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{{Short description|1275–1415 Muslim state in the Horn of Africa}} | |||
{{about|the sultanate in the Horn of Africa|the historic region|Ifat (historical region)}} | |||
{{Infobox Former Country | {{Infobox Former Country | ||
|native_name = | | native_name = {{native name|ar|سلطنة أوفات}} | ||
|conventional_long_name = Sultanate of Ifat | | conventional_long_name = Sultanate of Ifat | ||
|common_name = Ifat Sultanate | | common_name = Ifat Sultanate | ||
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| year_start = 1275 | ||
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| year_end = 1403 | ||
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| p1 = Makhzumi dynasty | ||
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| s1 = Adal Sultanate | ||
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| image_map = The_Sultanate_of_Ifat.png | ||
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| image_map_caption = The Ifat Sultanate in the 14th century. | ||
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| capital = *] (1275–1387) | ||
*] (1387–1403) | |||
|s1 = Adal Sultanate | |||
| official_languages = ] | |||
|flag_s1 = Flag of Adal.png | |||
| common_languages = {{unbulleted list|]|]/]|]<ref name=SRAR>{{cite book |last1=Endris |first1=Mohammed |title=Self-Rule And Representation In Amhara National Regional State: A Case Study On Argoba Nationality |publisher=Addis Ababa University |page=48 |url=http://213.55.95.56/bitstream/handle/123456789/17514/Mohammed%20Dejen.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y&fbclid=IwAR3ecBKuNYaBzF1oZq4hxrjnWEYZmxpZYwANyEBKePOId7AOYmGnmunPJE0}}</ref>|]}} | |||
|date_start = | |||
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| government_type = ] | ||
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| leader1 = ] | ||
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| leader2 = ] | ||
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| year_leader1 = 1185–1228 (first) | ||
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| year_leader2 = 1376–1403 (last) | ||
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| title_leader = ] | ||
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| religion = {{Plainlist| | ||
* ] (])}} | |||
|image_map = Ifat.png | |||
| currency = ] and ]<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Zakeria |first1=Ahmed |title=Harari Coins: A Preliminary Survey |journal=Journal of Ethiopian Studies |year=1991 |volume=24 |pages=23–46 |publisher=Institute of Ethiopian Studies |jstor=41965992 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41965992}}</ref> | |||
|image_map_caption = The Ifat Sultanate in the 14th century. | |||
| today = {{unbulleted list|]|]|] {{small|('']'')}}<br /> '''∟''' ] {{small|('']'')}}}} | |||
|national_motto = | |||
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| demonym = | ||
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| area_km2 = 120,000 | ||
| area_rank = | |||
|common_languages = Official: ], ] <br /> Minority: ] | |||
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| GDP_PPP = | ||
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| GDP_PPP_year = | ||
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| HDI = | ||
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| HDI_year = | ||
|stat_area4 = | |||
|population_density3 = | |||
|religion = ] ] | |||
|currency = | |||
|today = {{flag|Somalia}}<br />{{flag|Djibouti}}<br />{{flag|Ethiopia}} | |||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Sultanate of Ifat''', known as '''Wafāt''' or '''Awfāt''' in Arabic texts,<ref>{{cite book |last=Trimingham |first=J. Spencer |author-link= J. Spencer Trimingham |date=2013 |orig-date= 1952|title=Islam in Ethiopia |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UfrcAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA58 |location=London |publisher=Routledge |page=58 |isbn=9781136970221}}</ref> or the '''Kingdom of Zeila'''<ref>{{Cite book |last=E. Cerulli |title=Islam Yesterday and Today |pages=344}}</ref> was a medieval ] ] state in the eastern regions of the ] between the late 13th century and early 15th century.<ref name="Encyclopedia Britannica 1998">{{cite book | title=Ifat: historical state | publisher=Encyclopedia Britannica | year=1998 |author= ((The Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica)) | url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Ifat | access-date=2017-01-16}}</ref><ref>J. Gordon Melton and Martin Baumann, Religions of the World, Second Edition: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, page 2663</ref><ref>Asafa Jalata, State Crises, Globalisation, And National Movements In North-east Africa page 3-4</ref> It was formed in present-day ] around eastern ] in ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ullendorff |first1=Edward |title=The Glorious Victories of 'Amda Ṣeyon, King of Ethiopia |journal=Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London |year=1966 |volume=29 |issue=3 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=601 |doi=10.1017/S0041977X00073432 |jstor=611476 |s2cid=162414707 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/611476}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Østebø |first1=Terje |title=Localising Salafism Religious Change Among Oromo Muslims in Bale, Ethiopia |date=30 September 2011 |publisher=BRILL |pages=56–57 |isbn=978-9004184787 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BOn3ykfBN-0C&dq=north-eastern+foothills+of+the+shoan+plateau&pg=PA57}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Pankhurst |first1=Richard |title=The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History from Ancient Times to the End of the 18th Century |year=1997 |publisher=The Red Sea Press |page=39 |isbn=9780932415196 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zpYBD3bzW1wC&dq=Ifat%2C+known+to+the+early+arab+geographers+as+wifat+or+awfat%2C+was+situated+to+the+north-east+of&pg=PA39}}</ref> Led by the ], the polity stretched from ] to the port city of ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Huntingford |first1=G.W.B |title=Arabic Inscriptions in Southern Ethiopia |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/antiquity/article/abs/arabic-inscriptions-in-southern-ethiopia/2AC37D8288BABE8F89AEF2795D9DB814 |journal=Antiquity |date=1955 |volume=29 |issue=116 |pages=230–233 |publisher=Cambridge University Press|doi=10.1017/S0003598X00021955 }}</ref> The kingdom ruled over parts of what are now ], ], ], ]. | |||
The '''Sultanate of Ifat''' was a medieval ] ] in the ].<ref> </ref><ref>J. Gordon Melton and Martin Baumann, Religions of the World, Second Edition: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, page 2663</ref><ref>Asafa Jalata, State Crises, Globalisation, And National Movements In North-east Africa page 3-4</ref><ref>Encyclopedia of Africa south of the Sahara, page 62</ref> Led by the ], it was centered in ancient city of ] and ]. The Kingdom ruled over parts of what are now eastern ], ] and northern ]. | |||
==Location== | ==Location== | ||
The earliest account of Ifat Sultanate comes from ]. He says that the region is called Jabarta and its capital is called Wafāt. Its population, who are Muslim, are ethnically mixed. The city sat upon an elevated place in a valley next to a river. He calculates the astronomical position of the city being 8 latitude and 57 longitude according to Arab computation, which is located on the eastern edge of ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Trimmingham |first1=John Spencer |title=Islam in Ethiopia |date=1952 |publisher=Frank Cass & Company |isbn=9780714617312 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ}}</ref> Ifat Sultanate was also alternatively known as the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Cerulli |first1=Enrico |title=Islam yesterday and today |page=344 |url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1g-LkxaXWZopjLCFEuWm8wnly2lh4WvFp/view}}</ref> | |||
