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Majeerteen Sultanate

The Majeerteen Sultanate (Somali: Suldanadda Majeerteen, lit.'Boqortooyada Majerteen', Arabic: سلطنة مجرتين), also known as Majeerteenia and Migiurtinia, was a Somali kingdom centered in the Horn of Africa. Ruled by Boqor Osman Mahamuud during its golden age, the sultanate controlled the areas which are now called Puntland. The earliest mention of the kingdom is the 16th century. The polity had all of the organs of an integrated modern state and maintained a robust trading network. It also entered into treaties with foreign powers and exerted strong centralized authority on the domestic front.

Majeerteen Sultanate
Suldanadda Majeerteen
𐒈𐒚𐒐𐒆𐒖𐒒𐒖𐒆𐒆𐒖 𐒑𐒖𐒃𐒜𐒇𐒂𐒜𐒒
سلطنة مجرتين
Migiurtinia
Possibly 17th century–1927
Flag
Map of the Majeerteen Sultanate at its height.
StatusSomali Sultanate
Protectorate of Italy ( 7 April 1889– 26 October 1926)
CapitalAlula
Common languagesSomali
Religion
Islam
GovernmentMonarchy
Sultan 
• 1809 - 1818
Boqor Mahmud IV "Xawaadane" Yusuf Ali
• 1818 - 1835
Boqor Osman Mahmud Yusuf
• 1835 - 1837
Boqor Yusuf Osman Mahmud
• 1837 - 1866
Boqor Mahmud Yusuf Osman
• 1866 - 1927
Boqor Osman Mahamuud Yusuf
History 
• Established
Possibly 17th century
• Campaign of the Sultanates
October–November 1927
Area
• Total
90,744 km2 (35,036 sq mi)
Today part ofSomalia

History

Establishment

The Majeerteen Sultanate was established possible around 1600s by Somalis from the Majeerteen Darod clan.[1] It reached prominence during the 19th century, under the reign of the resourceful Boqor (King) Osman Mahamuud.[2]

Majeerteen-British agreement

 
One of the forts of the Majeerteen Sultanate (Migiurtinia) in Hafun.

Due to consistent ship crashes along the northeastern Cape Guardafui headland, Boqor Osman's kingdom entered into an informal agreement with Britain, wherein the British agreed to pay the King annual subsidies to protect shipwrecked British crews and guard wrecks against plunder. The agreement, however, remained unratified, as the British feared that doing so would "give other powers a precedent for making agreements with the Somalis, who seemed ready to enter into relations with all comers."[3]

Sultanate of Hobyo

Osman Mahamuud's Kingdom was under attack in the mid-19th century due to a power struggle between himself and his ambitious cousin, Yusuf Ali Kenadid. After almost five years of battle, the young upstart was terribly defeated and finally forced into exile in Yemen. A decade later, in the 1870s, Kenadid returned from the Arabian Peninsula with a band of Hadhrami musketeers and a group of devoted lieutenants. With their assistance along with aid and weaponry from Boqor Osman, he managed to overpower the local Hawiye clans and establish the separate Sultanate of Hobyo (Obbia) in 1878.[2][4]

Majeerteen-Italian treaties

In the late 19th century, all extant Somali monarchs entered into treaties with one of the colonial powers, Abyssinia, Britain or Italy, except for the Dhulbahante,[5] since the Italians considered part of the Dhulbahante subject of the Italian-protected Sultan of the Majeerteen.[6] With the intermediation of Sultan Yusuf Ali Kenadid & after a conference of all notablels of the sultanate in Bargal,[7] In 7. April 1889 in Alula, Somalia, Boqor Osman entered into a treaty with Italy, making his kingdom a protectorate known as Italian Somaliland.[8] In the years following the treaty the protectorate was however rather nominal due to Italian warships tasked with maintaining contact with the sultan visiting so rarely & irregularly. Piracy, looting of crashed steamships, weapons trade & slave trade could be carried out with almost no consequences.[8]

 
Italian Somaliland including the Majeerteen Sultanate.

