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Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi

Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi (Somali: Axmed Ibraahim al-Qaasi or Axmed Gurey, Harari: አሕመድ ኢብራሂም አል-ጋዚ, Arabic: أحمد بن إبراهيم الغازي ;[2] c. 1506 – 21 February 1543)[3] was an imam and general of the Adal Sultanate.[3] Imam Ahmad (commonly named Ahmed Gurey in Somali, and Gura in Afar, both meaning "the left-handed" or "the southpaw"), invaded the Ethiopian Empire under the Sultanate of Adal during the Ethiopian-Adal War.[4]

Ahmad ibn Ibrahim
Imam and General of the Adal Sultanate
Statue of Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi in Mogadishu, Somalia
Reignc. 1527 – 21 February 1543
PredecessorMahfuz
SuccessorNur ibn Mujahid
Bornc. 1506
Hubat, or Zeila (Adal Sultanate)
Died21 February 1543(1543-02-21) (aged 36–37)
Wayna Daga, Ethiopian Empire
Burial
SpouseBati del Wambara
IssueMohammad ibn Ahmad[1]
ReligionIslam

Ethnicity

Imam Ahmad is regarded by most scholars as an ethnic Somali.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][13] However, a few historians have dismissed the Somali theory. Merid Wolde Aregay argued Ahmed ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi belonged to the Harla dynasty of rulers through his father.[14] Mohammed Hassan also states Ahmed was the son of Garad Ibrahim, a provincial governor of Sim in Harla realm.[15] According to Taddesse Tamrat, although various Somali clans were involved in the conquest, Ahmed was not a Somali and had links to the Semitic-speaking Wâlasma aristocracy.[16] Some sources assert Ahmad was Harari (commonly interchangeable with the Harla, as the Harari was found by seven Harla subclans),[17][18][19][20][21][22][23] while others regard him as Afar or Argobba.[24][25][26]

Many Somali clans played a strong role in Gurey's conquest of Abyssinia, however, it is said that these clans went to war not so much as Somalis but as Muslims.[27][28] In the Futuh al-Habasa of Sihab ad-Din records that when the Sultan Umar Din of Harar and the Imam quarrelled over the distribution of the alms tax at some point between the Battle of Shimbra Kure and the Battle of Amba Sel, it led to Imam Ahmad leaving Harar to retire to live amongst Somalis for some time and regularly mediated disputes between clans[29]

Historian Whiteway, R. S. (Richard Stephen) based on the accounts of the Portuguese expeditions to Abyssinia had this much to say about Imam Ahmad's background:

Of the early history of the Imam Ahmad but little is known. He was the son of one Ibrahim el Ghazi, and both he and his father were common soldiers in the troop of Garad Aboun. Nothing even is said as to his nationality. He was certainly not an Arab: probably he was a Somali, for we find him closely connected with many who were Somalis.[30]

Patrick Gikes however states:

Emir Ahmed Gurrey, known to the Ethiopians as Ahmed Gran. The emir himself was almost certainly from one of the pre-Somali peoples around Harar, but Somalis from a number of clans, particularly the Gorgora, a clan that probably originated around Zelia, certainly fought in his armies. Ahmed himself probably had no direct links with Somalis other than recruiting them, but his mythic value was substantial. He had launched a highly successful jihad against Ethiopia in the 1530s.[31]

I. M. Lewis discusses the existence of another leader named Ahmad Gurey, and suggests that the two leaders have been conflated into one historical figure:

The text refers to two Ahmad's with the nickname 'Left-handed'. One is regularly presented as 'Ahmad Guray, the Somali' (...) identified as Ahmad Gurey Huseyn, chief of the Habar Magaadle. Another reference, however, appears to link the Habar Magadle with the Eidagale. The other Ahmad is simply referred to as 'Imam Ahmad' or simply the 'Imam'. This Ahmad is not qualified by the adjective Somali (...) The two Ahmads have been conflated into one figure, the heroic Ahmed Guray[32]

The leading historian of Ethiopia, former Minister of Education, Arts & Culture and Dean of the National Library under Haile Selassie, Takla Sadiq Mekuria, devoted a 950-page book to the question of origin of Gragn and the identity of the Malassay in his rough monograph on the Gragn Wars (1961) called "Ya Gragn Warara" (The Conquests of Gragn), in it he draws on the evidence from Arab Faqih Sihab Uddin and the chronicles of Sarsa-Dengel. Through the mediation of Dagazmac Wargnah he interviewed Ahmed Ali Shami, the highest authoritative scholar of Harar that produced the concise manuscript history of Harar (in his Fatah Madinat Harar manuscript) for several European institutions and concludes Gragn's father was to come from the Hawiye (Somali clan) in the Ogaden; a genealogy of eight generations before Gragn is known in this tradition.[33]

Early years

 
Ruins of the Sultanate of Adal in Zeila, Somaliland.