The historian ] records that Ifat was situated near the ] coast, and states its size as 15 days travel by 20 days travel. Its army numbered 15,000 horsemen and 20,000 foot soldiers. Al-Umari also credits it with seven "mother cities": Belqulzar, Kuljura, Shimi, ], ], Jamme and Laboo.<ref>G.W.B. Huntingford, ''The Glorious Victories of Ameda Seyon, King of Ethiopia'' (Oxford: University Press, 1965), p. 20.</ref> Professor Taddesse Tamrat believes Ifat's borders included ], ] and ]. This gave the polity control of the trade route inland from Zeila, making it a major commercial power.<ref>Taddesse Tamrat, ''Church and State in Ethiopia (1270–1527)'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972), p. 84.</ref> While reporting that its center was "a place called Walalah, probably the modern Wäläle south of Šäno in the Ěnkwoy valley, about 50 miles ENE of ]", G.W.B. Huntingford offers a more tangible description of Ifat's borders (although he admits they are "provisional"), stating that its southern and eastern boundaries were along the ], the western frontier a line drawn between ] towards the ] river east of ] (which it shared with ]), and the northern boundary along the ] and ] rivers.<ref>G.W.B. Huntingford, ''The historical geography of Ethiopia from the first century AD to 1704'', (Oxford University Press: 1989), p. 76</ref> | |||
According to ], Ifat was a state close to the ] coast, 15 days by 20 days "normal traveling time". The state had a river (]), was well peopled and had an army of 20,000 soldiers and 15,000 horsemen. ] mentioned seven cities in Ifat: ], ], Shimi, ], ], Jamme and Laboo.<ref>G.W.B. Huntingford, ''The Glorious Victories of Ameda Seyon, King of Ethiopia'' (Oxford: University Press, 1965), p. 20.</ref> While reporting that its center was "a place called Walalah, probably the modern Wäläle south of Šäno in the Ěnkwoy valley, about 50 miles ENE of ]", ] "provisionally" estimated its southern and eastern boundaries were along the ], the western frontier a line drawn between ] towards the ] east of ] (which it shared with ]), and the northern boundary along the ] and ] rivers.<ref>G.W.B. Huntingford, ''The historical geography of Ethiopia from the first century AD to 1704'', (Oxford University Press: 1989), p. 76</ref> The al-Umari territorial account of Ifat Sultanate implies a size of 300 kilometers by 400 kilometers, which may be an exaggeration, according to ].<ref>Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. p. 46</ref> | |||
==History== | |||
According to Taddesse Tamrat, Ifat's borders included ], ] and ]. The port of Zeila provided an entry point for trade and served as the most important entry point for Islam into Ethiopian lands. Ifat rulers controlled Zeila, and it was an important commercial and religious base for them.<ref>Taddesse Tamrat, ''Church and State in Ethiopia (1270–1527)'' (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972), p. 83-84.</ref> | |||
It was the northernmost of several Muslim states in the Horn of Africa, acting as a buffer between Christian kingdom and the Muslim states along the coastal regions.<ref name="Encyclopedia Britannica 1998"/> Five Ifat cities in eastern ]; Asbäri, Nora, Mäsal, Rassa Guba, and Beri-Ifat now mostly in ruins dating back to the fourteenth century have been located.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Chekroun |first1=Amélie |title=The Sultanates of Medieval Ethiopia |publisher=Brill |page=77 |url=https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-02505420/document}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hirsch |first1=Bertrand |title=Muslim Historical Spaces in Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa: A Reassessment |year=2004 |issue=1 |journal=Northeast African Studies |volume=11 |page=34 |jstor=41960544 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41960544}}</ref> The local ] credited ] for building these towns.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Fauvelle |first1=François-Xavier |title=The Awfāt Sultanate, its capital and the Walasmaʿ necropolis |publisher=French Institute of Oriental Archeology |url=https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=fr&u=https://journals.openedition.org/anisl/4054%3Flang%3Den&prev=search}}</ref> The dwellings resemble Argobba or ] historical building designs.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hirsch |first1=Bertrand |title=Reconnaissance de trois villes musulmanes de l'époque médiévale dans l'Ifat |journal=Annales d'Éthiopie |volume=27 |year=2006 |page=134 |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/ethio_0066-2127_2006_num_22_1_1486}}</ref> | |||
== Founding of Ifat == | |||
{{Main|Walashma dynasty|}} | |||
] was introduced to the Horn region early on from the ], shortly after the ].<ref>Hamza Dudgeon, “The Hanafis,” in the ''Routledge Handbook of Islamic Ritual and Practice'', ed. Oliver Leaman (New York: Routledge, 2022), 77</ref><ref>Samīra al-Zāyid, ''al-Jāmiʿ fī al-Sīra al-Nabawiyya'', 6 vols.,1st ed. (N.P: al-Maṭbaʿa al-ʿIlmiyya, 1995), 1:415-418, 422, 461-477.</ref> Zeila's two-] mosque ] dates to about the 7th century, and is one of the oldest ] in Africa.<ref name="Btgpb">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M6NI2FejIuwC|title=Somaliland|last=Briggs|first=Phillip|publisher=Bradt Travel Guides|year=2012|isbn=978-1841623719|page=7}}</ref> In the late 9th century, ] wrote that Muslims were living along the northern Somali seaboard.<ref name="Encyamer">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OP5LAAAAMAAJ|title=Encyclopedia Americana, Volume 25|publisher=Americana Corporation|year=1965|pages=255}}</ref><ref name="Lewispohoa">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Cd0mAQAAMAAJ|title=Peoples of the Horn of Africa: Somali, Afar and Saho|last=Lewis|first=I.M.|publisher=International African Institute|year=1955|pages=140}}</ref> This claim, however, has been called suprious and more complicated by contemporary Somali historians, who claim Muslim emmigration to Zeila unlikely, as Dr. ] reminds us that “Zayla, the center of the closest Somali urban territory ] ], is estimated to be more than 1000 km by land and even further by sea.”<ref>Abdurahman Abdullahi Baadiyow, ''Making Sense of Somali History'', 2 vols. (London: Adonis & Abbey, 2017), 1:49-50, 55</ref><ref> Ali Abdirahman Hersi, “The Arab Factor in Somali History: The Origins and the Development of Arab Enterprise and Cultural Influences in the Somali Peninsula” (PhD diss., University of California Los Angeles, 1977), 75-79</ref><ref>Cabdulqaadir Salaad Dhoorre, ''Soomaaliya iyo Taariikhdeedii Hore'' (n.p:n.d), 63, 67</ref><ref>Jaamac Maxamed Qaalib, ''Taariikhda Soomalida: Xogogaalnimo u Badah'' (Mogadishu: Hud Hud Books, 2018), 51</ref><ref>Robrecht Deforche, “Stabilization and Common Identity: Reflections on the Islamic Courts Union and Al-Itihaad,” ''Bildhaan: An International Journal of Somali Studies'': Vol. 13 (2014): 110</ref> | |||
The ] are regarded by scholars as the founders of the Ifat Sultanate.<ref name=SRAR /><ref>{{cite thesis |last1=Tesfaye |first1=Frehiwot |title=Food Security And Peasants' Survival Strategy: A Study Of A Village In Northern Shewa, Ethiopia |date=1998 |publisher=University of Toronto |page=143 |url=https://tspace.library.utoronto.ca/handle/1807/16013|type=Thesis }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=History of Harar |page=47 |url=https://everythingharar.com/files/History_of_Harar_and_Harari-HNL.pdf}}</ref> According to the Egyptian historian Al-Maqrizi, the ruling class of the Ifat Sultanate were ] from the ], while the population mostly consisted of Muslims.<ref name="Islam in Ethiopia">{{cite book |last1=Trimingham |first1=John |title=Islam in Ethiopia |year=1952 |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=58 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B4NHAQAAIAAJ&q=hobat+adal}}</ref> | |||
Ifat first emerged when Umar ibn Dunya-huz, later to be known as Sultan ], carved out his own kingdom and conquered the ] located in northern ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Østebø |first1=Terje |title=Localising Salafism: Religious Change Among Oromo Muslims in Bale, Ethiopia |date=30 September 2011 |publisher=BRILL |page=56 |isbn=978-9004184787 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BOn3ykfBN-0C&dq=showa+sultanate+hararge&pg=PA56}}</ref> In 1288 Sultan Wali Asma successfully imposed his rule on ], ] and other Muslim states in the region.<ref name="Islam in Ethiopia"/> Taddesse Tamrat explains Sultan Walashma's military acts as an effort to consolidate the Muslim territories in the Horn of Africa in much the same way as Emperor ] was attempting to consolidate the Christian territories in the highlands during the same period.<ref>Taddesse Tamrat, ''Church and State'', p. 125</ref> | |||
== History == | |||
