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Serer history

The medieval history of the Serer people of Senegambia is partly characterised by resisting Islamization from perhaps the 11th century during the Almoravid movement (which would later result in the Serers of Takrur migration to the south),[1] to the 19th century Marabout movement of Senegambia[2][3][4] and continuation of the old Serer paternal dynasties.

A 19th-century war and ceremonial drum called junjung from the Kingdom of Sine.

Resistance to Islam, 11th century Edit

According to Galvan (2004), "The oral historical record, written accounts by early Arab and European explorers, and physical anthropological evidence suggest that the various Serer peoples migrated south from the Fuuta Tooro region (Senegal River valley) beginning around the eleventh century, when Islam first came across the Sahara."[5]: p.51  Over generations these people, possibly Pulaar speaking herders originally, migrated through Wolof areas and entered the Siin and Saluum river valleys. This lengthy period of Wolof-Serer contact has left us unsure of the origins of shared "terminology, institutions, political structures, and practices."[5]: p.52 

Professor Étienne Van de Walle gave a slightly later date, writing that "The formation of the Sereer ethnicity goes back to the thirteenth century, when a group came from the Senegal River valley in the north fleeing Islam, and near Niakhar met another group of Mandinka origin, called the Gelwar, who were coming from the southeast (Gravrand 1983). The actual Sereer ethnic group is a mixture of the two groups, and this may explain their complex bilinear kinship system".[6]

After the Arab invasion of North Africa, the Berbers of the north advanced Islam via the Almoravid movement, penetrating parts of Africa, Europe and Asia.[7][8] After the fall of the Ghana empire, the Serers resisted conversion and engaged in the battlefield to defend not only the Serer religion, but also their own power and wealth especially the Serer "Lamanic class" whose wealth and power was achieved through the Lamanic lineage.[9][10][11][12][13][14][15]

The Serer earned their living from agriculture, animal husbandry, fishing, boat building (an ancient Serer tradition) and transporting people over the river.[16][17]

The jihads that had affected Tekrur in the 11th century which led to the Serers of Tekrur exodus only affected those Serers living in Tekrur at the time. It did not apply to all Serer people. The Serer people are very diverse and spread throughout the Senegambia founding towns and villages, the Serer names of these towns and villages still remain today.[18]

...the Serer traversed vast expanses of territory during pre-colonial times and saw the entire region [the Senegambia region] as their home, as their history of migration in the area clearly shows..

In Senegambia, southward migration Edit

In the Senegambia region, the Serer people were ruled by Lamanes. The Serer who have migrated from Tekrur to join their distant Serer relatives created a southward migration for Mandinka migrants. Godfrey Mwakikagile proposed that the Mandinkas were either defeated in battle or incorporated into Serer society.[20] The Serers ruled over the Wolof kingdom of Jolof. They were ruling Jolof before the Jaw, Ngom, Mengue (or Mbengue) and Njie dynasties (who were all Serers with the exception of the Mengue dynasty who were Lebou – Mengue or Mbengue is a Lebou surname).[21] However, these Serer and Lebou rulers of Jolof (predominantly a Wolof area) became assimilated into Wolof culture.

Migration from Kabuu to Sine Edit

The actual foundation of the Kingdom of Sine is unclear, but in the late 14th century Mandinka migrants entered the area. They were led by a matrilineal clan known as the Gelwaar. Here they encountered the Serer, who had already established a system of lamanic authorities, and established a Gelwaar led state with its capital in or near a Serer lamanic estate centred at Mbissel.[5]: p.54 [22][23]