Imam Ahmad was born in 1506 at Hubat[34] or Zeila, in the Adal Sultanate.[35][36][37][38] Ahmad spent most of his childhood in the city of Harar.[39] Due to the un-Islamic rule during the reign of Sultan Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad, Ahmad would leave Harar for Hubat.[40] In Hubat an uprising Adashe crowned himself Sultan of the inhabitants. Adashe longed for Harar and quickly started his conquest after gaining respect from the people. Ahmed along with his father joined Adashe in his conquest and joined the ranks of the elite Adalite force, and became the elite infantryman of Hubat.[41][42] Adashe who was the uncle of Gragn revolted against the rulers of Zeila and attacked several Adal strong holds, Adashe was then made sultan of Adal for seven years which was his greatest achievement. His rule over Zeila (Adal) wouldn't last long because a sultan by the name of Abu Bakr ibn Muhammed rebelled. Abu Bakr was defeated Adashe and killed Adashe near Harar. Abu bakr then established himself at Harar.[43] When Abu Bakr became sultan the whole country turned against him because Adashe was a kind man and even his arch enemies loved him. Many people joined the forces of Ahmed Gragn because he claimed to avenge his masters death and kill Abu Bakr. Abu Bakr waged war against Ahmed; however, Ahmed killed Abu Bakr and became the sultan of Adal.[44]

He married Bati del Wambara, the daughter of Mahfuz, the Governor of Zeila.[45] In 1531, Bati would give birth to their first child named Muhammad.[1]

When Mahfuz was killed returning from a campaign against the Abyssinian emperor Dawit II in 1517,[46] the Adal sultanate lapsed into anarchy for several years, until Imam Ahmad killed the last of the contenders for power and took control of Harar.[47]

Ethiopian historians such as Azazh T'ino and Bahrey have written that during the period of his rise to power, Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi had converted many Oromo pastoral people to Islam.[48]

In retaliation for an attack on Adal the previous year by the Abyssinian general Degalhan, Imam Ahmad invaded Abyssinia in 1529, supplementing his force with considerable numbers of muskets purchased from the Ottomans, which would panic the Abyssinian troops. Imam Ahmad maintained the discipline of most of his men, defeating Emperor Dawit II at Shimbra Kure that March.[49]

Invasion of Abyssinia

The chronicle of Imam Ahmad's invasion of Abyssinia is depicted in various Somali, Abyssinian and other foreign sources. Ahmed with the help of an army overwhelmingly manned by ethnic Somalis[50] or Harla/Harari[51][52] invaded Ethiopia. Imam Ahmad campaigned in Abyssinia in 1531, breaking Emperor Dawit II ability to resist in the Battle of Amba Sel on 28 October. The Muslim army of Imam Ahmad then marched northward to loot the island monastery of Lake Hayq and the stone churches of Lalibela. When the Imam entered the province of Tigray, he defeated an Abyssinian army that confronted him there. On reaching Axum, he destroyed the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion.

The Abyssinians were forced to ask for help from the Portuguese, who landed at the port of Massawa on 10 February 1541, during the reign of the emperor Gelawdewos. The force was led by Cristóvão da Gama and included 400 musketeers as well as a number of artisans and other non-combatants. Da Gama and Imam Ahmad met on 1 April 1542 at Jarte, which Trimingham has identified with Anasa, between Amba Alagi and Lake Ashenge.[53] Here the Portuguese had their first glimpse of Ahmad, as recorded by Castanhoso:

While his camp was being pitched, the king of Zeila [Imam Ahmad] ascended a hill with several horse and some foot to examine us: he halted on the top with three hundred horse and three large banners, two white with red moons, and one red with a white moon, which always accompanied him, and [by] which he was recognized.[54]

On 4 April, after the two unfamiliar armies had exchanged messages and stared at each other for a few days, da Gama formed his troops into an infantry square and marched against the Imam's lines, repelling successive waves of Muslim attacks with musket and cannon. This battle ended when Imam Ahmad was wounded in the leg by a chance shot; seeing his banners signal retreat, the Portuguese and their Abyssinian allies fell upon the disorganized Muslims, who suffered losses but managed to reform next to the river on the distant side.

Over the next several days, Imam Ahmad's forces were reinforced by arrivals of fresh troops. Understanding the need to act swiftly, da Gama on April 16 again formed a square which he led against Imam Ahmad's camp. Castanhoso laments that "the victory would have been complete this day had we only one hundred horses to finish it: for the King was carried on men's shoulders in a bed, accompanied by horsemen, and they fled in no order."[55]

Reinforced by the arrival of the Bahr Negus Yeshaq, da Gama marched southward after Imam Ahmad's force, coming within sight of him ten days later. However, the onset of the rainy season prevented da Gama from engaging Ahmad a third time. On the advice of Queen Seble Wongel, da Gama made winter camp at Wofla near Lake Ashenge, still within sight of his opponent,[56] while the Imam made his winter camp on Mount Zobil.[57]

The Imam was forced to ask for help. According to Abbé João Bermudes [pt], Imam Ahmad received 2000 musketeers from Arabia, and artillery and 900 picked men from the Ottomans to assist him. Meanwhile, due to casualties and other duties, da Gama's force was reduced to 300 musketeers. After the rains ended, Imam Ahmad attacked the Portuguese camp and through weight of numbers killed all but 140 of da Gama's troops. Da Gama himself, badly wounded, was captured with ten of his men and, after refusing an offer to spare his life if he would convert to Islam, was executed.[58]

The survivors and Emperor Gelawdewos were afterward able to join forces and, drawing on the Portuguese supplies of muskets, attacked Ahmad on 21 February 1543 in the Battle of Wayna Daga, where their vastly outnumbered troops of 9,000 managed to defeat the 15,000 soldiers under Gragn. The Imam was mortally wounded by a Portuguese musketeer during the battle.[59][60]