According to the Arab historian Maqrizi, known for his pro-Islamic version of history written around 1435, Sultan ] was the first ruler of Ifat.<ref>Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. p. 48</ref> Umar died around 1275, stated Maqrizi, and was succeeded by "four or five sons" with each ruling a short period.<ref name="D22">Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. p. 40-45.</ref> Finally, Sabr ad-Din I came to power and he ruled Ifat till the turn of the century. He was succeeded by Sultan Ali, according to Maqrizi, who was the first ruler to engage with a warfare against the ].<ref>{{Cite book|title=Effects of 16th Century Upheavals on the Horn|last=Riraash|first=Mohamed Abdullahi|publisher=Service D'Information Djibouti|location=Djibouti|pages=251|quote=We can attribute its success (The Walashma dynasty), longevity and influence, to the fact that the founders of the dynasty of Walasma were native of the area.}}</ref> Sultan Ali, however soon submitted back to Ethiopian rule, because according to Maqrizi he lacked popular support. This allowed Emperor ] to mount a campaign further west along the coast, near the vicinity of ].<ref name="D22"/> | |||
Before the establishment of Ifat eastern Ethiopia was ruled by the ], Dawaro, Sawans, Bali, and ].<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DPwOsOcNy5YC&dq=Sultanate+of+Ifat&pg=PR27|title=Mukhtar Haji|isbn=9780810866041|last1=Mukhtar|first1=Mohamed Haji|date=25 February 2003|publisher=Scarecrow Press }}</ref> These states were incorporated into the Ifat Sultanate however they managed to maintain a source of independence after Ifat collapsed. When Ifat was abolished by the Ethiopian Empire these states were also invaded, however Fatagar still managed to stay under the control of Ifat.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dR5yCmUejWEC&dq=hargaya+ethiopia&pg=PA184|title=Muslim society's in Africa|isbn=9780253007971|last1=Loimeier|first1=Roman|date=5 June 2013|publisher=Indiana University Press }}</ref> | |||
=== Conflict with Abyssinia === | |||
In 1320 a conflict between the Christian monarch and Muslim Ifat leaders began. The conflict was precipitated by ] of ].<ref name="D2-2">Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. p. 40.</ref> The Mamluk ruler Al-Nasir Muhammad was persecuting ] and destroying Coptic churches. The Ethiopian Emperor ] sent an envoy with a warning to the Mamluk ruler that if he did not stop the persecution of Christians in Egypt, he would retaliate against Muslims under his rule and would starve the peoples of Egypt by diverting the course of the Nile.<ref name="D22"/><ref name="F12">J. Spencer Trimingham, (Oxford: Geoffrey Cumberlege for the University Press, 1952), p. 70-71.</ref> According to Pankhurst, of the two threats, the diversion of Nile was an idle threat and the Egyptian sultan dismissed it because he likely realized this to be so. The fear that the Ethiopians might tamper with the Nile, states Pankhurst, was nevertheless to remain with Egyptians for many centuries.<ref name="D22"/> | |||
As a result of the threats and the dispute between Amda Seyon and Al Nasr, the Sultan of Ifat, ] responded,<ref name="D22"/> initiating a definite war of aggression.<ref name="F12"/> He invaded the Christian Abyssinian territory in the Amhara kingdom, burnt churches and forced ] among Christians.<ref name="F12"/> He also seized and imprisoned the envoy sent by the Emperor on his way back from Cairo. Haqq ad-Din tried to convert the envoy, killing him when this failed.<ref name="F12"/> In response, the irate Emperor raided the inhabitants of all the land of Shewa, much of it inhabited by Muslims at that time, and other districts of Ifat Sultanate.<ref name="D2-2-12">Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. pp. 41</ref> The historical records of that time, depending on which side wrote the history, indicate a series of defeat, destruction and burning of towns of the opposite side.<ref name="D22"/> | |||
According to the Christian chronicles, the son of the Sultan Haqq ad-Din Dadader Haqq ad-Din who was the leader of the Midra Zega and ] people who were then Muslims, fought the emperor in the ] in an area somewhere south of ] in modern ]. Dadader forces were able to surround the emperor ], who nevertheless succeeded in defeating them and killed the commander Dadader in the battle .<ref name="D2-2-12"/><ref name="D22"/><ref name="F12"/> | |||
=== Ifat rebellion === | |||
] rebellion was not an attempt to achieve independence, but to become emperor of a Muslim Ethiopia. Amda Seyon's royal chronicle states that Sabr ad-Din proclaimed: | |||
: "I wish to be King of all Ethiopia; I will rule the Christians according to their law and I will destroy their churches...I will nominate governors in all the provinces of Ethiopia, as does the King of ](Ethiopia)...I will transform the churches into mosques. I will subjugate and convert the King of the Christians to my religion, I will make him a provincial governor, and if he refuses to be converted I will hand him over to one of the shepherds, called Warjeke ]], that he may be made a keeper of camels. As for the Queen ], his wife, I will employ her to grind corn. I will make my residence at Marade ]], the capital of his kingdom.<ref>Pankhurst, Richard K.P. ''The Ethiopian Royal Chronicles.'' Addis Ababa: Oxford University Press, Inc., 1967, p. 15.</ref> | |||
In fact, after his first incursion, Sabr ad-Din appointed governors for nearby and neighboring provinces such as ] and Alamalé, as well as far-off provinces in the north like ], ], ], ], ], and ]. He also threatened to plant '']'' at the capital, a stimulant used by Muslims but forbidden to ].<ref>Pankhurst, ''Borderlands'', p. 42.</ref> | |||
Sabr ad-Din's rebellion in early 1332, with its religious support and ambitious goals, was therefore seen as a '']'' rather than an attempt at independence, and it was consequently immediately joined by the nearby Muslim province of Dewaro (the first known mention of the province), under the governor Haydera, and the western province of ] under the vassal local ruler Ameno. Sabr ad-Din divided his troops into three parts, sending a division north-westwards to attack ], one northwards to attack Angot, and another, under his personal command, westward to take ].<ref name="PankBord43">Pankhurst, ''Borderlands'', p. 43.</ref> | |||
Amda Seyon subsequently mobilized his soldiers to meet the threat, endowing them with gifts of gold, silver, and lavish clothing – so much so that the chronicler explains that "in his reign gold and silver abounded like stones and fine clothes were as common as the leaves of the trees or the grass in the fields."<ref>Pankhurst, ''Ethiopian Royal Chronicles'', p. 16.</ref> Despite the extravagance he bestowed on his men, many chose not to fight due to Ifat's inhospitable mountainous and arid terrain and the complete absence of roads. Nevertheless, they advanced on ], and an attachment was able to find the rebellious governor and put him to flight. Once the remainder of ] army arrived, they destroyed the capital of Ifat and killed many soldiers. But Sabr ad-Din once again escaped. The Ethiopian forces then grouped together for a final attack, destroying one of his camps, killing many and taking the rest as slaves as well as looting it of its gold, silver, and its "fine clothes and jewels without number."<ref name="PankBord43" /> | |||
Sabr ad-Din subsequently sued for peace, appealing to Queen Jan Mengesha, who refused his peace offer and expressed Amda Seyon's determination not to return to his capital until he had searched Sabr ad-Din out. Upon hearing this, Sabr ad-Din realized that his rebellion futile and surrendered himself to Amda Seyon's camp.<ref name="PankBord43" /> Amda Seyon's courtiers demanded that Sabr ad-Din be executed, but he instead granted him relative clemency and had the rebellious governor imprisoned. Amda Seyon then appointed the governor's brother, ], as his successor in Ifat. Just as the Ifat rebellion had been quelled, however, the neighboring states of Adal and ], just north of Ifat rose against the Emperor. Amda Seyon soon also put down this rebellion.<ref>Pankhurst, ''Borderlands'', p. 44.</ref> | |||
=== After the era of Amda Seyon I === | |||
The Muslim rulers of Ifat continued their campaign against the Christian Emperor. His son, Emperor Sayfa Arad appointed Ahmad, also known as Harb Arad ibn Ali as the sultan of Ifat, and put Ali's father and relatives in prison.<ref name="rp4950" /> Sayfa Arad was close to Ahmad and supported his rule, however, Ahmad was killed in an Ifat uprising. Ahmad's son ] then came to power in Ifat. Internal ruling family struggle in Ifat expelled grandfather Ali's son named Mola Asfah who gathered forces and attacked Ahmad's son. A series of battles affirmed Sultan Haqq ad-Din II position of power.<ref name="rp4950" /> In the fourteenth century Haqq ad-Din II transferred Ifat's capital to the ] plateau thus he is regarded by some to be the true founder of the ].<ref>{{cite book |title=The Cambridge History of Africa |year=1975 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=150 |isbn=9780521209816 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GWjxR61xAe0C&dq=haqedin%27s+transfer+of+his+political+centre+from+Ifat+to+the+Harar+area&pg=PA150}}</ref> The new Sultan moved away from previous capital of Ifat, to the city of ].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pankhurst |first=Richard |year=1982 |title=History Of Ethiopian Towns |page=56 |publisher=Steiner |isbn=9783515032049 }}</ref> From there, he ceaselessly fought with the Emperor, in over twenty battles through 1370, according to Maqrizi's chronicle written in 1435. The Ifat Sultan Haqq ad-Din II died in a battle in 1376.<ref name="rp4950">Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. pp. 49–50</ref> | |||
According to historian ], the continued warfare between Ifat Sultanate and the Ethiopian Emperor was a part of the larger geopolitical conflict, where Egypt had arrested Coptic Church's Patriarch Marcos in 1352. This arrest led to retaliatory arrest and imprisonment of all Egyptian merchants in Ethiopia. In 1361, the Egyptian Sultan al-Malik al-Salih released the Patriarch and then sought amicable relations with Ethiopian Emperor. The actions of the Ifat Sultanate and Muslim kingdoms in the Horn of Africa, states Abir, were linked to the Muslim-Christian conflicts between Egypt and Ethiopia.<ref name="Abir2013p25">{{cite book|author=Mordechai Abir|title=Ethiopia and the Red Sea: The Rise and Decline of the Solomonic Dynasty and Muslim European Rivalry in the Region |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7fArBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA25 |year=2013|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-28090-0|pages=25–27}}</ref> | |||
===The end of Ifat Sultanate=== | |||
In 1376, Sultan ], also called Sa'ad ad-Din II, succeeded his brother and came to power, who continued to attack the Abyssinian Christian army. He attacked regional chiefs such as at Zalan and Hadeya, who supported the Emperor.<ref name=rp51>Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. p. 50–52</ref> According to Mordechai Abir, Sa'ad ad-Din II raids against the Ethiopian empire were largely hit-and-run type, which hardened the resolve of the Christian ruler to end the Muslim rule in their east.<ref name="Abir2013p25"/> In the early 15th century, the Ethiopian Emperor who was likely ] collected a large army to respond.<ref name=rp51/> He branded the Muslims of the surrounding area "enemies of the Lord", and invaded Ifat. After much war, Ifat's troops were defeated in 1403 on the Harar plateau, Sultan Sa'ad ad-Din subsequently fled to Zelia where Ethiopian soldiers pursued him.<ref name=rp51/><ref>Ewald Wagner (1991), The Genealogy of the later Walashma' Sultans of Adal and Harar, Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft, Vol. 141, No. 2 (1991), pp. 376–386</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Fage |first1=J.D. |title=The Cambridge History of Africa: From c. 500 B.C. to A.D. 1050 |year=1975 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=154 |isbn=9780521209816 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GWjxR61xAe0C&dq=dawit+led+a+series+of+energetic+campaigns+into+the+very+heart+of+the+harar+plateau&pg=PA154}}</ref> ] narrates: | |||
{{blockquote|the ] pursued Sa'd al-Din as far as the peninsula of ], in the ocean, where he took refuge. The Amhara besieged him there, and deprived him of water; at last one of the impious showed them a way by which they could reach him. When they came upon him a battle ensued; and after three days the water failed. Sa'd al Din was wounded in the forehead and fell to the ground, whereupon they pierced him with their swords. But he died happily, falling in God's cause.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pankhurst |first=Richard |year=1982 |title=History Of Ethiopian Towns |page=57 |isbn=9783515032049 }}</ref>}} | |||
After Sa'ad ad-Din's death “the strength of the Muslims was abated”, as Marqrizi states, and then the Amhara settled in the country “and from the ravaged mosques and they made churches”. The followers of Islam were said to have been harassed for over twenty years.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pankhurst |first=Richard |year=1982 |title=History Of Ethiopian Towns |page=58 |isbn=9783515032049 }}</ref> | |||
The sources disagree on which Ethiopian Emperor conducted this campaign. According to the medieval historian ], Emperor ] in 1403 pursued the ], ], to Zeila, where he killed the Sultan and sacked the city of ]. However, another contemporary source dates the death of Sa'ad ad-Din II to 1410, and credits Emperor ] with the slaying.<ref>J. Spencer Trimingham, ''Islam in Ethiopia'' (Oxford: Geoffrey Cumberlege for the University Press, 1952), p. 74 and note explains the discrepancy in the sources.</ref> | |||
According to ] tradition the Argobba fled Ifat and settled around Harar in the ] lowlands during their conflict with Abyssinia in the fifteenth century, a gate was thus named after them called the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=ABUBAKER |first1=ABDULMALIK |title=THE RELEVANCY OF HARARI VALUES IN SELF REGULATION AND AS A MECHANISM OF BEHAVIORAL CONTROL: HISTORICAL ASPECTS |publisher=The University of Alabama |page=44 |url=https://everythingharar.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/RelevanceofhararivaluesAbdumalik.pdf}}</ref> Adal Sultanate with its capital of Harar emerged in the southeastern areas as the leading Muslim principality in latter part of the 15th century.<ref>{{cite book|author=Terje Østebø|title=Localising Salafism: Religious Change Among Oromo Muslims in Bale, Ethiopia|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BOn3ykfBN-0C&pg=PA57 |year=2011|publisher=BRILL Academic|isbn=978-90-04-18478-7|page=57}}</ref> Several small territories continued to be ruled by different Walasma groups up to the eighteenth century.<ref name=D2-5>John T. Hinnant Michigan State University, 1975. p. 191.</ref> By eighteenth century several Christian dynasties named Yifat and ], which were the province names of Ifat sultanate, were established.<ref name=D2-6>John T. Hinnant Michigan State University, 1975. p. 191.</ref> Presently, its name is preserved in the Ethiopian district of ], situated in ] of the ]. | |||
== Sultans of Ifat == | |||
{{Main|Walashma dynasty}} | {{Main|Walashma dynasty}} | ||
According to fourteenth century historian ], the ruler of Ifat donned headbands made of silk.<ref>{{cite book |title=Problemi attuali di scienza e di cultura quaderno |year=1974 |publisher=Accademia nazionale dei Lincei |page=242 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bu7QAAAAMAAJ&q=awfat}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
<br /> | |||
{{History of Somalia}} | |||
{| class="wikitable" | |||
{{History of Djibouti}} | |||
! | |||
Ifat first emerged in the 13th century, when ] ] (or his son Ali, according to ]) is recorded as having conquered the ] in 1285. Taddesse Tamrat explains Sultan Umar's military acts as an effort to consolidate the Muslim territories in the Horn of Africa in much the same way as Emperor ] was attempting to consolidate the Christian territories in the highlands during the same period.<ref>Taddesse Tamrat, ''Church and State'', p. 125</ref> These two states inevitably came into conflict over Shewa and territories further south. A lengthy war ensued, but the Muslim sultanates of the time were not strongly unified.<ref> (accessed 4 November 2009)</ref> Ifat was finally defeated by Emperor ] of Ethiopia in 1332, who then appointed ] as the new King, followed by Jamal ad-Din's brother ].<ref>''The Glorious Victories'', p. 107.</ref> | |||
!Ruler Name | |||
!Reign | |||
!Note | |||
|- | |||
|1 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān ]<ref>{{Cite book |last=Fasi |first=M. El |url= |title=L'Afrique du VIIe au XIe siècle |date= |publisher= |isbn= |pages=620 |language=fr}}</ref> | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |1197-1276 | |||
|Founder of the Walashma dynasty, his nickname was ʿAdūnyo or Wilinwīli. He started a military campaign to conquer the Sultanate of Shewa. ] is his 5th ancestor. | |||
|- | |||
|2 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān ] | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |1275–1299 | |||
|Son of ʿUmar DunyaHuz, he led many successful campaigns the most notable of which being the Conquest of the Shewa and burning of their capital marking the end of the ] | |||
|- | |||
|3 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān '''ḤaqqudDīn''' ʿUmar | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of ʿUmar DunyaHuz | |||
|- | |||
|4 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān '''Ḥusein''' ʿUmar | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of ʿUmar DunyaHuz | |||
