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Songhai Empire - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Songhai Empire

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Songhai Empire, c. 1500
The Songhai Empire, c. 1500

The Songhai Empire, also known as the Songhay Empire, was a pre-colonial African state centered in eastern Mali. From the early 15th to the late 16th century, Songhai was one of the largest African empires in history. This empire bore the same name as its leading ethnic group, the Songhai. Its capital was the city of Gao, where a small Songhai state had existed since around 9th century. Its base of power was on the bend of the Niger River in present-day Niger and Burkina Faso. 80% of people lived in small family owned farm houses.

Contents

[edit] Origin

Prior to the Songhai Empire, the region had been dominated by the Mali Empire, centered on Timbuktu. Mali grew famous due to their immense riches obtained through trade with the Arab world, and the legendary hajj of Mansa Musa. However by the early 15th century, the Mali Empire was in decline. Disputes over succession weakened the crown and many subjects broke away. The Songhai were one of them, and made the prominent city of Gao their new capital.

[edit] Sunni Dynasty

The first great king of Songhai was Sunni Ali. Ali was a Muslim like the Mali kings before him, but he also kept the traditional animist beliefs as well. He was also an efficient warrior who in the 1460s conquered many of the Songhai's neighboring states, including what remained of the Mali Empire. With his control of critical trade routes and cities such as Timbuktu, Sunni Ali brought great wealth to the Songhai Empire, which at its height would surpass the wealth of the Mali.

[edit] Askiya Dynasty

Sunni Ali was followed by an emperor named Askia Muhammad from the Mandé people, who would preside over Songhai's golden age. Whereas Ali brought conquests, Muhammad brought political reform and revitalization. He set up a complex bureaucracy with separate departments for agriculture, the army, and the treasury, to each of which he appointed supervising officials. A devout Muslim, Muhammad not only completed a pilgrimage to Mecca like Mansa Musa before him, but opened religious schools, constructed mosques, and opened up his court to scholars and poets from throughout the Muslim world.

[edit] Apex

At its greatest extent , the Songhai lands reached far down the Niger river into modern day Nigeria itself, all the way to the Northeast of modern day Mali, and even to a small part of the Atlantic ocean in the West. Songhai would continue to prosper until late into the 16th century, particularly under the long and peaceful rule of Askia Daoud.

[edit] Decline

Following Daoud's death, however, a civil war over succession weakened the Empire, leading Morocco Sultan Ahmad I al-Mansur Saadi to dispatch an invasion force under the Judar Pasha. Judar Pasha was a Spaniard by birth, but had been captured as a baby and educated at the Moroccan court. After a cross-Saharan march, Judar's forces razed the salt mines at Taghaza and moved on Gao; when Askia Ishaq II (r. 1588-1591) met Judar at the 1591 Battle of Tondibi, the Songhai forces were routed by the Moroccan's gunpowder weapons despite vastly superior Songhai numbers. Judar sacked Gao, Timbuktu, and Djenné, destroying the Songhai as a regional power. However, governing such a vast empire across such long distances proved too much for the Moroccans, and they soon relinquished control of the region, letting it splinter into dozens of smaller kingdoms.

[edit] Songhai Economic Structure

Safe economic trade existed throughout the Empire, due to the 200,000 person army stationed in the provinces. A primary economic source was the goldfields of the Niger River. The Songhai empire would trade with these nearby but independent goldfields; salt was so precious in the region that the people of West Africa would sometimes be prepared to trade gold for equal quantities in salt. Eighty percent of the people lived on small, family-owned farms no more than 10 acres large.[citation needed] The trans-Saharan trade consisted primarily of gold, salt, and slaves. The Julla (merchants) would form partnerships, and the state would protect these merchants, and the port cities on Niger. It was a very strong and powerful trading kingdom. They also made crafts for trade, and for religious purposes.[citation needed]

[edit] Songhai Social Structure

Upper classes in society converted to Islam while lower classes continued to follow traditional religions. Sermons emphasize obedience to King. Timbuktu was the educational capital

[edit] Rulers of the Songhai Empire

The Songhai state has existed in one form or another for over a thousand years if one traces its rulers from the first settlement in Gao to its semi-vassal status under the Mali Empire through its continuation in Niger as the Dendi Kingdom. Below are list of the kings according to the period they occupied..

[edit] Za Dynasty in Kukiya

There were 14 Za dynasty rulers in the early period of Songhai history.

  • Alayaman: 690s
  • Zakoi: 700s
  • Takoi a.k.a. Takay :710s
  • Akoi a.k.a. Mata-Kay:720s
  • Ku:730s
  • Ali-Fay: 740s
  • Biyu-Kumoy:750s
  • Biyu: 760's
  • Za-Kuroy: 770's
  • Yama-Karaway: 770's
  • Yama: 780's
  • Yama-Danka-Kiba'u: 780-785
  • Kukuray: 786-789
  • Kinkin: 791-800

[edit] Za Dynasty in Gao

Za Kusoy is the first Songhai ruler to convert to Islam. He also turns the small kingdom of Gao into a Muslim state. Gao begins to attract North African merchants under his reign.