His wife Bati del Wambara managed to escape the battlefield with a remnant of the soldiers, and they made their way back to Harar, where she rallied his followers. Intent on avenging her husband's death, she married his nephew Nur ibn Mujahid on condition that Nur would avenge Imam Ahmad's defeat. In 1550, Nur departed on a Jihad, or Holy War, in the eastern Abyssinian lowlands of Bale, and Hadiya but was repelled by Ras Fanu'el. Abyssinians launched a punitive expedition that captured vast amount of treasure and livestock and they sacked many towns including Harar. In 1559, he invaded Fatagar and Abyssinian Emperor Galawdewos launched a second punitive expedition but was killed in battle.[61]

Legacy

 
Jami mosque in Harar, the location of Ahmed Ibrahim's tomb[62]

"In Ethiopia the damage which Ahmad Gragn did has never been forgotten," wrote Paul B. Henze. "Every Christian highlander still hears tales of Gragn in his childhood. Haile Selassie referred to him in his memoirs, "I have often had villagers in northern Ethiopia point out sites of towns, forts, churches and monasteries destroyed by Gragn as if these catastrophes had occurred only yesterday."[63] To most Somalis Ahmad is a national hero who fought against Abyssinian aggression on their ancient territories.[64]

Further reading

Ahmad's invasion of Abyssinia is described in detail in the Futuh al-habaša ("The Conquest of Ethiopia"), written in Arabic by Ahmad's follower Sihab ad-Din Admad ibn 'Abd-al-Qadir, in its current version incomplete, covering the story only to 1537, narrating the Imam's raids on the islands of Lake Tana. Richard Burton the explorer claimed that the second part could be found "in Mocha or Hudaydah"; but, despite later investigation, no one else has reported seeing a copy of this second part. The surviving first part was translated into French by René Basset and published from 1897 to 1901. Richard Pankhurst made a partial translation into English as part of his The Ethiopian Royal Chronicles (Addis Ababa: Oxford University Press, 1967), and a complete translation of the Futuh al-habaša by Paul Lester Stenhouse was published by Tsehai in 2003 (ISBN 978-0-9723172-5-2).

