Massina Empire Explained

Native Name:خلافة حمد الله
Conventional Long Name:Caliphate of Hamdullahi
Common Name:Massina Empire
Era:Late modern period
Fula jihads
Event Start:Battle of Noukouma
Year Start:1818
Event Pre:Founding of the Sultanate of Massina
Date Pre:c. 1400
Year End:1862
P1:Bambara Empire
P2:Pashalik of Timbuktu
S1:Toucouleur Empire
Image Map Caption:The Fulani Jihad States of West Africa, c. 1830.
Capital:Hamdullahi
Common Languages:Arabic (official)
Maasina Fulfulde, Bambara, Tamasheq
Religion:Islam
Government Type:Caliphate
Leader1:Seku Amadu
Year Leader1:1818 – 1845
Leader2:Amadu II
Year Leader2:1845 – 1852
Leader3:Amadu III
Year Leader3:1852 – 1862
Title Leader:Almami
Legislature:Grand Council
Today:Mali

The Caliphate of Hamdullahi (Arabic: '''خلافة حمد الله'''; also: Dina of Massina, Sise Jihad state), commonly known as the Massina empire (also spelled Maasina or Macina), was an early nineteenth-century Sunni Muslim caliphate in West Africa centered in the Inner Niger Delta of what is now the Mopti and Ségou Regions of Mali. It was founded by Seku Amadu in 1818 during the Fulani jihads after defeating the Bambara Empire and its allies at the Battle of Noukouma. By 1853, the empire had fallen into decline and was ultimately destroyed by Omar Saidou Tall of Toucouleur.[1]

The Massina Empire was one of the most organized theocratic states of its time on the African continent and had its capital at Hamdullahi. It was ruled by an almami with the help of a Grand Council that possessed the power to elect new rulers after the death of the previous one. While, in theory, the almami did not have to be a member of the Bari family, but only someone who was learned and pious, every almami elected happened to be a son of the previous ruler.

History

Sultanate of Massina

Massina was founded in c. 1400 by a group of Fulani originally coming from the Termess, south of Hodh. For centuries after their arrival, the inhabitants were vassals of larger states, including the Mali Empire (14th century), the Songhai Empire (15th-16th centuries), the Arma (Moroccan) pashas of Tomboctou (17th century), and the Bambara Empire at Ségou (18th century).

Seku Amadu and the Founding of the Caliphate

In the early 1800s, inspired by the recent Muslim uprisings of Usman dan Fodio in nearby Hausaland, preacher and social reformer Seku Amadu began efforts at increasing religious revivals in his homeland.[2] Amadu was born from a minor scholar family from one of the less important Fulbe clans.[3] He was both a religious and political outsider which increasingly led him to clash with the established elites as his influence in the region grew at their expense. This tension would lead to open confrontation in 1818 when the death of Ardo Guidado, son of the chief Fulani Ardo Amadu, was blamed on one of Seku Amadu's students.

Ardo Amadu used this incident to mobilize an army of over 200,000 men from Segu, Poromani, Monimpé, Goundaka, and Massina to crush the Jihadists. The initial encounter took place at the Battle of Noukouma, during which Seku Amadu's relatively small battalion of 1,000 men was able to route a force of 100,000, led by General Jamogo Séri. Seku Amadu interpreted his victory as a divine miracle and went on to lead a jihad against the Bambara Empire in 1818. The empire expanded rapidly, taking Djenné in 1819 and establishing a new capital at Hamdullahi in 1820.[4] [5]

Empire

At the height of the Empire's power, a 10,000-man army was stationed in the city, and Seku Amadu ordered the construction of six hundred madrasas to further the spread of Islam. Alcohol, tobacco, music and dancing were banned in accordance with Islamic law, while a social welfare system provided for widows and orphans. A strict interpretation of Islamic injunctions against ostentation led Amadu to order the Great Mosque of Djenné to be abandoned, and all future mosques were ordered built with low ceilings and without decoration or minarets.