|- | |||
|5 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān '''NasradDīn''' ʿUmar | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of ʿUmar DunyaHuz | |||
|- | |||
|6 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān '''Mansur''' ʿAli | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of ʿAli "Baziwi" ʿUmar | |||
|- | |||
|7 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān '''JamaladDīn''' ʿAli | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of ʿAli "Baziwi" ʿUmar | |||
|- | |||
|8 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān '''Abūd''' JamaladDīn | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of JamaladDīn ʿAli | |||
|- | |||
|9 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān '''Zubēr''' Abūd | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of Abūd JamaladDīn | |||
|- | |||
|10 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |] | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Daughter of Abūd JamaladDīn | |||
|- | |||
|11 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān ] | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–1328 | |||
|Son of Naḥwi Mansur, grandson of Mansur ʿUmar | |||
|- | |||
|12 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān ] | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |1328–1332 | |||
|Son of Naḥwi Mansur, defeated by Emperor Amde Seyon of Abyssinia, who replaced him with his brother JamaladDīn as a vassal. | |||
|- | |||
|13 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān ] | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |1332–13?? | |||
|Son of Naḥwi Mansur, vassal king under Amde Seyon | |||
|- | |||
|14 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān '''NasradDīn''' Naḥwi | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of Naḥwi Mansur, vassal king under Amde Seyon | |||
|- | |||
|15 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān ] | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of SabiradDīn Maḥamed Naḥwi, rebelled against Emperor Newaya Krestos after the death of Amde Seyon, but the rebellion failed and he was replaced with his brother Aḥmed | |||
|- | |||
|16 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān ] | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–13?? | |||
|Son of ʿAli SabiradDīn Maḥamed, accepted the role of vassal and did not continue to rebel against Newaya Krestos, and is subsequently regarded very poorly by Muslim historians | |||
|- | |||
|17 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān ] | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |13??–1376 | |||
|Son of Aḥmed ʿAli | |||
|- | |||
|18 | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |Sulṭān ] | |||
| style="white-space:nowrap" |1376–1403 | |||
|Son of Aḥmed ʿAli, killed in the Abyssinian invasion of Ifat under Yeshaq I | |||
|} | |||
==Military== | |||
Despite this setback, the Muslim rulers of Ifat continued their campaign. The Ethiopian Emperor branded the Muslims of the surrounding area "enemies of the Lord", and invaded Ifat in the early 15th century. After much struggle, Ifat's troops were defeated. The Sultanate's ruler, King ], subsequently fled to Zeila. The Ethiopian Emperor's men pursued the King there, where they slayed him. The sources disagree on which Emperor conducted this campaign. According to the medieval historian ], Emperor ] in 1403 pursued the ], ], to Zeila, where he killed the Sultan and sacked the city. However, another contemporary source dates the death of Sa'ad ad-Din II to 1415, and credits Emperor ] with the slaying.<ref>J. Spencer Trimingham, ''Islam in Ethiopia'' (Oxford: Geoffrey Cumberlege for the University Press, 1952), p. 74 and note explains the discrepancy in the sources.</ref> | |||
According to ] Ifat's infantry consisted of the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Hassan |first1=Mohammed |title=The Oromo Of Ethiopia, 1500-1850 |publisher=University of London |page=21 |url=https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29226/1/10731321.pdf}}</ref> | |||
==People== | |||
Ifat eventually disappeared as a distinct polity following the ] (''Futuh al-Habash'') led by ], and the subsequent ] migrations into the area. Its name is preserved in the modern-day Ethiopian district of ], situated in Shewa. | |||
Ifat's inhabitants, according to ] Randall Pouwels, and Ulrich Brakumper include nomadic groups such as ], ] and ] people whom were already Muslims by the thirteenth century, the ], ]s, the extinct ] and ].<ref name="E5">], Randall Pouwels Ohio University Press, 2000. p. 228.</ref><ref name="E2">David H. Shinn, Thomas P. Ofcansky Scarecrow Press, 2013. p. 225.</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=A river of blessing essays Paul Baxter}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=Ulrich Brakumper}}</ref> Arabic was ] but the inhabitants of Ifat spoke ] and ] languages.<ref name="D7">Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. pp. 45–46.</ref><ref name="AA5" /> | |||
Ifat or Yifat, once the easternmost district of Shewa Sultanate, is located in a strategic position between the central highlands and the sea, and includes diverse population.<ref name="E2" /><ref name="E1" /> Its predecessor state ] is believed to be the first inland Muslim state and by the time it was incorporated into Ifat much of the inhabitants of Shewa land were Muslims.<ref name="E1">Nehemia Levtzion, Randall Pouwels Ohio University Press, 2000. p. 228.</ref><ref name="D22"/> According to the chronicle of Shewa Sultanate converting the inhabitants in the area begun in 1108, and the first to convert were the Gbbah people whom Trimingham suggested them being the ancestors of Argobbas.<ref name="AA5">J. D. Fage, Roland Oliver Cambridge University Press, 1975. p. 107.</ref> A few years later after the conversion of the Gbbah people, the chronicle of Shewa sultanate mentions that in 1128 the Amhara fled from the land of Werjih. The Werjih were a pastoral people, and in the fourteenth century they occupied the Awash Valley east of Shewan Plateau.<ref name="AA6">J. D. Fage, Roland Oliver Cambridge University Press, 1975. p. 107.</ref> | |||
==Language== | |||
According to the 14th-century historian ], the people of Ifat spoke "Abyssinian and ]". ] suggests that the 'Abyssinian' in this assertion denotes an ] language.<ref name="Fage">{{cite journal | last =Fage | first =J.D | coauthors = | title = The Cambridge History of Africa: From c. 1050 to c. 1600 | journal =ISIM Review | volume = | issue =Spring 2005 | pages =146–147 | publisher = Cambridge University Press | location =UK | year =2010 | url =http://books.google.ca/books?id=Qwg8GV6aibkC&pg=PA146#v=onepage&q&f=false| doi = | accessdate =2009-04-10}}</ref> | |||
By the mid-fourteenth century, Islam expanded in the region and the inhabitants north of Awash river were the Muslim people of Zaber and Midra Zega (located south of modern ]); the Gabal (or Warjeh people today called ]); and much of the inhabitants of Ankober, were under the Sultanate of Ifat.<ref name=D1>Deutsche UNESCO-Kommission 1974. p. 269.</ref><ref>Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. p. 41-42.</ref><ref name=D2-1>S. L. Seaton, Henri J. Claessen Walter de Gruyter, 1979. p. 157.</ref> Tegulat, previously the capital of Shewa Sultanate, is situated on a mountain 24 km north of ] and was known by Muslims as Mar'ade.<ref name=D4>George Wynn Brereton Huntingford British Academy, 1989. p. 78.</ref><ref name=D8>George Wynn Brereton Huntingford British Academy, 1989. p. 80.</ref><ref name="D5">Niall Finneran Routledge, 2013. p. 254.</ref> The chronicle of Amda Tsion even mentions Khat being widely consumed by Muslims in the city of Marade.<ref name=D6>Maurice Randrianame, B. Shahandeh, Kalman Szendrei, Archer Tongue, International Council on Alcohol and Addictions The Council, 1983. p. 26.</ref> Tegulat, later became the seat of Emperor Amde Tsion, thereby, making it the capital of the empire. The emperor then appointed the descendants of Walasmas as the king of all the Muslim lands.<ref name="D2-3"></ref> | |||
However, the 19th century Ethiopian historian Asma Giyorgis suggests that the Walashma themselves spoke Arabic, which is similar to ].<ref name="history of sawa">{{cite book|last=Giyorgis|first=Asma|title=Aṣma Giyorgis and his work: history of the Gāllā and the kingdom of Šawā|year=1999|publisher=Medical verlag|isbn=9783515037167|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=mGcwAQAAIAAJ&q=walasma+language&dq=walasma+language&hl=en&sa=X&ei=2gnBT4-dI4Se6QH1w4CpCg&ved=0CFcQ6AEwBg=false|page=257}}</ref> | |||