  • Jeffrey, Shaw (2021). The Ethiopian-Adal War, 1529-1543: The Conquest of Abyssinia. Warwick: Helion and Company. ISBN 978-1914059681.
  • Whiteway, R.S. (1967) [1902]. The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541–1543. Nendeln, Liechtenstein: Kraus Reprint Limited. (collection of primary sources on the Portuguese expedition in English translation)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Richard Stephen Whiteway (1902). The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541-1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso. Hakluyt Society. p. xxxiv.
  2. ^ R. Michael Feener (2004). Islam in World Cultures: Comparative Perspectives. ABC-CLIO. p. 219. ISBN 9781576075166.
  3. ^ a b Saheed A. Adejumobi (2008). The History of Ethiopia. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 178. ISBN 9780313322730.
  4. ^ The New Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 1. Encyclopædia Britannica. 1998. p. 163. ISBN 9780852296639.
  5. ^ Revolutionary Ethiopia: From Empire to People's Republic by Edmond Joseph Keller
  6. ^ Muddle of the Middle East, Volume 1 by Nikshoy C. Chatterji
  7. ^ Some Records of Ethiopia, 1593-1646: Being Extracts from The History of High By G.W.B. Huntingford
  8. ^ The Planting of Christianity in Africa, Volume 1
  9. ^ An Encyclopedia of World History, Ancient, Medieval and Modern, Chronologically Arranged By William Leonard Langer
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  11. ^ The History of Ethiopia By Saheed A. Adejumobi
  12. ^ E. J. Brill's first encyclopaedia of Islam : 1913 - 1936. 3. E - Iʿtimād al-Dawl by Martijn Theodor Houtsma
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  14. ^ Aregay, Merid Wolde. (1971). Southern Ethiopia and the Christian kingdom 1508 - 1708, with special reference to the Galla migrations and their consequences (Ph.D). University of London. p. 133.
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  17. ^ Siegbert Uhlig (2003). Encyclopaedia Aethiopica: A-C. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 155. ISBN 9783447047463.
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  19. ^ Ben-Dror, Avishai. (PDF). Tel Aviv University. p. VII. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-09-04.
  20. ^ Muth, Franz-Christoph (2001). "Allahs Netze: ʽArabfaqīhs Futūḥ al-Ḥabaša als Quelle für Netzwerkanalysen". Annales d'Éthiopie. 17: 116. doi:10.3406/ethio.2001.993.
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  24. ^ Kifleyesus, Abbebe (2006). Tradition and Transformation: The Argobba of Ethiopia. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 84. ISBN 978-3-447-05341-9.
  25. ^ Hinika, Mohammed Hassen (2017-12-13). "The Genealogy and Ethnic Identity of Ahmed Ibn Ibrahim Al-Gazi (Gragn) of Ethiopia: A Historiographical Reappraisal". East African Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities. 2 (2): 21–40. ISSN 2521-2192.
  26. ^ Morin, Didier (1997). Poésie traditionelle des Afars (in French). Peeters Publishers. ISBN 978-90-6831-989-7.
  27. ^ David D. Laitin, Said S. Samatar (1987). Somalia: Nation in Search of a State. Westview Press. p. 12. ISBN 9780865315556.
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  29. ^ Sihab ad-Din Ahmad bin 'Abd al-Qader, Futuh al-Habasa: The conquest of Ethiopia, translated by Paul Lester Stenhouse with annotations by Richard Pankhurst (Hollywood: Tsehai, 2003), pp. 101-105
  30. ^ Richard Stephen Whiteway (1902). The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541–1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso. Hakluyt Society. p. 38.
  31. ^ Gikes, Patrick (2003). "National Identity and Historical Mythology in Eritrea and Somaliland". Northeast African Studies. Michigan State University Press. 10 (3): 174. JSTOR 41931244.
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  33. ^ MÄLÄSAY: SELBSTBEZEICHNUNG EINES HARARINER OFFIZIERSKORPS UND IHR GEBRAUCH IN ÄTHIOPISCHEN UND ARABISCHEN CHRONIKEN Paideuma: Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde Bd. 36, Afrika-Studien II (1990), p.112
  34. ^ Steed, Christopher (4 May 2000). A History of the Church in Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 74. ISBN 9780521583428.
  35. ^ Led by its chief Ahmed Ibn Ibrahim Al-Ghazi, or Ahmed Gragn, born in the Somali port of Zeila - Schools and National Identities in French-speaking Africa: Political Choices page 60
  36. ^ Ahmed Gurey (left-handed in the Somali language) was born in the port city of Zeila in Northern Somalia. - Zakarie Abdi Bade - DYNAMICS OF RELIGION AND NATIONALISM IN SOMALIA: ALLIES AND OPPONENTS - International Journal of Contemporary Applied Researches Page 40
  37. ^ Philip Briggs (2019). Somaliland: with the overland route from Addis Ababa via eastern Ethiopia. Bradt Travel Guides. page 10
  38. ^ Ethiopia - Page 50 by Philip Briggs
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  40. ^ Richard Pankhurst (1997). The Ethiopian Borderlands: In Regional History from Ancient Times to the End of the 18th Century Essay. Red Sea Pr. p. 165. ISBN 9780932415196.
  41. ^ Adashe. JSTOR 41965889.
  42. ^ Adashe. 1905.
  43. ^ Lewis, I. M. (1999). A pastoralist democracy. ISBN 9780852552803.
  44. ^ Fage, J. D.; Oliver, Roland Anthony (1975). Ahmed. ISBN 9780521209816.
  45. ^ Richard Stephen Whiteway (1902). The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541-1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso. Hakluyt Society. p. xxxiii.
  46. ^ Timothy Insoll (1902). The Archaeology of Islam in Sub-Saharan Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 81. ISBN 9780521657020.
  47. ^ J. D. Fage, Roland Anthony Oliver (1979). The Cambridge History of Africa, Volume 3. Cambridge University Press. p. 81. ISBN 9780521209816.
  48. ^ Mengistu Woube (2005). Effects of Resettlement Schemes on the Biophysical and Human Environments: The Case of the Gambela Region, Ethiopia. Universal-Publishers. p. 44.
  49. ^ The battle is described in the Futuh, pp. 71-86.
  50. ^ Malone, Barry (2011-12-28). "Troubled Ethiopia-Somalia history haunts Horn of Africa". Reuters. Retrieved 2021-01-15.
  51. ^ Hassen, Mohammed. "Review work Futuh al habasa". International Journal of Ethiopian Studies: 179. JSTOR 27828848.
  52. ^ Fage, J.D (1975). The Cambridge History of Africa. Cambridge University Press. p. 170. ISBN 9780521209816. Retrieved 10 June 2016.
  53. ^ J. Spencer Trimingham (1952). Islam in Ethiopia. Oxford: Geoffrey Cumberlege for the University Press. p. 173.
  54. ^ Richard Stephen Whiteway (1902). The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541-1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso. Hakluyt Society. p. 41.
  55. ^ Richard Stephen Whiteway (1902). The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541-1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso. Hakluyt Society. p. 52.
  56. ^ Richard Stephen Whiteway (1902). The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541-1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso. Hakluyt Society. p. 53.
  57. ^ G.W.B. Huntingford (1989). The historical geography of Abyssinia from the first century AD to 1704. Oxford University Press. p. 134. ISBN 9780197260555.
  58. ^ Described in terms worthy of a saint's life by Jerónimo Lobo, who based his account on the testimony of an eye witness. (The Itinerário of Jerónimo Lobo, translated by Donald M. Lockhart [London: Hakluyt Society, 1984], pp. 201-217)
  59. ^ Richard Whiteway, The Portuguese expedition in Abyssnia, pp. 82
  60. ^ "20 Famous Historical and Biblical Figures from Africa". 28 May 2021.
  61. ^ Whiteway, Richard (1902). The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541–1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso. Hakluyt Society.
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  64. ^ Somalia: From The Dawn of Civilization To The Modern Times: Chapter 8: Somali Hero - Ahmad Gurey (1506-43) CivicsWeb March 9, 2005, at the Wayback Machine