His second cousin and rival Sultan Yusuf Ali Kenadid had signed a similar agreement vis-a-vis his own Sultanate of Hobyo the year before. Both Boqor Osman and Sultan Kenadid had entered into the protectorate treaties to advance their own expansionist goals, with Sultan Kenadid looking to use Italy's support in his ongoing power struggle with Boqor Osman over the Majeerteen Sultanate, as well as in a separate conflict with the Omani Sultan of Zanzibar over an area to the north of Warsheikh. In signing the agreements, the rulers also hoped to exploit the rival objectives of the European imperial powers so as to more effectively assure the continued independence of their territories.[9]

The terms of each treaty specified that Italy was to steer clear of any interference in the sultanates' respective administrations.[9] In return for Italian arms and an annual subsidy, the Sultans conceded to a minimum of oversight and economic concessions.[10] The Italians also agreed to dispatch a few ambassadors to promote both the sultanates' and their own interests.[9] The new protectorates were thereafter managed by Vincenzo Filonardi through a chartered company.[10] An Anglo-Italian border protocol was later signed on 5 May 1894, followed by an agreement in 1906 between Cavalier Pestalozza and General Swaine acknowledging that Baran fell under the Majeerteen Sultanate's administration.[9] With the gradual extension into northern Somalia of Italian colonial rule, both Kingdoms were eventually annexed in the early 20th century.[11] However, unlike the southern territories, the northern sultanates were not subject to direct rule due to the earlier treaties they had signed with the Italians.[citation needed]

Administration

Bureaucracy

 
Ruins of King Osman's castle in Bargal (built in 1878), a seasonal capital of the Majeerteen Sultanate

The Sultanate of Hobyo, the Majeerteen Sultanate exerted a strong centralized authority during its existence, and possessed all of the organs and trappings of an integrated modern state: a functioning bureaucracy, a hereditary nobility, titled aristocrats, a state flag, as well as a professional army.[12][13] Both sultanates also maintained written records of their activities, which still exist.[14]

The Majeerteen Sultanate's main capital was at Alula, with its seasonal headquarters at Bargal. It likewise had a number of castles and forts in various areas within its realm, including a fortress at Murcanyo.[15]

The Majeerteen Sultanate's ruler, however, commanded more power than was typical of other Somali leaders during the period. As the primus inter pares, Boqor Osman taxed the harvest of aromatic trees and pearl fishing along the seaboard. He retained prior rights on goods obtained from ship wrecks on the coast. The Sultanate also exerted authority over the control of woodland and pastureland, and imposed both land and stock taxes.[16]

Commerce

According to official reports from 1924 commissioned by the Regio Governo della Somalia Italiana, the Majeerteen Sultanate maintained robust commercial activities before the Italian occupation of the following year. The Sultanate reportedly exported 1,056,400 Indian Rupees (IR) worth of commodities, 60% of which came from the sale of frankincense and other gums. Fish and other sea products sold for a total value of 250,000 IR, roughly equivalent to 20% of the Sultanate's aggregate exports. The remaining export proceeds came from livestock, with the export list of 1924 consisting of 16 items.[17]

Military

In addition to a strong civil administration, the Majeerteen Sultanate maintained a regular army. Besides protecting the polity from both external and internal threats, military officials were tasked with carrying out the King's instructions. The latter included tax collection, which typically came in the form of the obligatory Muslim alms (seko or sako) ordinarily tithed by Somalis to the poor and religious clerics (wadaads).[16][18]

Puntland

Established in 1998, the autonomous Puntland region in northeastern Somalia now administers much of the former territories of the Majeerteen Sultanate (Migiurtinia).[19]

Sultans

Rulers of the Majeerteen Sultanate:[20]

# Sultan Reign Notes
1 Suldaan Cismaan "Bah-Dir" 1815–1842 Also known as Cismaan I
2 Suldaan Yuusuf "Bah-Yaaquub" 1842–1844 Also known as Yuusuf I. Brief reign of only two years.
3 Suldaan Maxamuud Suldaan Cismaan Maxamuud 1844–1860
4 Suldaan Cismaan Suldaan Maxamuud Suldaan Cismaan 1860–1927 Also known as Osman Mahamuud or Cismaan II Maxamuud. Long reign of almost 70 years. Last Sultan of the Majeerteen Sultanate

