Addoow wrote:james dahl wht do u know about the yacub sultane and the mogadishu kingdom?
thanks
I am afraid I have not heard of the Yacub sultanate, perhaps I know it under a different name?
The Mogadishu kingdom, and the whole east coast actually, has a rather different history. In ancient times the east coast was, like the coast further south, inhabited by the ancestors of the Swahili. However the traditional Bantu agricultural lifestyle is marginal in much of Somalia and the population was very low and centered in the far south. The surviving descendants of these people are the Bajuni.
The Bazrangid Empire of Persia changed this in around 50 BCE when the Bazrangid established the town of Xamar Weyne and Xamar Jijab, which at the time was a Iranian/Bantu settlement like the others further south.
Himyar, after it regained independence from Kush, established another town in Benadir called Shingani after its founder, Shingan Ben Hami Ben Ma'di-Karib, around 650 CE.
After the arrival of the Sabe and Somali around 950 CE, things changed rapidly. The Hawiye founded Marka as their new capital, and Sayid Barkash of Oman founded Barawe with the Tunni in 962 CE. Xamar Weyne and Xamar Jijab became Muslim towns, and Xamar Jijab was abandoned as it was not secure enough from Somali raids.
Xamar Weyne and Shingani became heavily fortified Arab/Persian market towns, and dominated trade with the interior. Eventually they were unified in around 1200 CE under Fakr ad-Din as the Sultanate of Mogadishu.
About 200 years later the Ajuran managed to depose the descendants of Fakr ad-Din and prop up one of their relatives, Muzaffar, essentially making the Ajuran masters of Mogadishu.
Then the Portuguese arrived. The Portuguese conquered Brava and attacked Mogadishu, though they lacked the power to defeat the Ajuran and Muzaffar. Though this period of history is hazy, Portugal attacked Mogadishu many, many times, and the Ajuran Empire fought the Portuguese for 200 years. In the mid 1600s the Ajuran suffered a massive rebellion and were utterly defeated by the Hiraab and Geledi.
The Muzaffar were defeated in Mogadishu and for the first time the Somali ruled Mogadishu, specifically the Hiraab. When Muscat and the Ottoman Empire finally broke the power of Portugal in East Africa in 1750 CE, Mogadishu and the whole east coast became loose vassals of Muscat.
Young Wadani * wrote:Also can you prove that Ahmed Gurey was Somali?
Thanks again.
He wasn't paternally Somali, as his family was of Arabian descent. I've heard that his widow married a Marehan, which is perhaps where the Somali connection comes from.