External links

ahmad, ibrahim, ghazi, ahmad, ibrahim, redirects, here, sultan, from, 1374, 1384, 1387, 1393, ahmad, ibrahim, mustansir, somali, axmed, ibraahim, qaasi, axmed, gurey, harari, አሕመድ, ኢብራሂም, አል, ጋዚ, arabic, أحمد, بن, إبراهيم, الغازي, 1506, february, 1543, imam, g. Ahmad ibn Ibrahim redirects here For the Sultan of Fez from 1374 1384 and 1387 1393 see Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al Mustansir Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi Somali Axmed Ibraahim al Qaasi or Axmed Gurey Harari አሕመድ ኢብራሂም አል ጋዚ Arabic أحمد بن إبراهيم الغازي 2 c 1506 21 February 1543 3 was an imam and general of the Adal Sultanate 3 Imam Ahmad commonly named Ahmed Gurey in Somali andGurain Afar both meaning the left handed or the southpaw invaded the Ethiopian Empire under the Sultanate of Adal during the Ethiopian Adal War 4 Ahmad ibn IbrahimImam and General of the Adal SultanateStatue of Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi in Mogadishu SomaliaReignc 1527 21 February 1543PredecessorMahfuzSuccessorNur ibn MujahidBornc 1506Hubat or Zeila Adal Sultanate Died21 February 1543 1543 02 21 aged 36 37 Wayna Daga Ethiopian EmpireBurialJamia MosqueSpouseBati del WambaraIssueMohammad ibn Ahmad 1 ReligionIslam Contents 1 Ethnicity 2 Early years 3 Invasion of Abyssinia 4 Legacy 5 Further reading 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEthnicity EditImam Ahmad is regarded by most scholars as an ethnic Somali 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 However a few historians have dismissed the Somali theory Merid Wolde Aregay argued Ahmed ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi belonged to the Harla dynasty of rulers through his father 14 Mohammed Hassan also states Ahmed was the son of Garad Ibrahim a provincial governor of Sim in Harla realm 15 According to Taddesse Tamrat although various Somali clans were involved in the conquest Ahmed was not a Somali and had links to the Semitic speaking Walasma aristocracy 16 Some sources assert Ahmad was Harari commonly interchangeable with the Harla as the Harari was found by seven Harla subclans 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 while others regard him as Afar or Argobba 24 25 26 Many Somali clans played a strong role in Gurey s conquest of Abyssinia however it is said that these clans went to war not so much as Somalis but as Muslims 27 28 In the Futuh al Habasa of Sihab ad Din records that when the Sultan Umar Din of Harar and the Imam quarrelled over the distribution of the alms tax at some point between the Battle of Shimbra Kure and the Battle of Amba Sel it led to Imam Ahmad leaving Harar to retire to live amongst Somalis for some time and regularly mediated disputes between clans 29 Historian Whiteway R S Richard Stephen based on the accounts of the Portuguese expeditions to Abyssinia had this much to say about Imam Ahmad s background Of the early history of the Imam Ahmad but little is known He was the son of one Ibrahim el Ghazi and both he and his father were common soldiers in the troop of Garad Aboun Nothing even is said as to his nationality He was certainly not an Arab probably he was a Somali for we find him closely connected with many who were Somalis 30 Patrick Gikes however states Emir Ahmed Gurrey known to the Ethiopians as Ahmed Gran The emir himself was almost certainly from one of the pre Somali peoples around Harar but Somalis from a number of clans particularly the Gorgora a clan that probably originated around Zelia certainly fought in his armies Ahmed himself probably had no direct links with Somalis other than recruiting them but his mythic value was substantial He had launched a highly successful jihad against Ethiopia in the 1530s 31 I M Lewis discusses the existence of another leader named Ahmad Gurey and suggests that the two leaders have been conflated into one historical figure The text refers to two Ahmad s with the nickname Left handed One is regularly presented as Ahmad Guray the Somali identified as Ahmad Gurey Huseyn chief of the Habar Magaadle Another reference however appears to link the Habar Magadle with the Eidagale The other Ahmad is simply referred to as Imam Ahmad or simply the Imam This Ahmad is not qualified by the adjective Somali The two Ahmads have been conflated into one figure the heroic Ahmed Guray 32 The leading historian of Ethiopia former Minister of Education Arts amp Culture and Dean of the National Library under Haile Selassie Takla Sadiq Mekuria devoted a 950 page book to the question of origin of Gragn and the identity of the Malassay in his rough monograph on the Gragn Wars 1961 called Ya Gragn Warara The Conquests of Gragn in it he draws on the evidence from Arab Faqih Sihab Uddin and the chronicles of Sarsa Dengel Through the mediation of Dagazmac Wargnah he interviewed Ahmed Ali Shami the highest authoritative scholar of Harar that produced the concise manuscript history of Harar in his Fatah Madinat Harar manuscript for several European institutions and concludes Gragn s father was to come from the Hawiye Somali clan in the Ogaden a genealogy of eight generations before Gragn is known in this tradition 33 Early years Edit Ruins of the Sultanate of Adal in Zeila Somaliland Imam Ahmad was born in 1506 at Hubat 34 or Zeila in the Adal Sultanate 35 36 37 38 Ahmad spent most of his childhood in the city of Harar 39 Due to the un Islamic rule during the reign of Sultan Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad