In September 1893, Walter Burton Harris, an English journalist and travel writer, left England for an audacious journey to North Africa. His lengthy description of the Berbers of Morocco in his travel narrative <em>Tafilet</em> (1895) is foundational in its ethnography of this indigenous people of North Africa. <br><br>Harris arrived in the port city of Safi in mid- October. After gathering a crew and necessities, he headed into the interior, towards the Atlas Mountains, with a layover in the former capital of Morocco—Marrakesh. Upon departing Marrakesh, Harris noticed a sharp distinction in the way the people dressed. To the best of his knowledge, he had now set foot in the land of the mountaineers, the land of the Berbers. Harris was astonished at how distinctive they were in relation to the Arabs: ‘While the [Arabs] wear the <em>jelab</em>, a hooded garment closed down the front, it is never found amongst the Berbers, whose one desire as to clothing seems to be absolute freedom of limb.’<br><br>Harris thought the Berbers were a subgroup of the Hamites<sup>1</sup> (a defunct, Eurocentric classification). However, it is now known that these subgroups are independent branches of the broader Afro-Asiatic language family. <br><br>During his travels, Harris identified four Berber dialects, spoken in different parts of Morocco: Shelha, Riffia, Susia, and Drauia<sup>2</sup>. Harris observed that his servant, a Riffia speaker, could make himself comprehensible to speakers of the other dialects.<br><br>As for ‘Berber’, unable to trace its origins, Harris suggested it was a Roman term for those who did not speak Latin or Greek.<sup>3</sup> However, the people that Harris called ‘Berber’ have always referred to themselves as the ‘Amazigh’—‘free’ or ‘noble man’.<br><br>