une petite portion de l'ancienne province de Bougie, la Petite Kabylie, ou Basse Kabylie, s'étendait de Bouira en englobant le Djurdjura oriental, l'Akfadou jusqu'à Bougie et s'étendait d'ouest en est, et de la Méditerranée en passant par la vallée de la Soummam du nord au sud, soit plus de 500 km. Elle comprenait ainsi les confédérations des Bibans et celle des Babors jusqu'a Collo. Trois grands massifs montagneux occupent la plus grande partie de la région : * Au Nord, la chaîne de la Kabylie maritime, culminant aux Aït Djennad (mont Tamgout 1278 m) * Au Sud, le Djurdjura, dominant la vallée de la Soummam, culminant au Lalla-Khadîdja (mont Tamgout Aâlayen 2308 m) * Entre les deux, le massif Agawa, le plus densément peuplé, avec 800 m d'altitude moyenne. C'est là où se trouve la plus grande ville de la Grande Kabylie, Tizi Ouzou. Larbaa Nath Irathen (anciennement « Fort-National »), qui compte 28 000 habitants en 2001, est le centre urbain le plus élevé de la région.

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