Ahmad would leave Harar for Hubat 40 In Hubat an uprising Adashe crowned himself Sultan of the inhabitants Adashe longed for Harar and quickly started his conquest after gaining respect from the people Ahmed along with his father joined Adashe in his conquest and joined the ranks of the elite Adalite force and became the elite infantryman of Hubat 41 42 Adashe who was the uncle of Gragn revolted against the rulers of Zeila and attacked several Adal strong holds Adashe was then made sultan of Adal for seven years which was his greatest achievement His rule over Zeila Adal wouldn t last long because a sultan by the name of Abu Bakr ibn Muhammed rebelled Abu Bakr was defeated Adashe and killed Adashe near Harar Abu bakr then established himself at Harar 43 When Abu Bakr became sultan the whole country turned against him because Adashe was a kind man and even his arch enemies loved him Many people joined the forces of Ahmed Gragn because he claimed to avenge his masters death and kill Abu Bakr Abu Bakr waged war against Ahmed however Ahmed killed Abu Bakr and became the sultan of Adal 44 He married Bati del Wambara the daughter of Mahfuz the Governor of Zeila 45 In 1531 Bati would give birth to their first child named Muhammad 1 When Mahfuz was killed returning from a campaign against the Abyssinian emperor Dawit II in 1517 46 the Adal sultanate lapsed into anarchy for several years until Imam Ahmad killed the last of the contenders for power and took control of Harar 47 Ethiopian historians such as Azazh T ino and Bahrey have written that during the period of his rise to power Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi had converted many Oromo pastoral people to Islam 48 In retaliation for an attack on Adal the previous year by the Abyssinian general Degalhan Imam Ahmad invaded Abyssinia in 1529 supplementing his force with considerable numbers of muskets purchased from the Ottomans which would panic the Abyssinian troops Imam Ahmad maintained the discipline of most of his men defeating Emperor Dawit II at Shimbra Kure that March 49 Invasion of Abyssinia EditMain article Ethiopian Adal War The chronicle of Imam Ahmad s invasion of Abyssinia is depicted in various Somali Abyssinian and other foreign sources Ahmed with the help of an army overwhelmingly manned by ethnic Somalis 50 or Harla Harari 51 52 invaded Ethiopia Imam Ahmad campaigned in Abyssinia in 1531 breaking Emperor Dawit II ability to resist in the Battle of Amba Sel on 28 October The Muslim army of Imam Ahmad then marched northward to loot the island monastery of Lake Hayq and the stone churches of Lalibela When the Imam entered the province of Tigray he defeated an Abyssinian army that confronted him there On reaching Axum he destroyed the Church of Our Lady Mary of Zion The Abyssinians were forced to ask for help from the Portuguese who landed at the port of Massawa on 10 February 1541 during the reign of the emperor Gelawdewos The force was led by Cristovao da Gama and included 400 musketeers as well as a number of artisans and other non combatants Da Gama and Imam Ahmad met on 1 April 1542 at Jarte which Trimingham has identified with Anasa between Amba Alagi and Lake Ashenge 53 Here the Portuguese had their first glimpse of Ahmad as recorded by Castanhoso While his camp was being pitched the king of Zeila Imam Ahmad ascended a hill with several horse and some foot to examine us he halted on the top with three hundred horse and three large banners two white with red moons and one red with a white moon which always accompanied him and by which he was recognized 54 On 4 April after the two unfamiliar armies had exchanged messages and stared at each other for a few days da Gama formed his troops into an infantry square and marched against the Imam s lines repelling successive waves of Muslim attacks with musket and cannon This battle ended when Imam Ahmad was wounded in the leg by a chance shot seeing his banners signal retreat the Portuguese and their Abyssinian allies fell upon the disorganized Muslims who suffered losses but managed to reform next to the river on the distant side Over the next several days Imam Ahmad s forces were reinforced by arrivals of fresh troops Understanding the need to act swiftly da Gama on April 16 again formed a square which he led against Imam Ahmad s camp Castanhoso laments that the victory would have been complete this day had we only one hundred horses to finish it for the King was carried on men s shoulders in a bed accompanied by horsemen and they fled in no order 55 Reinforced by the arrival of the Bahr Negus Yeshaq da Gama marched southward after Imam Ahmad s force coming within sight of him ten days later However the onset of the rainy season prevented da Gama from engaging Ahmad a third time On the advice of Queen Seble Wongel da Gama made winter camp at Wofla near Lake Ashenge still within sight of his opponent 56 while the Imam made his winter camp on Mount Zobil 57 The Imam was forced to ask for help According to Abbe Joao Bermudes pt Imam Ahmad received 2000 musketeers from Arabia and artillery and 900 picked men from the Ottomans to assist him Meanwhile due to casualties and other duties da Gama s force was reduced to 300 musketeers After the rains ended Imam Ahmad attacked the Portuguese camp and through weight of numbers killed all but 140 of da Gama s troops Da Gama himself badly wounded was captured with ten of his men and after refusing an offer to spare his life if he would