One of the most enduring accomplishments was a code regulating the use of the inland Niger delta region by Fula cattle herders and diverse farming communities.

Massina's expansion into the region between the Mali-Niger border and north-eastern Burkina Faso was more successful, and marked the southernmost limit of the empire, which it shared with the Sokoto empire. The various chiefdoms of the region, most notably Baraboullé and Djilgodji, were subsumed in the late 1820s after a serious of disastrous battles for the Massina army that ultimately ended when threats from the Yatenga kingdom forced the local chieftains to place themselves under Massina's protection. The conflict that emerged with the Bambara state of Kaarta, however, was more serious, with Massina's army suffering heavy casualties, especially in 1843–44. every attempt by to expand westward proved equally futile.

After the first conquest of the north-eastern regions between Timbuktu and Gao in 1818-1826, Arma and the Tuareg who controlled the region rebelled several times, trying to escape the imposition of direct rule by Lobbo’s appointed governor Abd al-Qādir (who took over from Pasha Uthman al-rimi). This prompted Massina to firmly control the town in 1833 when a Fulbe governor was appointed that controlled the entire region up to Gao. A Tuareg force drove off the Massina garrison in 1840 but were in the following year defeated and expelled. The Tuareg then regrouped in 1842-1844 and managed to defeat the Massina forces and drive them from Timbuktu, but the city was later besieged by Massina and its inhabitants were starved into resubmitting to Massina's rule by 1846. Disputes between Massina and Timbuktu were often mediated by the Kunta scholary family led by Muhammad al-Kunti and his son al-Mukhtar al-Saghir.[6] Amedu died in 1845, leaving control of the Massina Empire to his son, Amadu II, who was succeeded by his son Amadu III.

Decline

The ascension of Amadu III to the throne in 1853, following his election by the Grand Council over arguably more capable uncles, marked the beginning of the decline of the empire. Amadu III's reign was defined by controversy. He was said to be less valiant in war and was more lax when it came to the adherence to the religious tenets that governed the empire. By the time of Omar Saidou Tall's Jihad against the Massina Empire, he was met with little resistance from Amadu III's unorganized army.

In 1862, Omar Tall of Toucouleur launched an attack on the Massina from his newly secured base at Ségou. After a series of bloody battles, he entered Hamdullahi on March 16, leveling it. Amadu III was captured and put to death. Though resistance briefly continued under Amadu III's brother Ba Lobbo, the destruction marked the effective end of the Massina Empire.

Government

The Massina Empire contained one of the most sophisticated governments in Africa at the time, with a system of checks and balances and a well-established tax system. It was organized as an Islamic state with strong democratic tendencies that created great stability within the empire.

There were also agents who would audit government officials.

Legislature

The Massina Empire was governed by a 40-member Grand Council appointed by the Almami for their wisdom and creativity and 60 judges who were prominent marabouts. The Grand Council acted as the legislative, executive, and judicial branches of the empire and could make their own decisions based on strict observance of the Maliki interpretation of Sharia law. However, it was only the Almami who could demand a revision of a policy or decision or act as a lawyer on behalf of a plaintiff. If the Grand Council and the Almami ever came to a disagreement 40 of the 60 judges were selected randomly to make the final decision.

The Grand Council also possessed the authority to designate the succeeding Almami. While, in theory, the almami did not have to be a member of the Bari family, but only someone who was learned and pious, every almami elected happened to be a son of the previous ruler.[7]

Regions

The empire was made up of five major regions known as Jenneri, Fakala-Kunari, Hayre-Seno, Massina, and Nabbe-Dude. Within each of these regions, governance was entrusted to a military governor, known as the amiru, who bore the responsibility of safeguarding their respective territories. The amiru were supported by local councils and a state-funded judicial system, granting them the authority to render independent legal judgments and facilitate conflict resolution. The Grand Council would act as the supreme court.

