Ahmed el Inglizi
{{Short description|English-Moroccan architect (fl. 1770)}}
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File:Essaouira harbour fortifications 1770.jpg were partly built by Ahmed El Alj, also known as Ahmed el Inglizi, in 1770, as described in the sculptured inscription in Arabic (right).]]
Image:Rabat, Les Oudayas.jpg in Rabat was restored by Ahmed el Inglizi.]]
Ahmed el Inglizi ("Ahmed the English"), also Ahmed El Alj or Ahmed Laalaj ("Ahmed the Renegade"), was an English renegade architect and engineer who worked for the Sultan of Morocco Mohammed ben Abdallah in the 18th century. As described by his surname "El Alj", Ahmed el Inglizi was a "renegade", i.e. he had abandoned Christianity for Islam. He seems to have joined with the pirates known as the Salé Rovers."Ahmed el Inglizi- one of the number of European pirates who joined up with the Salle Rovers" in The real guide, Morocco by Mark Ellingham, Shaun McVeigh Prentice Hall, p.189 {{ISBN|978-0-13-783697-0}}.
He is known for building parts of Essaouira (particularly the harbour entrance), after Frenchman Théodore Cornut had designed and built the city itself, particularly the kasbah, corresponding to the Royal quarters and the buildings for Christian merchants and diplomats.Of Essaouira: "He employed European architects to design it, one a Frenchman said to be his prisoner, and the other an Englishman, converted to Islam and known as Ahmed el-Inglizi— otherwise Ahmed the Englishman." in Morocco Dorothy Hales Gary, Baron Patrick Balfour Kinross, Viking Press, 1971 p. 35.
Ahmed el Inglizi is also known to have worked for the king in Rabat, where he restored the kasbah mosque, an old building dating to around 1150.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t4hmPoi_CJ4C&pg=PA171|title=Maverick Guide to Morocco|last=Susan|first=Searight|year=1999 |publisher=Pelican Publishing|isbn=9781455608645|language=en}} He was also responsible for several of the fortifications built in Rabat."El Inglizi was responsible, too, for several of the forts built below and around the plateforme" in The real guide, Morocco by Mark Ellingham, Shaun McVeigh Prentice Hall, p.189 {{ISBN|978-0-13-783697-0}}.
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Category:English former Christians
Category:Moroccan former Christians
Category:18th-century Moroccan people
Category:18th-century English architects
Category:Converts from Anglicanism
Category:Converts to Islam from Protestantism
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