  • Kusoy Muslim Dam: 1000s
  • Han-Kuz-Wanku-Dam: ????-????
  • Biyu-Ki-Kima: ????-????
  • Nintasanay: ????-????
  • Biyu-Kayna-Kinba: ????-????
  • Kayna-Shanyunbu: ????-????
  • Tib: ????-????
  • Yama-Dad: ????-????
  • Fadazu: ????-????
  • 'Ali-Kuru: ????-????
  • Bir-Fuluku: ????-????
  • Yasiboy: ????-????
  • Duru: ????-????
  • Zenku-Baru: ????-????
  • Bisi-Baru: ????-????
  • Bada: ????-????
  • Bisi Baro Ber: 1150s
  • UNKNOWN NUMBERS AND NAMES OF KINGS: 1150s-1275

[edit] Sunni Dynasty in Gao

According to Stride and Ifeka's Peoples and Empires of West Africa, Gao fell under the indirect control of the Mali Empire during the reign of Sundiata. In around 1275, an official of Mali fled to Gao established his own dynasty. The kings of the dynasty were called Sunni or Sonni meaning "replacement" or "liberator" kings. Gao had to be continously attacked to keep the new Sunni dynasty paying tribute, first by Mansa Sakura and later by General Sagmandir under Mansa Musa. By 1420, Songhai was strong enough to exact tribute from Masina. In all, the Sunni dynasty would cound 18 kings.

  • Sunni Ali Kolon: circa 1275
  • Sunni Salman Nari: ????-????
  • Sunni Ibrahim Kabyao: ????-????
  • Sunni Uthman Gifo Kanafa: circa 1320
  • Sunni Bar-Kayna-Ankabi: ????-????
  • Sunni Musa: ????-????
  • Sunni Bakr Zanku: ????-????
  • Sunni Bakr Dala-Buyunbu: ????-????
  • Sunni Mar-Kiray: ????-????
  • Sunni Muhammad Da'u: ????-????
  • Sunni Muhammad Kukiya: circa 1275
  • Sunni Muhammad Fari: ????-????
  • Sunni Karbifu: ????-????
  • Sunni Mar-Fay-Kuli-Jimu: ????-????
  • Sunni Mar-Arkana: ????-????
  • Sunni Mar Arandan: ????-????
  • Sunni Sulayman Dama Dandi: 1410s-1440s
  • Sunni Silman Dandi: 1440s-1464
  • Sunni Ali: 1464-1492
  • Sunni Abu-Bakry Baro: 1492-1493

[edit] Askiya Dynasty in Gao

In 1493, Muhammad Toure the Great deposes the brother of Sunni Ali. The sister of the deposed monarch cries out at Toure the word "Askiya" meaning usurper. Toure adopts the moniker as the title of his new dynasty.

[edit] Askiya Dynasty in Lulami

After the Battle of Tondibi, Moroccan forces destroy the Songhai Empire in Mali. The askiya dynasty survives however and flees to their native Dendi region of Niger. They set up a new capital at Lulami and continue all the traditions of the Songhai Empire.

  • Askia Nuh I: 1591-1598
  • Askia al-Mustafa: 1598-????
  • Askia Muhammad Surku Ilji: ????- ????
  • Askia Harun Dancette: ????-????
  • Askia al-Amin: ????-????
  • Askia Dawud I: ????-????
  • Askia Muhammad: ????-????
  • Askia Dawud II: ????-????
  • Askia Muhammad Bari: ????-????
  • Askia Mar Shindin: ????-????
  • Askia Nuh II: ????-????
  • Askia al-Barak: ????-????
  • Askia al-Hajj: ????-????
  • Askia Ismail: ????-????
  • Askia Dawud III: ????-????
  • Askia Hanga: 1700s-1761
  • Askia Samsu Beri: 1761-1779
  • Askia Hargani: 1779-1793
  • Askia Fodi Mayrumfa: 1793
  • Askia Samsu Keyna: 1793-1798
  • Askia Fodi Mayrumfa: 1798-1805 (2nd time)
  • Askia Tomo: 1805-1823
  • Askia Bassaru Missi Ize: 1823-1842
  • Askia Bumi a.k.a. Askia Kodama Komi: 1842-1845
  • Askia Koyze Baba: 1845-1864
  • Askia Koyze Baba Baki: 1864-1865
  • Askia Wankoy: 1865-1868
  • Askia Bigo Farma: 1868-1882
  • Askia Dauda: 1882-1887
  • Askia Malla: 1887-1901
  • French conquest: 1901

[edit] See also

[edit] Bibliography

  • Cissoko, S. M., Timbouctou et l'empire songhay, Paris 1975.
  • Hunwick, J., Timbuktu and the Songhay Empire, Leiden 2003.
  • Lange, D., Ancient Kingdoms of West Africa, Dettelbach 2004 (the book has a chapter titled "The Mande factor in Gao history", pp. 409-544).

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