Ifat or Yifat, once the easternmost district of Shewa Sultanate, is located in a strategic position between the central highlands and the sea, and includes diverse population.<ref name="E2" /><ref name="E1" /> Its predecessor state ] is believed to be the first inland Muslim state and by the time it was incorporated into Ifat much of the inhabitants of Shewa land were Muslims.<ref name="E1">Nehemia Levtzion, Randall Pouwels Ohio University Press, 2000. p. 228.</ref><ref name="D22"/> According to the chronicle of Shewa Sultanate converting the inhabitants in the area begun in 1108, and the first to convert were the Gbbah people whom Trimingham suggested them being the ancestors of Argobbas.<ref name="AA5">J. D. Fage, Roland Oliver Cambridge University Press, 1975. p. 107.</ref> A few years later after the conversion of the Gbbah people, the chronicle of Shewa sultanate mentions that in 1128 the Amhara fled from the land of Werjih. The Werjih were a pastoral people, and in the fourteenth century they occupied the Awash Valley east of Shewan Plateau.<ref name="AA6">J. D. Fage, Roland Oliver Cambridge University Press, 1975. p. 107.</ref> | |||
By the mid-fourteenth century, Islam expanded in the region and the inhabitants north of Awash river were the Muslim people of Zaber and Midra Zega (located south of modern ]); the Gabal (or Warjeh people today called ]); and much of the inhabitants of Ankober, were under the Sultanate of Ifat.<ref name=D1>Deutsche UNESCO-Kommission 1974. p. 269.</ref><ref>Richard Pankhurst The Red Sea Press, 1997. p. 41-42.</ref><ref name=D2-1>S. L. Seaton, Henri J. Claessen Walter de Gruyter, 1979. p. 157.</ref> Tegulat, previously the capital of Shewa Sultanate, is situated on a mountain 24 km north of ] and was known by Muslims as Mar'ade.<ref name=D4>George Wynn Brereton Huntingford British Academy, 1989. p. 78.</ref><ref name=D8>George Wynn Brereton Huntingford British Academy, 1989. p. 80.</ref><ref name="D5">Niall Finneran Routledge, 2013. p. 254.</ref> The chronicle of Amda Tsion even mentions Khat being widely consumed by Muslims in the city of Marade.<ref name=D6>Maurice Randrianame, B. Shahandeh, Kalman Szendrei, Archer Tongue, International Council on Alcohol and Addictions The Council, 1983. p. 26.</ref> Tegulat, later became the seat of Emperor Amde Tsion, thereby, making it the capital of the empire. The emperor then appointed the descendants of Walasmas as the king of all the Muslim lands.<ref name="D2-3"></ref> | |||
==Language== | |||
The 19th-century Ethiopian historian Asma Giyorgis suggests that the Walashma themselves spoke Arabic.<ref name="history of sawa">{{cite book|last=Giyorgis|first=Asma|title=Aṣma Giyorgis and his work: history of the Gāllā and the kingdom of Šawā|year=1999|publisher=Medical verlag|isbn=9783515037167|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mGcwAQAAIAAJ&q=walasma+language|page=257}}</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
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Latest revision as of 02:46, 23 October 2024
1275–1415 Muslim state in the Horn of Africa This article is about the sultanate in the Horn of Africa. For the historic region, see Ifat (historical region).Sultanate of Ifatسلطنة أوفات (Arabic) | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1275–1403 | |||||||||
The Ifat Sultanate in the 14th century. | |||||||||
Capital | |||||||||
Official languages | Arabic | ||||||||
Common languages | |||||||||
Religion | |||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||
Sultan | |||||||||
• 1185–1228 (first) | Umar Walasma | ||||||||
• 1376–1403 (last) | Sa'ad ad-Din II | ||||||||
History | |||||||||
• Established | 1275 | ||||||||
• Disestablished | 1403 | ||||||||
Area | |||||||||
• Total | 120,000 km (46,000 sq mi) | ||||||||
Currency | Dinar and Dirham | ||||||||
| |||||||||
Today part of |
The Sultanate of Ifat, known as Wafāt or Awfāt in Arabic texts, or the Kingdom of Zeila was a medieval Sunni Muslim state in the eastern regions of the Horn of Africa between the late 13th century and early 15th century. It was formed in present-day Ethiopia around eastern Shewa in Ifat. Led by the Walashma dynasty, the polity stretched from Zequalla to the port city of Zeila. The kingdom ruled over parts of what are now Ethiopia, Djibouti, Somaliland, Somalia.
Location
The earliest account of Ifat Sultanate comes from Ibn Sa'id al-Maghribi. He says that the region is called Jabarta and its capital is called Wafāt. Its population, who are Muslim, are ethnically mixed. The city sat upon an elevated place in a valley next to a river. He calculates the astronomical position of the city being 8 latitude and 57 longitude according to Arab computation, which is located on the eastern edge of Shewa. Ifat Sultanate was also alternatively known as the state of Zeila.
According to Ibn Fadlallah al-Umari, Ifat was a state close to the Red Sea coast, 15 days by 20 days "normal traveling time". The state had a river (Awash River), was well peopled and had an army of 20,000 soldiers and 15,000 horsemen. Al Umari mentioned seven cities in Ifat: Biqulzar, Kwelgora, Shimi, Shewa, Adal, Jamme and Laboo. While reporting that its center was "a place called Walalah, probably the modern Wäläle south of Šäno in the Ěnkwoy valley, about 50 miles ENE of Addis Ababa", G.W.B. Huntingford "provisionally" estimated its southern and eastern boundaries were along the Awash River, the western frontier a line drawn between Medra Kabd towards the Jamma river east of Debre Libanos (which it shared with Damot), and the northern boundary along the Adabay and Mofar rivers. The al-Umari territorial account of Ifat Sultanate implies a size of 300 kilometers by 400 kilometers, which may be an exaggeration, according to Richard Pankhurst.
According to Taddesse Tamrat, Ifat's borders included Fatagar, Dawaro and Bale. The port of Zeila provided an entry point for trade and served as the most important entry point for Islam into Ethiopian lands. Ifat rulers controlled Zeila, and it was an important commercial and religious base for them.
It was the northernmost of several Muslim states in the Horn of Africa, acting as a buffer between Christian kingdom and the Muslim states along the coastal regions. Five Ifat cities in eastern Shewa; Asbäri, Nora, Mäsal, Rassa Guba, and Beri-Ifat now mostly in ruins dating back to the fourteenth century have been located. The local Argobba people credited Arabs for building these towns. The dwellings resemble Argobba or Harari historical building designs.
Founding of Ifat
Main article: Walashma dynastyIslam was introduced to the Horn region early on from the Arabian Peninsula, shortly after the hijra. Zeila's two-mihrab mosque Masjid al-Qiblatayn dates to about the 7th century, and is one of the oldest mosques in Africa. In the late 9th century, Al-Yaqubi wrote that Muslims were living along the northern Somali seaboard. This claim, however, has been called suprious and more complicated by contemporary Somali historians, who claim Muslim emmigration to Zeila unlikely, as Dr. Baadiyow reminds us that “Zayla, the center of the closest Somali urban territory , is estimated to be more than 1000 km by land and even further by sea.”
The Walashma dynasty are regarded by scholars as the founders of the Ifat Sultanate. According to the Egyptian historian Al-Maqrizi, the ruling class of the Ifat Sultanate were Arabs from the Hejaz, while the population mostly consisted of Muslims.
Ifat first emerged when Umar ibn Dunya-huz, later to be known as Sultan Umar Walasma, carved out his own kingdom and conquered the Sultanate of Shewa located in northern Hararghe. In 1288 Sultan Wali Asma successfully imposed his rule on Hubat, Zeila and other Muslim states in the region. Taddesse Tamrat explains Sultan Walashma's military acts as an effort to consolidate the Muslim territories in the Horn of Africa in much the same way as Emperor Yekuno Amlak was attempting to consolidate the Christian territories in the highlands during the same period.
History
According to the Arab historian Maqrizi, known for his pro-Islamic version of history written around 1435, Sultan Umar Walasma was the first ruler of Ifat. Umar died around 1275, stated Maqrizi, and was succeeded by "four or five sons" with each ruling a short period. Finally, Sabr ad-Din I came to power and he ruled Ifat till the turn of the century. He was succeeded by Sultan Ali, according to Maqrizi, who was the first ruler to engage with a warfare against the Abyssinia. Sultan Ali, however soon submitted back to Ethiopian rule, because according to Maqrizi he lacked popular support. This allowed Emperor Yagbe'u Seyon to mount a campaign further west along the coast, near the vicinity of Zeila.