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Fergusson, James (2013-05-01). The World's Most Dangerous Place: Inside the Outlaw State of Somalia. Da Capo Press. ISBN 978-0306821585.
  2. ^ a b Helen Chapin Metz, ed., Somalia: a country study, (The Division: 1993), p.10.
  3. ^ David D. Laitin, Politics, Language, and Thought: The Somali Experience, (University Of Chicago Press: 1977), p.71
  4. ^ Lee V. Cassanelli, The shaping of Somali society: reconstructing the history of a pastoral people, 1600-1900, (University of Pennsylvania Press: 1982), p.75.
  5. ^ Jardine, Douglas (1923). Mad Mullah of Somaliland. Early in 1885 Great Britain concluded separate protective treaties with all the Somali tribes now living under her protection, except the Warsangeli, who concluded a treaty in 1886, and the Dolbahanta, with whom no treaty has been made.
  6. ^ Irons, Roy (2013). Churchill and the Mad Mullah of Somaliland : betrayal and redemption, 1899-1921. Barnsley, South Yorkshire. p. 12. ISBN 978-1-4738-3155-1. OCLC 885208819. No treaty was concluded with the Dolbahanta, the largest of the clans, for the Italians regarded part of the clan as subject to the Sultan of the Mijerteen, who was himself under Italian protection.
  7. ^ Battera, Frederico (2004). "Dalla tribù allo Stato nella Somalia nord-orientale: il caso sei Sultanati di Hobiyo e Majeerteen, 1880-1930". pp. 144–145.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  8. ^ a b La Migiurtinia Ed Il Territorio Del Nugál. p. 57.
  9. ^ a b c d Issa-Salwe (1996), 34–35.
  10. ^ a b Hess (1964), 416–17.
  11. ^ The Majeerteen Sultanates
  12. ^ Horn of Africa, Volume 15, Issues 1-4, (Horn of Africa Journal: 1997), p.130.
  13. ^ Michigan State University. African Studies Center, Northeast African studies, Volumes 11-12, (Michigan State University Press: 1989), p.32.
  14. ^ Sub-Saharan Africa Report, Issues 57-67. Foreign Broadcast Information Service. 1986. p. 34.
  15. ^ S. B. Miles, On the Neighbourhood of Bunder Marayah, Vol. 42, (Blackwell Publishing on behalf of The Royal Geographical Society (with the institute of British Geographers): 1872), p.61-63.
  16. ^ a b I. M. Lewis, A pastoral democracy: a study of pastoralism and politics among the Northern Somali of the Horn of Africa, (LIT Verlag Münster: 1999), p.208.
  17. ^ Transformation towards a regulated economy, (WSP Transition Programme, Somali Programme: 2000) p.62.
  18. ^ Luling, Virginia (1993). The Use of the Past: Variation in Historical traditions in a South Somalia community. University of Besançon. p. 178.
  19. ^ Istituto italo-africano, Africa: rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione, Volume 56, (Edizioni africane: 2001), p.591.
  20. ^ "Somali Traditional States". Worldstatesmen. Retrieved 5 April 2015.

References

  • Hess, Robert L. (1964). "The 'Mad Mullah' and Northern Somalia". The Journal of African History. 5 (3): 415–33. doi:10.1017/s0021853700005107. S2CID 162991126.
  • Issa-Salwe, Abdisalam M. (1996). The Collapse of the Somali State: The Impact of the Colonial Legacy. London: Haan Associates. ISBN 187420991X.
  • Sheik-ʻAbdi, ʻAbdi ʻAbdulqadir (1993). Divine madness: Moḥammed ʻAbdulle Ḥassan (1856-1920). Zed Books. ISBN 0-86232-444-0.

