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IN THE COURTS OF THE NATIONS - DataSpace - Princeton ...

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obligations, including paying debts or compensating victims of murder or theft (discussed at<br />

length in Chapter Five). 35 The use of the bastinado—striking the soles of a person’s feet—is<br />

widely attested in pre-colonial Morocco. 36 Very little is said about fines in the Makhzan<br />

archives; while this does not indicate that Makhzan officials never demanded fines from<br />

convicted criminals, it is difficult to know when and why fines were imposed based on the<br />

sources at hand. 37<br />

In addition to the question of the Makhzan’s idealized or even symbolic functions in the<br />

Moroccan legal system, we must also examine the Makhzan’s effectiveness in carrying out its<br />

perceived role. The sources preserved in the Makhzan archives challenge the view of the legal<br />

system as dominated by corrupt local officials over whom the central government had no<br />

effective control. This image is particularly misleading for Mawlāy Ḥasan’s reign (1873-94),<br />

during which the Makhzan asserted its authority with greater success than during most periods of<br />

Moroccan history. 38 In some ways, Mawlay Ḥasan’s achievements were the culmination of a<br />

process which began decades earlier, one that was in large part a response to European<br />

imperialism in North Africa. France’s invasion of Algeria marked a turning point in the<br />

Makhzan’s approach to centralization, inspiring a number of state reforms aimed at<br />

strengthening the central government (of which the creation of the Ministry of Complaints was<br />

one, as discussed shortly). Mawlāy Ḥasan did not depart dramatically from the efforts or<br />

strategies of his predecessors; rather, he simply had greater success in his attempts to create a<br />

more powerful central government. Many of his achievements were brought to a somewhat<br />

35<br />

For an evocative description of a Moroccan prison, see Meakin, Life in Morocco, 233-5.<br />

36<br />

See, for instance, Arthur Leared, Morocco and the Moors: Being an account of travels, with a general description<br />

of the country and its people (London: S. Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, 1891), 254-5: Meakin, Life in<br />

Morocco, 255-6.<br />

37<br />

On the use of fines see also ibid., 256.<br />

38<br />

Miège, Le Maroc et l’Europe, v. 3, 197-234; Berque, L’intérieur du Maghreb, 479-505; Tozy, Monarchie et islam<br />

politique au Maroc, 52-63.<br />

160

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