The Banà « Shabrëá¹Â, sometimes called the Banà « al-Ṭawël, were a prominent muwallad family in al-Andalus between the 8th and 10th centuries AD.
The family traced itself back to an indigenous Iberian Christian who converted to Islam not long after the invasion of 711. His name, Sh...h, given by al-ÿUdhrë, cannot be fully reconstructed and is clearly non-Arabic. The first prominent member of the family mentioned by al-ÿUdhrë is Shabrëá¹Â, active on either side of 800. By then they were one of the most powerful families in the Upper March. The seat of Banà « ShabrëṠpower was in Huesca and Barbastro was also under their control. Although initially allied with the Umayyad emirs of Córdoba, by the 10th century they had carved out for themselves an effectively autonomous zone between the Umayyad and Carolingian powers. As a result, they sometimes pursued alliances with Pamplona and the Christian counties of the Pyrenees. They also used non-Arabic names, like Fortà «n. The most prominent member of the family was Muḥammad al-Ṭawël, whose nickname means "long" or "tall".