External links

  Media related to Majeerteen at Wikimedia Commons

  • lntroduction and change to the somalo in Migiurtinia and other comissariats
  • Square kilometers of Migiurtinia according to Encyclopadeia Britannica (1983)
  • In 1938, Mussolini briefly considered settling Jews into Migiurtinia and turning it into a Jewish state
  • World famous incense was from Migiurtinia
  • First whispers of democracy and anti democracy protests took place in Migiurtinia and Mudugh
  • Sultanate of Migiurtinia signed a treaty with the Italy Government on April 7, 1889.

majeerteen, sultanate, this, article, about, early, modern, somali, sultanate, clan, majeerteen, somali, suldanadda, majeerteen, boqortooyada, majerteen, arabic, سلطنة, مجرتين, also, known, majeerteenia, migiurtinia, somali, kingdom, centered, horn, africa, ru. This article is about the early modern Somali Sultanate For the clan see Majeerteen The Majeerteen Sultanate Somali Suldanadda Majeerteen lit Boqortooyada Majerteen Arabic سلطنة مجرتين also known as Majeerteenia and Migiurtinia was a Somali kingdom centered in the Horn of Africa Ruled by Boqor Osman Mahamuud during its golden age the sultanate controlled the areas which are now called Puntland The earliest mention of the kingdom is the 16th century The polity had all of the organs of an integrated modern state and maintained a robust trading network It also entered into treaties with foreign powers and exerted strong centralized authority on the domestic front Majeerteen SultanateSuldanadda Majeerteen𐒈𐒚𐒐𐒆𐒖𐒒𐒖𐒆𐒆𐒖 𐒑𐒖𐒃𐒜𐒇𐒂𐒜𐒒 سلطنة مجرتينMigiurtiniaPossibly 17th century 1927FlagMap of the Majeerteen Sultanate at its height StatusSomali SultanateProtectorate of Italy 7 April 1889 26 October 1926 CapitalAlulaCommon languagesSomaliReligionIslamGovernmentMonarchySultan 1809 1818Boqor Mahmud IV Xawaadane Yusuf Ali 1818 1835Boqor Osman Mahmud Yusuf 1835 1837Boqor Yusuf Osman Mahmud 1837 1866Boqor Mahmud Yusuf Osman 1866 1927Boqor Osman Mahamuud YusufHistory EstablishedPossibly 17th century Campaign of the SultanatesOctober November 1927Area Total90 744 km2 35 036 sq mi Succeeded bySultanate of HobyoItalian SomalilandToday part ofSomalia Contents 1 History 1 1 Establishment 1 2 Majeerteen British agreement 1 3 Sultanate of Hobyo 1 4 Majeerteen Italian treaties 2 Administration 2 1 Bureaucracy 2 2 Commerce 2 3 Military 3 Puntland 4 Sultans 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditEstablishment Edit The Majeerteen Sultanate was established possible around 1600s by Somalis from the Majeerteen Darod clan 1 It reached prominence during the 19th century under the reign of the resourceful Boqor King Osman Mahamuud 2 Majeerteen British agreement Edit One of the forts of the Majeerteen Sultanate Migiurtinia in Hafun Due to consistent ship crashes along the northeastern Cape Guardafui headland Boqor Osman s kingdom entered into an informal agreement with Britain wherein the British agreed to pay the King annual subsidies to protect shipwrecked British crews and guard wrecks against plunder The agreement however remained unratified as the British feared that doing so would give other powers a precedent for making agreements with the Somalis who seemed ready to enter into relations with all comers 3 Sultanate of Hobyo Edit Main article Sultanate of Hobyo Osman Mahamuud s Kingdom was under attack in the mid 19th century due to a power struggle between himself and his ambitious cousin Yusuf Ali Kenadid After almost five years of battle the young upstart was terribly defeated and finally forced into exile in Yemen A decade later in the 1870s Kenadid returned from the Arabian Peninsula with a band of Hadhrami musketeers and a group of devoted lieutenants With their assistance along with aid and weaponry from Boqor Osman he managed to overpower the local Hawiye clans and establish the separate Sultanate of Hobyo Obbia in 1878 2 4 Majeerteen Italian treaties Edit In the late 19th century all extant Somali monarchs entered into treaties with one of the colonial powers Abyssinia Britain or Italy except for the Dhulbahante 5 since the Italians considered part of the Dhulbahante subject of the Italian protected Sultan of the Majeerteen 6 With the intermediation of Sultan Yusuf Ali Kenadid amp after a conference of all notablels of the sultanate in Bargal 7 In 7 April 1889 in Alula Somalia Boqor Osman entered into a treaty