Native Name: | Bambara: italics=no|ߓߊ߲ߓߊߙߊ߲߫ ߝߊ߯ߡߟߊ|Banbaran Fāmala |
Conventional Long Name: | Bamana Empire |
Common Name: | Bamana Empire |
Era: | Early modern period |
Event Start: | Mamari (Biton) Coulibaly takes power |
Year Start: | 1712 |
Event Pre: | Kaladian establishes dynasty |
Date Pre: | c.1640 |
Event1: | Ngolo Diarra takes power |
Date Event1: | 1766 |
Event End: | Conquest by the Toucouleur Empire |
Year End: | 1861 |
P1: | Saadi dynasty |
S1: | Toucouleur Empire |
Image Map Caption: | Some of the cities in Mali which were under the control of the Bamana Empire. |
Capital: | Ségou |
Common Languages: | Bambara |
Religion: | Animism, Islam |
Government Type: | Monarchy |
Currency: | cowries, mithqal |
Leader1: | Mamary Coulibaly |
Year Leader1: | 1712-1755 |
Leader2: | Ngolo Diarra |
Year Leader2: | 1766-1790 |
Title Leader: | Faama |
Today: | Mali |
The Bamana Empire (also Bambara Empire or Ségou Empire, Bambara: italics=no|ߓߊ߲ߓߊߙߊ߲߫ ߝߊ߯ߡߟߊ|Banbaran Fāmala) was one of the largest states of West Africa in the 18th century.[1] Along with Kaarta it was one of the most important successors of the Songhai Empire. Based on an earlier kingdom established in 1640, it grew into a powerful empire in the early 18th century under Bitòn Coulibaly. The empire existed as a centralized state from 1712 until the 1861 invasion by the Toucouleur conqueror El Hadj Umar Tall.
Around 1640, Kaladian Coulibaly, also known as Fa Sine, became the leader of a small Bambara kingdom in the city of Ségou in Mali. Though he made many successful conquests of neighboring tribes and kingdoms, he failed to set up a significant administrative framework, and the new empire disintegrated following his death (c. 1660).
In 1712 Mamari Kulubali, as known as Biton Coulibaly, Kaladian's great-grandson, was elected the leader of a youth organization known as a tòn. Mamari soon reorganized the tòn as a personal army supplemented with runaway slaves, assumed the title of bitòn, and set about overthrowing the traditional political order.[1] He became the first Faama of Ségou, making it the capital of a new Bamana Empire.
Fortifying the capital with Songhai techniques, Bitòn Kulubali built a large army of conscripts known as the ton djon and a navy of war canoes to patrol the Niger.[2] He introduced a novel system of taxation using the cowrie shell as currency.[1] His successful defeat of an invasion from the Kong Empire in 1725 cemented his position. He then proceeded to launch successful assaults against his neighbors, the Fulani, the Soninke, and the Mossi, conquering Macina, Beledougou, Djenne, Bamako and Tomboctou, though he held the latter city only briefly. In 1751 he also conquered Niani, making the Mansa of the rump-state Mali Empire a vassal. During this time he founded the city of Bla as an outpost and armory.
Mamari's death in 1755 inaugurated an era of instability and civil war.[3] Dinkoro Coulibaly reigned for a few years before being overthrown by his brother Ali. A devout muslim, he attempted to convert the empire and was soon deposed himself.[1]
In 1766, a former slave and leader of the ton djon named Ngolo Diarra seized the throne and re-established stability, reigning for nearly forty years of prosperity. He began a series of successful conquests, including that of Timbuktu and the Macina region.[2] The Ngolosi, his descendants, would continue to rule the Empire until its fall.
Ngolo's son Mansong Diarra took the throne c.1790 following his father's death in battle and a short succession dispute.[2] [4] During this period the Faama ruled from a massive palace in Segou and commanded a well-organized cavalry army, often used for raising tribute and taxes in the form of cowries. The capital, Segou, was a prosperous city of around 30,000 inhabitants straddling both banks of the Niger river.[1] After Mansong's death in 1808, the empire's power progressively declined.[2]
At the Battle of Noukouma in 1818, Bambara forces met and were defeated by Fula Muslim fighters rallied by the jihad of Cheikou Amadu (or Seku Amadu) of Massina. The Bamana Empire survived but was irreversibly weakened. Seku Amadu's forces decisively defeated the Bambara, taking Djenné and much of the territory around Mopti and forming into a Massina Empire. Timbuktu would fall as well in 1845.
After 1839 the faamaw succeeded each other in rapid fashion as the tonjon leaders grew increasingly powerful, independent, and prone to intervene in succession disputes.[5] When El Hadj Umar Tall, a Toucouleur religious leader, declared a jihad against the empire in 1859, this balkanization prevented 'faama' Ali from mounting an effective defense. Tall took Nyamina without a fight on May 25th 1860, then defeated the Bamana army at Witala in September.[5] Ségou itself fell on March 10, 1861, marking the end of the Bamana Empire.[2]
The Bamana Empire was structured around traditional Bambara institutions. The most important of these was the ton, or age-group. They were in theory completely egalitarian and elected their own leaders. Through charisma and ruthless power politics, however, Biton converted this into essentially an army made up of forobadjon (nominally, slaves of the community) led by tondjons, or slaves of the ton but who were in practice a military aristocracy. Any faama strong enough to control the tondjons was in effect an absolute monarch, doling out state property as rewards for bravery. A 40-man council of state swore allegiance and obedience to him and served as a rubber stamp. Relatives were given key posts, and the faama was the head priest of powerful and important religious cults.[7] The army was a place where ethnic and class distinctions mattered little, and capable people could rise and make their fortunes.[7] Another traditional institution was the kòmò, a body to resolve theological concerns. The kòmò often consulted religious sculptures in their decisions, particularly the four state boliw, large altars designed to aid the acquisition of political power.
Administratively, the core of the state was in the too-daga, the area closest to Segou. The ruler's designated successor held lots of power there. Most other provinces were governed by local elites who pledged loyalty to the faama or appointed governors.[7] The royal symbols were a bow and arrows, and a golden axe.[7]
The economy of the Bamana Empire flourished through trade, especially that of the slaves captured in their many wars. One category of slave, the jonfin, could be sold; another, the jonba were put to work by the state either as laborers or as soldiers in the ton djon. The demand for slaves then led to further fighting, leaving the Bambara in a perpetual state of war with their neighbors, and slaves from the area formed the majority of those sold to European traders at the Senegal and Gambia river trading posts.[1]
Trade was conducted largely by Muslim maraka merchants who traded across the Sahara or towards the coast. They exchanged guns, shell money, horses, salt, gold, cloth, and slaves.[1]
Mungo Park, passing through the Bambara capital of Ségou in 1797 recorded a testament to the Empire's prosperity: