We need to start thinking in terms of baardheer- Isiolo trade route, we need to acquire as much land as possible and I believe these people and their borana counterparts would sell us land

5:30 harti and isaaq
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Based wrote:Damn, Somalis are deep in Kenya brah.
Isiolo is like what, a hundred miles from Nairobi?
based this used to be old marexaan land until the British expelled us, its time for our young people in Eastleigh to rediscovered the old land of urmidigBased wrote:Damn, Somalis are deep in Kenya brah.
Isiolo is like what, a hundred miles from Nairobi?
I believe it was a blessing in disguise instead of our southern migration we moved east towards to the coast and once we finish that project, our realm we be united under a commonwealth inshallahgrandpakhalif wrote:warya eagle hawk if it wasn't for british colonial entrapment, sade would have reached the heartland of Rhodesia by now, and conquered it.
The Baltic Germans (German: Deutsch-Balten, or Baltendeutsche) were mostly ethnically German inhabitants of the eastern shore of the Baltic Sea, which today form the countries of Estonia and Latvia. The Baltic German population never made up more than 10% of the total.[1] They formed the social, commercial, political and cultural élite in that region for several centuries. Some of them also took high positions in the military and civilian life of the Russian Empire, particularly in Saint Petersburg.
In 1881, there were approximately 46,700 Germans in Estonia (5.3% of the population).[2] According to the Russian Empire Census of 1897, there were 120,191 Germans in Latvia, or 6.2% of the population.[3]
In the 12th and 13th centuries, Germans, both colonists (see Ostsiedlung) and crusaders, settled in the Baltic.[4] After the Livonian Crusades they quickly came to control all the administrations of government, politics, economics, education and culture of these areas for over 700 years until 1918, despite remaining a minority ethnic group. Whilst the vast majority of urban lands were colonised by traders, rural estates [5] were soon formed by crusaders and their descendants. With the decline of Latin, German quickly became the language of all official documents, commerce and government business for hundreds of years until 1919.