with Italy making his kingdom a protectorate known as Italian Somaliland 8 In the years following the treaty the protectorate was however rather nominal due to Italian warships tasked with maintaining contact with the sultan visiting so rarely amp irregularly Piracy looting of crashed steamships weapons trade amp slave trade could be carried out with almost no consequences 8 Italian Somaliland including the Majeerteen Sultanate His second cousin and rival Sultan Yusuf Ali Kenadid had signed a similar agreement vis a vis his own Sultanate of Hobyo the year before Both Boqor Osman and Sultan Kenadid had entered into the protectorate treaties to advance their own expansionist goals with Sultan Kenadid looking to use Italy s support in his ongoing power struggle with Boqor Osman over the Majeerteen Sultanate as well as in a separate conflict with the Omani Sultan of Zanzibar over an area to the north of Warsheikh In signing the agreements the rulers also hoped to exploit the rival objectives of the European imperial powers so as to more effectively assure the continued independence of their territories 9 The terms of each treaty specified that Italy was to steer clear of any interference in the sultanates respective administrations 9 In return for Italian arms and an annual subsidy the Sultans conceded to a minimum of oversight and economic concessions 10 The Italians also agreed to dispatch a few ambassadors to promote both the sultanates and their own interests 9 The new protectorates were thereafter managed by Vincenzo Filonardi through a chartered company 10 An Anglo Italian border protocol was later signed on 5 May 1894 followed by an agreement in 1906 between Cavalier Pestalozza and General Swaine acknowledging that Baran fell under the Majeerteen Sultanate s administration 9 With the gradual extension into northern Somalia of Italian colonial rule both Kingdoms were eventually annexed in the early 20th century 11 However unlike the southern territories the northern sultanates were not subject to direct rule due to the earlier treaties they had signed with the Italians citation needed Administration EditBureaucracy Edit Main article Somali aristocratic and court titles Ruins of King Osman s castle in Bargal built in 1878 a seasonal capital of the Majeerteen Sultanate The Sultanate of Hobyo the Majeerteen Sultanate exerted a strong centralized authority during its existence and possessed all of the organs and trappings of an integrated modern state a functioning bureaucracy a hereditary nobility titled aristocrats a state flag as well as a professional army 12 13 Both sultanates also maintained written records of their activities which still exist 14 The Majeerteen Sultanate s main capital was at Alula with its seasonal headquarters at Bargal It likewise had a number of castles and forts in various areas within its realm including a fortress at Murcanyo 15 The Majeerteen Sultanate s ruler however commanded more power than was typical of other Somali leaders during the period As the primus inter pares Boqor Osman taxed the harvest of aromatic trees and pearl fishing along the seaboard He retained prior rights on goods obtained from ship wrecks on the coast The Sultanate also exerted authority over the control of woodland and pastureland and imposed both land and stock taxes 16 Commerce Edit According to official reports from 1924 commissioned by the Regio Governo della Somalia Italiana the Majeerteen Sultanate maintained robust commercial activities before the Italian occupation of the following year The Sultanate reportedly exported 1 056 400 Indian Rupees IR worth of commodities 60 of which came from the sale of frankincense and other gums Fish and other sea products sold for a total value of 250 000 IR roughly equivalent to 20 of the Sultanate s aggregate exports The remaining export proceeds came from livestock with the export list of 1924 consisting of 16 items 17 Military Edit In addition to a strong civil administration the Majeerteen Sultanate maintained a regular army Besides protecting the polity from both external and internal threats military officials were tasked with carrying out the King s instructions The latter included tax collection which typically came in the form of the obligatory Muslim alms seko or sako ordinarily tithed by Somalis to the poor and religious clerics wadaads 16 18 Puntland EditEstablished