convert to Islam was executed 58 The survivors and Emperor Gelawdewos were afterward able to join forces and drawing on the Portuguese supplies of muskets attacked Ahmad on 21 February 1543 in the Battle of Wayna Daga where their vastly outnumbered troops of 9 000 managed to defeat the 15 000 soldiers under Gragn The Imam was mortally wounded by a Portuguese musketeer during the battle 59 60 His wife Bati del Wambara managed to escape the battlefield with a remnant of the soldiers and they made their way back to Harar where she rallied his followers Intent on avenging her husband s death she married his nephew Nur ibn Mujahid on condition that Nur would avenge Imam Ahmad s defeat In 1550 Nur departed on a Jihad or Holy War in the eastern Abyssinian lowlands of Bale and Hadiya but was repelled by Ras Fanu el Abyssinians launched a punitive expedition that captured vast amount of treasure and livestock and they sacked many towns including Harar In 1559 he invaded Fatagar and Abyssinian Emperor Galawdewos launched a second punitive expedition but was killed in battle 61 Legacy Edit Jami mosque in Harar the location of Ahmed Ibrahim s tomb 62 In Ethiopia the damage which Ahmad Gragn did has never been forgotten wrote Paul B Henze Every Christian highlander still hears tales of Gragn in his childhood Haile Selassie referred to him in his memoirs I have often had villagers in northern Ethiopia point out sites of towns forts churches and monasteries destroyed by Gragn as if these catastrophes had occurred only yesterday 63 To most Somalis Ahmad is a national hero who fought against Abyssinian aggression on their ancient territories 64 Further reading EditAhmad s invasion of Abyssinia is described in detail in the Futuh al habasa The Conquest of Ethiopia written in Arabic by Ahmad s follower Sihab ad Din Admad ibn Abd al Qadir in its current version incomplete covering the story only to 1537 narrating the Imam s raids on the islands of Lake Tana Richard Burton the explorer claimed that the second part could be found in Mocha or Hudaydah but despite later investigation no one else has reported seeing a copy of this second part The surviving first part was translated into French by Rene Basset and published from 1897 to 1901 Richard Pankhurst made a partial translation into English as part of his The Ethiopian Royal Chronicles Addis Ababa Oxford University Press 1967 and a complete translation of the Futuh al habasa by Paul Lester Stenhouse was published by Tsehai in 2003 ISBN 978 0 9723172 5 2 Jeffrey Shaw 2021 The Ethiopian Adal War 1529 1543 The Conquest of Abyssinia Warwick Helion and Company ISBN 978 1914059681 Whiteway R S 1967 1902 The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 Nendeln Liechtenstein Kraus Reprint Limited collection of primary sources on the Portuguese expedition in English translation See also EditImam Ahmed Stadium Adal Sultanate History of Medieval Somalia History of Ethiopia List of SomalisReferences Edit a b Richard Stephen Whiteway 1902 The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso Hakluyt Society p xxxiv R Michael Feener 2004 Islam in World Cultures Comparative Perspectives ABC CLIO p 219 ISBN 9781576075166 a b Saheed A Adejumobi 2008 The History of Ethiopia Greenwood Publishing Group p 178 ISBN 9780313322730 The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Volume 1 Encyclopaedia Britannica 1998 p 163 ISBN 9780852296639 Revolutionary Ethiopia From Empire to People s Republic by Edmond Joseph Keller Muddle of the Middle East Volume 1 by Nikshoy C Chatterji Some Records of Ethiopia 1593 1646 Being Extracts from The History of High By G W B Huntingford The Planting of Christianity in Africa Volume 1 An Encyclopedia of World History Ancient Medieval and Modern Chronologically Arranged By William Leonard Langer The Ethiopian revolution 1974 1987 A transformation from an aristocratic to a totalitarian autocracy By Andargachew Tiruneh The History of Ethiopia By Saheed A Adejumobi E J Brill s first encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 3 E Iʿtimad al Dawl by Martijn Theodor Houtsma The Battle of Adwa Reflections on Ethiopia s Historic Victory Against European Colonialism Aregay Merid Wolde 1971 Southern Ethiopia and the Christian kingdom 1508 1708 with special reference to the Galla migrations and their consequences Ph D University of London p 133 Hassen Mohammed Review work Futuh al habasa International Journal of Ethiopian Studies 179 180 JSTOR 27828848 Tamrat Taddesse November 1991 Review Place Names in Ethiopian History Journal of Ethiopian Studies p 120 JSTOR 41965996 Siegbert Uhlig 2003 Encyclopaedia Aethiopica A C Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 155 ISBN 9783447047463 Mirza Sana 28 December 2017 The visual resonances of a Harari Qur an An 18th century Ethiopian manuscript and its Indian Ocean connections OpenEdition 8 5 doi 10 4000 afriques 2052 Ben Dror Avishai The Egyptian Hikimdariya of Harar and its Hinterland Historical Aspects 1875 1887 PDF Tel Aviv University p VII Archived from the original PDF on 2012 09 04 Muth Franz Christoph 2001 Allahs Netze ʽArabfaqihs Futuḥ al Ḥabasa als Quelle fur Netzwerkanalysen Annales d Ethiopie 17 116 doi 10 3406 ethio 2001 993 Esposito John 2009 Ethiopia The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 530513 5 Wagner Ewald 1991 The Genealogy of the later Walashma Sultans of Adal and Harar Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenlandischen Gesellschaft Harrassowitz Verlag 141 2 377 JSTOR 43378336 Fernaren Nial 8 November 2007 The Archaeology of Ethiopia Routledge ISBN 978 1136755521 Retrieved 7 February 2016 Kifleyesus Abbebe 2006 Tradition and Transformation The Argobba of Ethiopia Otto Harrassowitz Verlag p 84 ISBN 978 3 447 05341 9 Hinika Mohammed Hassen 2017 12 13 The Genealogy and Ethnic Identity of Ahmed Ibn Ibrahim Al Gazi Gragn of Ethiopia A Historiographical Reappraisal East African Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities 2 2 21 40 ISSN 2521 2192 Morin Didier 1997 Poesie traditionelle des Afars in French Peeters Publishers ISBN 978 90 6831 989 7 David D Laitin Said S Samatar 1987 Somalia Nation in Search of a State Westview Press p 12 ISBN 9780865315556 ʻArabfaqih Shihab al Din Aḥmad ibn ʻAbd al Qadir 2003 01 01 The conquest of Abyssinia 16th century Tsehai Publishers amp Distributors ISBN 9780972317269 Sihab ad Din Ahmad bin Abd al Qader Futuh al Habasa The conquest of Ethiopia translated by Paul Lester Stenhouse with annotations by Richard Pankhurst Hollywood Tsehai 2003 pp 101 105 Richard Stephen Whiteway 1902 The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso Hakluyt Society p 38 Gikes Patrick 2003 National Identity and Historical Mythology in Eritrea and Somaliland Northeast African Studies Michigan State University Press 10 3 174 JSTOR 41931244 Morin Didier 2004 Dictionnaire historique afar 1288 1982 in French KARTHALA Editions ISBN 9782845864924 MALASAY SELBSTBEZEICHNUNG EINES HARARINER OFFIZIERSKORPS UND IHR GEBRAUCH IN ATHIOPISCHEN UND ARABISCHEN CHRONIKEN Paideuma Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde Bd 36 Afrika Studien II 1990 p 112 Steed Christopher 4 May 2000 A History of the Church in Africa Cambridge University Press p 74 ISBN 9780521583428 Led by its chief Ahmed Ibn Ibrahim Al Ghazi or Ahmed Gragn born in the Somali port of Zeila Schools and National Identities in French speaking Africa Political Choices page 60 Ahmed Gurey left handed in the Somali language was born in the port city of Zeila in Northern Somalia Zakarie Abdi Bade DYNAMICS OF RELIGION AND NATIONALISM IN SOMALIA ALLIES AND OPPONENTS International Journal of Contemporary Applied Researches Page 40 Philip Briggs 2019 Somaliland with the overland route from Addis Ababa via eastern Ethiopia Bradt Travel Guides page 10 Ethiopia Page 50 by Philip Briggs David H Shinn Thomas P Ofcansky 2013 Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia Scarecrow Press pp 20 21 ISBN 9780810874572 Richard Pankhurst 1997 The Ethiopian Borderlands In Regional History from Ancient Times to the End of the 18th Century Essay Red Sea Pr p 165 ISBN 9780932415196 Adashe JSTOR 41965889 Adashe 1905 Lewis I M 1999 A pastoralist democracy ISBN 9780852552803 Fage J D Oliver Roland Anthony 1975 Ahmed ISBN 9780521209816 Richard Stephen Whiteway 1902 The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso Hakluyt Society p xxxiii Timothy Insoll 1902 The Archaeology of Islam in Sub Saharan Africa Cambridge University Press p 81 ISBN 9780521657020 J D Fage Roland Anthony Oliver 1979 The Cambridge History of Africa Volume 3 Cambridge University Press p 81 ISBN 9780521209816 Mengistu Woube 2005 Effects of Resettlement Schemes on the Biophysical and Human Environments The Case of the Gambela Region Ethiopia Universal Publishers p 44 The battle is described in the Futuh pp 71 86 Malone Barry 2011 12 28 Troubled Ethiopia Somalia history haunts Horn of Africa Reuters Retrieved 2021 01 15 Hassen Mohammed Review work Futuh al habasa International Journal of Ethiopian Studies 179 JSTOR 27828848 Fage J D 1975 The Cambridge History of Africa Cambridge University Press p 170 ISBN 9780521209816 Retrieved 10 June 2016 J Spencer Trimingham 1952 Islam in Ethiopia Oxford Geoffrey Cumberlege for the University Press p 173 Richard Stephen Whiteway 1902 The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso Hakluyt Society p 41 Richard Stephen Whiteway 1902 The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso Hakluyt Society p 52 Richard Stephen Whiteway 1902 The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso Hakluyt Society p 53 G W B Huntingford 1989 The historical geography of Abyssinia from the first century AD to 1704 Oxford University Press p 134 ISBN 9780197260555 Described in terms worthy of a saint s life by Jeronimo Lobo who based his account on the testimony of an eye witness The Itinerario of Jeronimo Lobo translated by Donald M Lockhart London Hakluyt Society 1984 pp 201 217 Richard Whiteway The Portuguese expedition in Abyssnia pp 82 20 Famous Historical and Biblical Figures from Africa 28 May 2021 Whiteway Richard 1902 The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541 1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso Hakluyt Society Insoll Timothy The Mosques of Harar An Archaeological and Historical Study PDF University of Exeter p 6 Paul B Henze 2002 Layers of Time A History of Ethiopia Hurst amp Company p 90 ISBN 9781850653936 Somalia From The Dawn of Civilization To The Modern Times Chapter 8 Somali Hero Ahmad Gurey 1506 43 CivicsWeb Archived March 9 2005 at the Wayback MachineExternal links EditThe Ethiopian Muslim and Christian War 1528 1560 Somalia From The Dawn of Civilization To The Modern Times Chapter 8 Somali Hero Ahmad Gurey 1506 43 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi amp oldid 1139725550, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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