Local government

The capital of Hamdullahi was divided into 18 neighborhoods further divided into several residences. Each of these residences were surrounded by a high wall to protect privacy and a well that ensured a reliable source of drinking water. There was also a strong police presence that enforced rules of conduct such as hygiene. Taxes were levied on harvest, military spending, and a general Muslim tithe in all of the villages and towns of the empire.

Education was prioritized by the empire and played an important part in every citizen's life. Both boys and girls from the ages of 7-21 would learn the basics of the Qur'an and the tradition of the Prophet, advanced theology and mysticism, and, in some cases, more secular subjects such as grammar and rhetoric. All school fees were fixed and teachers were subsidized by the central government.

List of rulers

Names and dates taken from John Stewart's African States and Rulers (1989).[8] For some alternative spellings and dates, see the Tarikh al-Sudan. Rulers from 1814 to 1873, except for Tukolor regents, used the title of 'Sheikh'.[8]

NameReign StartReign End
1Majam Dyalloc. 14001404
2Birahim I14041424
3Ali I14241433
4Kanta14331466
5Ali II14661480
6Nguia14801510
7Sawadi15101539
8Ilo15391540
9Amadi Sire15401543
10Hammadi I15431544
11Bubu I15441551
12Ibrahim15511559
13Bubu II15591583
14Hammadi II1583c. 1595
Moroccan rule (c. 1595  - 1599)
14Hammadi II (Restored)15991603
15Bubu III16031613
16Birahim II16131625
17Silamaka16251627
18Hammadi III16271663
19Hammadi IV1663
20Ali III16631673
21Gallo16731675
22Gurori I16751696
23Gueladio16961706
24Guidado17061716
25Hammadi V17611780
26Ya Gallo17801801
27Gurori II18011810
28unknown18101814
29Hamadu I18141844
30Hamadu II18441852
31Hamadu III18521862
Tukolor military government (1862  - 1863)
32Sidi al-Bakka (Tukolor regent)18631864
33Sheikh Abidin al-Bakha'i (Tukolor regent)1864
34Badi Tali18641871
35Badi Sidi18711872
36Ahmadu18721873
-Sheikh Abidin al-Bakha'i (Tukolor regent) (Restored)18731874

See also

References

Sources

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Brodnicka, Monika . The Encyclopedia of Empire . Massina Empire . John Wiley & Sons, Inc . 11 January 2016 . 1–3 . 10.1002/9781118455074.wbeoe388. 978-1-118-44064-3 .
  2. Abdul Azim Islahi. Islamic economic thinking in the 12th AH/18th CE century with special reference to Shah Wali-Allah al-Dihlawi. MPRA (Paper No. 75432). 2009. 48,41. https://web.archive.org/web/20210515142845/https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/75432/. May 15, 2021. live.
  3. Book: Nobili, Mauro . A Contested Space of Competing Claims: The Middle Niger, 1810s–1840s. In Sultan, Caliph, and the Renewer of the Faith: Aḥmad Lobbo, the Tārīkh al-fattāsh and the Making of an Islamic State in West Africa . Cambridge University Press . 2020 . 123–202 . 10.1017/9781108804295. 978-1-108-80429-5 .
  4. Book: Fage. J.D.. A History of West Africa: An Introductory Survey. 1969. Cambridge University Press. Cambridge. 154–155.
  5. Johnson . Marion . 1976 . The Economic Foundations of an Islamic Theocracy: The Rise of Masina . Journal of African History . 17 . 4 . 481–495 . 10.1017/S0021853700015024 . 162679554 .
  6. Diagayété . Mohamed . A note on Mawlāy 'Abd al-Qādir b. Muḥammad al-Sanūsī and his relationship with the Caliphate of Ḥamdallāhi .
  7. Book: Ajayi, Jacob F. Ade . Africa in the Nineteenth Century Until the 1880s . University of California Press . 1989 . 9780520039179 . 608.
  8. Book: Stewart, John. African States and Rulers. McFarland. 1989. 0-89950-390-X. London. 173.