in 1998 the autonomous Puntland region in northeastern Somalia now administers much of the former territories of the Majeerteen Sultanate Migiurtinia 19 Sultans EditRulers of the Majeerteen Sultanate 20 Sultan Reign Notes1 Suldaan Cismaan Bah Dir 1815 1842 Also known as Cismaan I2 Suldaan Yuusuf Bah Yaaquub 1842 1844 Also known as Yuusuf I Brief reign of only two years 3 Suldaan Maxamuud Suldaan Cismaan Maxamuud 1844 18604 Suldaan Cismaan Suldaan Maxamuud Suldaan Cismaan 1860 1927 Also known as Osman Mahamuud or Cismaan II Maxamuud Long reign of almost 70 years Last Sultan of the Majeerteen SultanateSee also EditAdal Sultanate Ajuran Sultanate Isaaq Sultanate Ali Yusuf Kenadid List of Muslim empires and dynasties List of Sunni Muslim dynastiesNotes Edit Fergusson James 2013 05 01 The World s Most Dangerous Place Inside the Outlaw State of Somalia Da Capo Press ISBN 978 0306821585 a b Helen Chapin Metz ed Somalia a country study The Division 1993 p 10 David D Laitin Politics Language and Thought The Somali Experience University Of Chicago Press 1977 p 71 Lee V Cassanelli The shaping of Somali society reconstructing the history of a pastoral people 1600 1900 University of Pennsylvania Press 1982 p 75 Jardine Douglas 1923 Mad Mullah of Somaliland Early in 1885 Great Britain concluded separate protective treaties with all the Somali tribes now living under her protection except the Warsangeli who concluded a treaty in 1886 and the Dolbahanta with whom no treaty has been made Irons Roy 2013 Churchill and the Mad Mullah of Somaliland betrayal and redemption 1899 1921 Barnsley South Yorkshire p 12 ISBN 978 1 4738 3155 1 OCLC 885208819 No treaty was concluded with the Dolbahanta the largest of the clans for the Italians regarded part of the clan as subject to the Sultan of the Mijerteen who was himself under Italian protection Battera Frederico 2004 Dalla tribu allo Stato nella Somalia nord orientale il caso sei Sultanati di Hobiyo e Majeerteen 1880 1930 pp 144 145 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b La Migiurtinia Ed Il Territorio Del Nugal p 57 a b c d Issa Salwe 1996 34 35 a b Hess 1964 416 17 The Majeerteen Sultanates Horn of Africa Volume 15 Issues 1 4 Horn of Africa Journal 1997 p 130 Michigan State University African Studies Center Northeast African studies Volumes 11 12 Michigan State University Press 1989 p 32 Sub Saharan Africa Report Issues 57 67 Foreign Broadcast Information Service 1986 p 34 S B Miles On the Neighbourhood of Bunder Marayah Vol 42 Blackwell Publishing on behalf of The Royal Geographical Society with the institute of British Geographers 1872 p 61 63 a b I M Lewis A pastoral democracy a study of pastoralism and politics among the Northern Somali of the Horn of Africa LIT Verlag Munster 1999 p 208 Transformation towards a regulated economy WSP Transition Programme Somali Programme 2000 p 62 Luling Virginia 1993 The Use of the Past Variation in Historical traditions in a South Somalia community University of Besancon p 178 Istituto italo africano Africa rivista trimestrale di studi e documentazione Volume 56 Edizioni africane 2001 p 591 Somali Traditional States Worldstatesmen Retrieved 5 April 2015 References EditHess Robert L 1964 The Mad Mullah and Northern Somalia The Journal of African History 5 3 415 33 doi 10 1017 s0021853700005107 S2CID 162991126 Issa Salwe Abdisalam M 1996 The Collapse of the Somali State The Impact of the Colonial Legacy London Haan Associates ISBN 187420991X Sheik ʻAbdi ʻAbdi ʻAbdulqadir 1993 Divine madness Moḥammed ʻAbdulle Ḥassan 1856 1920 Zed Books ISBN 0 86232 444 0 The Majeerteen SultanatesExternal links Edit Media related to Majeerteen at Wikimedia Commons The Majeerteen Sultanates lntroduction and change to the somalo in Migiurtinia and other comissariats Square kilometers of Migiurtinia according to Encyclopadeia Britannica 1983 In 1938 Mussolini briefly considered settling Jews into Migiurtinia and turning it into a Jewish state World famous incense was from Migiurtinia First whispers of democracy and anti democracy protests took place in Migiurtinia and Mudugh Sultanate of Migiurtinia signed a treaty with the Italy Government on April 7 1889 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Majeerteen Sultanate amp oldid 1143879636, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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