Before the establishment of Ifat eastern Ethiopia was ruled by the Gidaya, Dawaro, Sawans, Bali, and Fatagar. These states were incorporated into the Ifat Sultanate however they managed to maintain a source of independence after Ifat collapsed. When Ifat was abolished by the Ethiopian Empire these states were also invaded, however Fatagar still managed to stay under the control of Ifat.
Conflict with Abyssinia
In 1320 a conflict between the Christian monarch and Muslim Ifat leaders began. The conflict was precipitated by Al-Nasir Muhammad of Egypt. The Mamluk ruler Al-Nasir Muhammad was persecuting Christian Copts and destroying Coptic churches. The Ethiopian Emperor Amda Seyon I sent an envoy with a warning to the Mamluk ruler that if he did not stop the persecution of Christians in Egypt, he would retaliate against Muslims under his rule and would starve the peoples of Egypt by diverting the course of the Nile. According to Pankhurst, of the two threats, the diversion of Nile was an idle threat and the Egyptian sultan dismissed it because he likely realized this to be so. The fear that the Ethiopians might tamper with the Nile, states Pankhurst, was nevertheless to remain with Egyptians for many centuries.
As a result of the threats and the dispute between Amda Seyon and Al Nasr, the Sultan of Ifat, Haqq ad-Din I responded, initiating a definite war of aggression. He invaded the Christian Abyssinian territory in the Amhara kingdom, burnt churches and forced apostasy among Christians. He also seized and imprisoned the envoy sent by the Emperor on his way back from Cairo. Haqq ad-Din tried to convert the envoy, killing him when this failed. In response, the irate Emperor raided the inhabitants of all the land of Shewa, much of it inhabited by Muslims at that time, and other districts of Ifat Sultanate. The historical records of that time, depending on which side wrote the history, indicate a series of defeat, destruction and burning of towns of the opposite side.
According to the Christian chronicles, the son of the Sultan Haqq ad-Din Dadader Haqq ad-Din who was the leader of the Midra Zega and Menz people who were then Muslims, fought the emperor in the battle of Marra Biete in an area somewhere south of Marra Biete in modern North Shewa. Dadader forces were able to surround the emperor Amda Seyon I, who nevertheless succeeded in defeating them and killed the commander Dadader in the battle .
Ifat rebellion
Sabr ad-Din's rebellion was not an attempt to achieve independence, but to become emperor of a Muslim Ethiopia. Amda Seyon's royal chronicle states that Sabr ad-Din proclaimed:
- "I wish to be King of all Ethiopia; I will rule the Christians according to their law and I will destroy their churches...I will nominate governors in all the provinces of Ethiopia, as does the King of Zion(Ethiopia)...I will transform the churches into mosques. I will subjugate and convert the King of the Christians to my religion, I will make him a provincial governor, and if he refuses to be converted I will hand him over to one of the shepherds, called Warjeke , that he may be made a keeper of camels. As for the Queen Jan Mangesha, his wife, I will employ her to grind corn. I will make my residence at Marade , the capital of his kingdom.
In fact, after his first incursion, Sabr ad-Din appointed governors for nearby and neighboring provinces such as Fatagar and Alamalé, as well as far-off provinces in the north like Damot, Amhara, Angot, Inderta, Begemder, and Gojjam. He also threatened to plant khat at the capital, a stimulant used by Muslims but forbidden to Ethiopian Orthodox Christians.
Sabr ad-Din's rebellion in early 1332, with its religious support and ambitious goals, was therefore seen as a jihad rather than an attempt at independence, and it was consequently immediately joined by the nearby Muslim province of Dewaro (the first known mention of the province), under the governor Haydera, and the western province of Hadiya under the vassal local ruler Ameno. Sabr ad-Din divided his troops into three parts, sending a division north-westwards to attack Amhara, one northwards to attack Angot, and another, under his personal command, westward to take Shewa.
Amda Seyon subsequently mobilized his soldiers to meet the threat, endowing them with gifts of gold, silver, and lavish clothing – so much so that the chronicler explains that "in his reign gold and silver abounded like stones and fine clothes were as common as the leaves of the trees or the grass in the fields." Despite the extravagance he bestowed on his men, many chose not to fight due to Ifat's inhospitable mountainous and arid terrain and the complete absence of roads. Nevertheless, they advanced on 24 Yakatit, and an attachment was able to find the rebellious governor and put him to flight. Once the remainder of Amda Seyon's army arrived, they destroyed the capital of Ifat and killed many soldiers. But Sabr ad-Din once again escaped. The Ethiopian forces then grouped together for a final attack, destroying one of his camps, killing many and taking the rest as slaves as well as looting it of its gold, silver, and its "fine clothes and jewels without number."
Sabr ad-Din subsequently sued for peace, appealing to Queen Jan Mengesha, who refused his peace offer and expressed Amda Seyon's determination not to return to his capital until he had searched Sabr ad-Din out. Upon hearing this, Sabr ad-Din realized that his rebellion futile and surrendered himself to Amda Seyon's camp. Amda Seyon's courtiers demanded that Sabr ad-Din be executed, but he instead granted him relative clemency and had the rebellious governor imprisoned. Amda Seyon then appointed the governor's brother, Jamal ad-Din I, as his successor in Ifat. Just as the Ifat rebellion had been quelled, however, the neighboring states of Adal and Mora, just north of Ifat rose against the Emperor. Amda Seyon soon also put down this rebellion.
After the era of Amda Seyon I
The Muslim rulers of Ifat continued their campaign against the Christian Emperor. His son, Emperor Sayfa Arad appointed Ahmad, also known as Harb Arad ibn Ali as the sultan of Ifat, and put Ali's father and relatives in prison. Sayfa Arad was close to Ahmad and supported his rule, however, Ahmad was killed in an Ifat uprising. Ahmad's son Haqq ad-Din II then came to power in Ifat. Internal ruling family struggle in Ifat expelled grandfather Ali's son named Mola Asfah who gathered forces and attacked Ahmad's son. A series of battles affirmed Sultan Haqq ad-Din II position of power. In the fourteenth century Haqq ad-Din II transferred Ifat's capital to the Harar plateau thus he is regarded by some to be the true founder of the Adal Sultanate. The new Sultan moved away from previous capital of Ifat, to the city of Zeila. From there, he ceaselessly fought with the Emperor, in over twenty battles through 1370, according to Maqrizi's chronicle written in 1435. The Ifat Sultan Haqq ad-Din II died in a battle in 1376.
According to historian Mordechai Abir, the continued warfare between Ifat Sultanate and the Ethiopian Emperor was a part of the larger geopolitical conflict, where Egypt had arrested Coptic Church's Patriarch Marcos in 1352. This arrest led to retaliatory arrest and imprisonment of all Egyptian merchants in Ethiopia. In 1361, the Egyptian Sultan al-Malik al-Salih released the Patriarch and then sought amicable relations with Ethiopian Emperor. The actions of the Ifat Sultanate and Muslim kingdoms in the Horn of Africa, states Abir, were linked to the Muslim-Christian conflicts between Egypt and Ethiopia.
The end of Ifat Sultanate
In 1376, Sultan Sa'ad ad-Din Abdul Muhammad, also called Sa'ad ad-Din II, succeeded his brother and came to power, who continued to attack the Abyssinian Christian army. He attacked regional chiefs such as at Zalan and Hadeya, who supported the Emperor. According to Mordechai Abir, Sa'ad ad-Din II raids against the Ethiopian empire were largely hit-and-run type, which hardened the resolve of the Christian ruler to end the Muslim rule in their east. In the early 15th century, the Ethiopian Emperor who was likely Dawit I collected a large army to respond. He branded the Muslims of the surrounding area "enemies of the Lord", and invaded Ifat. After much war, Ifat's troops were defeated in 1403 on the Harar plateau, Sultan Sa'ad ad-Din subsequently fled to Zelia where Ethiopian soldiers pursued him. Al-Maqrizi narrates:
the Amhara pursued Sa'd al-Din as far as the peninsula of Zeila, in the ocean, where he took refuge. The Amhara besieged him there, and deprived him of water; at last one of the impious showed them a way by which they could reach him. When they came upon him a battle ensued; and after three days the water failed. Sa'd al Din was wounded in the forehead and fell to the ground, whereupon they pierced him with their swords. But he died happily, falling in God's cause.
After Sa'ad ad-Din's death “the strength of the Muslims was abated”, as Marqrizi states, and then the Amhara settled in the country “and from the ravaged mosques and they made churches”. The followers of Islam were said to have been harassed for over twenty years.
The sources disagree on which Ethiopian Emperor conducted this campaign. According to the medieval historian al-Makrizi, Emperor Dawit I in 1403 pursued the Sultan of Adal, Sa'ad ad-Din II, to Zeila, where he killed the Sultan and sacked the city of Zeila. However, another contemporary source dates the death of Sa'ad ad-Din II to 1410, and credits Emperor Yeshaq with the slaying.
According to Harari tradition the Argobba fled Ifat and settled around Harar in the Aw Abdal lowlands during their conflict with Abyssinia in the fifteenth century, a gate was thus named after them called the gate of Argobba. Adal Sultanate with its capital of Harar emerged in the southeastern areas as the leading Muslim principality in latter part of the 15th century. Several small territories continued to be ruled by different Walasma groups up to the eighteenth century. By eighteenth century several Christian dynasties named Yifat and Menz, which were the province names of Ifat sultanate, were established. Presently, its name is preserved in the Ethiopian district of Yifat, situated in North Shewa of the Amhara region.
Sultans of Ifat
Main article: Walashma dynastyAccording to fourteenth century historian Al Umari, the ruler of Ifat donned headbands made of silk.
Ruler Name | Reign | Note | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Sulṭān Umar Ibn Dunyā-ḥawz | 1197-1276 | Founder of the Walashma dynasty, his nickname was ʿAdūnyo or Wilinwīli. He started a military campaign to conquer the Sultanate of Shewa. Yusuf al-Kowneyn is his 5th ancestor. |
2 | Sulṭān Ali "Baziwi" Naḥwi ʿUmar | 1275–1299 | Son of ʿUmar DunyaHuz, he led many successful campaigns the most notable of which being the Conquest of the Shewa and burning of their capital marking the end of the Makhzumi dynasty |
3 | Sulṭān ḤaqqudDīn ʿUmar | 13??–13?? | Son of ʿUmar DunyaHuz |
4 | Sulṭān Ḥusein ʿUmar | 13??–13?? | Son of ʿUmar DunyaHuz |
5 | Sulṭān NasradDīn ʿUmar | 13??–13?? | Son of ʿUmar DunyaHuz |
6 | Sulṭān Mansur ʿAli | 13??–13?? | Son of ʿAli "Baziwi" ʿUmar |
7 | Sulṭān JamaladDīn ʿAli | 13??–13?? | Son of ʿAli "Baziwi" ʿUmar |
8 | Sulṭān Abūd JamaladDīn | 13??–13?? | Son of JamaladDīn ʿAli |
9 | Sulṭān Zubēr Abūd | 13??–13?? | Son of Abūd JamaladDīn |
10 | Māti Layla Abūd | 13??–13?? | Daughter of Abūd JamaladDīn |
11 | Sulṭān ḤaqqudDīn Naḥwi | 13??–1328 | Son of Naḥwi Mansur, grandson of Mansur ʿUmar |
12 | Sulṭān SabiradDīn Maḥamed "Waqōyi" Naḥwi | 1328–1332 | Son of Naḥwi Mansur, defeated by Emperor Amde Seyon of Abyssinia, who replaced him with his brother JamaladDīn as a vassal. |
13 | Sulṭān JamaladDīn Naḥwi | 1332–13?? | Son of Naḥwi Mansur, vassal king under Amde Seyon |
14 | Sulṭān NasradDīn Naḥwi | 13??–13?? | Son of Naḥwi Mansur, vassal king under Amde Seyon |
15 | Sulṭān "Qāt" ʿAli SabiradDīn Maḥamed | 13??–13?? | Son of SabiradDīn Maḥamed Naḥwi, rebelled against Emperor Newaya Krestos after the death of Amde Seyon, but the rebellion failed and he was replaced with his brother Aḥmed |
16 | Sulṭān Aḥmed "Harbi Arʿēd" ʿAli | 13??–13?? | Son of ʿAli SabiradDīn Maḥamed, accepted the role of vassal and did not continue to rebel against Newaya Krestos, and is subsequently regarded very poorly by Muslim historians |
17 | Sulṭān Ḥaqquddīn Aḥmed | 13??–1376 | Son of Aḥmed ʿAli |
18 | Sulṭān SaʿadadDīn Aḥmed | 1376–1403 | Son of Aḥmed ʿAli, killed in the Abyssinian invasion of Ifat under Yeshaq I |
Military
According to Mohammed Hassen Ifat's infantry consisted of the Argobba people.
People
Ifat's inhabitants, according to Nehemia Levtzion Randall Pouwels, and Ulrich Brakumper include nomadic groups such as Somalis, Afars and Warjih people whom were already Muslims by the thirteenth century, the Hararis, Argobbas, the extinct Doba and Harla. Arabic was Lingua franca but the inhabitants of Ifat spoke Cushitic and Ethio-Semitic languages.
Ifat or Yifat, once the easternmost district of Shewa Sultanate, is located in a strategic position between the central highlands and the sea, and includes diverse population. Its predecessor state Shewa Sultanate is believed to be the first inland Muslim state and by the time it was incorporated into Ifat much of the inhabitants of Shewa land were Muslims. According to the chronicle of Shewa Sultanate converting the inhabitants in the area begun in 1108, and the first to convert were the Gbbah people whom Trimingham suggested them being the ancestors of Argobbas. A few years later after the conversion of the Gbbah people, the chronicle of Shewa sultanate mentions that in 1128 the Amhara fled from the land of Werjih. The Werjih were a pastoral people, and in the fourteenth century they occupied the Awash Valley east of Shewan Plateau.
By the mid-fourteenth century, Islam expanded in the region and the inhabitants north of Awash river were the Muslim people of Zaber and Midra Zega (located south of modern Merhabete); the Gabal (or Warjeh people today called Tigri Worji); and much of the inhabitants of Ankober, were under the Sultanate of Ifat. Tegulat, previously the capital of Shewa Sultanate, is situated on a mountain 24 km north of Debre Berhan and was known by Muslims as Mar'ade. The chronicle of Amda Tsion even mentions Khat being widely consumed by Muslims in the city of Marade. Tegulat, later became the seat of Emperor Amde Tsion, thereby, making it the capital of the empire. The emperor then appointed the descendants of Walasmas as the king of all the Muslim lands.
Ifat or Yifat, once the easternmost district of Shewa Sultanate, is located in a strategic position between the central highlands and the sea, and includes diverse population. Its predecessor state Shewa Sultanate is believed to be the first inland Muslim state and by the time it was incorporated into Ifat much of the inhabitants of Shewa land were Muslims. According to the chronicle of Shewa Sultanate converting the inhabitants in the area begun in 1108, and the first to convert were the Gbbah people whom Trimingham suggested them being the ancestors of Argobbas. A few years later after the conversion of the Gbbah people, the chronicle of Shewa sultanate mentions that in 1128 the Amhara fled from the land of Werjih. The Werjih were a pastoral people, and in the fourteenth century they occupied the Awash Valley east of Shewan Plateau.
By the mid-fourteenth century, Islam expanded in the region and the inhabitants north of Awash river were the Muslim people of Zaber and Midra Zega (located south of modern Merhabete); the Gabal (or Warjeh people today called Tigri Worji); and much of the inhabitants of Ankober, were under the Sultanate of Ifat. Tegulat, previously the capital of Shewa Sultanate, is situated on a mountain 24 km north of Debre Berhan and was known by Muslims as Mar'ade. The chronicle of Amda Tsion even mentions Khat being widely consumed by Muslims in the city of Marade. Tegulat, later became the seat of Emperor Amde Tsion, thereby, making it the capital of the empire. The emperor then appointed the descendants of Walasmas as the king of all the Muslim lands.
Language
The 19th-century Ethiopian historian Asma Giyorgis suggests that the Walashma themselves spoke Arabic.
See also
References
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We can attribute its success (The Walashma dynasty), longevity and influence, to the fact that the founders of the dynasty of Walasma were native of the area.
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- Giyorgis, Asma (1999). Aṣma Giyorgis and his work: history of the Gāllā and the kingdom of Šawā. Medical verlag. p. 257. ISBN 9783515037167.
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