Marriages between the Serer paternal clans such as Faye and Joof to the Guelwar women created the Serer paternal dynasties and a Guelowar maternal dynasty. According to Serer oral tradition a king named Maad a Sinig Maysa Wali Jaxateh Manneh (many variations in spelling: Maissa Wali, Maissa Wally also known as Maysa Wali Jon or Maysa Wali Dione) – (reigned 1350)[24] was the first Guelowar king of Sine. Having served for several years as legal advisor to The Great Council of Lamans and assimilated into Serer culture, he was elected and crowned the firstking of Sine in (1350).[25][26] His sisters and nieces were married off to the Serer nobility and the offspring of these unions where the kings of Sine and later Saloum (Maad a Sinig and Maad Saloum respectively).[25][26][27][28]

Henry Gravrand reported an oral tradition describing what he called the "Battle of Troubang", a dynastic war between the two maternal royal houses of Ñaanco and the Guelowar,an off-shot and relatives of the Ñaanco (Nyanthio or Nyanco) maternal dynasty of Kaabu, in modern-day Guinea Bissau.[29][30] In reporting this tradition, Henry Gravrand did not notice that this is actually a description of the 1867 (or 1865) Battle of Kansala.[23]

King Njaajan Njie Edit

Njaajan Njie (English spelling in Gambia, Ndiandiane Ndiaye or N'Diadian N'Diaye – French spelling in Senegal, or Njaajaan Njaay - in the Serer language, also known as Amudu Bubakar b. 'Umar,[31] is the traditional founder of the Jolof Empire by the Wolof people. Traditional stories of the ancestry of this leader vary. One suggests that he was "the first and only son of a noble and saintly Arab father Abdu Darday and a "Tukuler" woman, Fatamatu Sail." This gives him an Almoravid lineage, ie a Berber and Islamic background, on his father's side, and a link on his mother's side to Takrur.[32][33] James Searing adds that "In all versions of the myth, Njaajaan Njaay speaks his first words in Pulaar rather than Wolof, emphasizing once again his character as a stranger of noble origins." Njaajan Njie was the founder of the first Wolof kingdom and claimed by the Wolof as their ancestor.[34] On the topic of his origins, Sallah adds that "Some say that Njajan Njai was a mysterious person of Fulani origin. Others say he was a Serer prince."[35]

John Donnelly Fage suggests although dates in the early 13th century (and others say 12th century) are usually ascribed to this king and the founding of the empire, a more likely scenario is "that the rise of the empire was associated with the growth of Wolof power at the expense of the ancient Sudanese state of Takrur, and that this was essentially a fourteenth-century development."[36]

Defeat of Portuguese slave raiders Edit

In 1446, a Portuguese caravel carrying the Portuguese slave trader - Nuno Tristão and his party attempted to enter Serer territory in order to carry out slave raiding. None of the adult passengers of that caravel survived. They all succumbed to Serer poisoned arrows except five young Portuguese (or fewer). One of them was left with the task to charter the caravel back to Portugal. Nuno was amongst those killed.[37][38]

19th century Marabout Movement Edit

The Battle of Fandane-Thiouthioune also known as The Battle of Somb was a religious war (but also partly motivated by conquest – empire building) between the Muslim Marabout movement of Senegambia and the Serer people of Sine.[39][40] On 18 July 1867, the leader of the Marabouts Maba Diakhou Bâ launched a jihad in the Serer Kingdom of Sine but was defeated and killed by the forces of Maad a Sinig Kumba Ndoffene Famak Joof, King of Sine.[41][42][43]

Maba Diakhou, a rather charismatic leader in the Marabout sect saw the propagation of Islam in Senegambia and an Islamic empire as his divine mission.[44] Although he did not achieve an Islamic empire, he had managed to conquer several villages in Senegal and Gambia and his movement was responsible for the Islamization of many Senegambians.[44]

The effects of Islam Edit

Although by the end of the twentieth century most Serer had converted to Islam (about 85% by the 1990s),[45] Serer people's medieval to 19th century history in resisting Islamization has created a division between "believers" of Islam and "non-believers" such as the orthodox Serers who adhere to Serer religion.[46][47][48] Klein notes that :

"The most important factor dividing the peoples of Senegambia was the differential impact of Islam. In this, the Serer stood out as the one group that had undergone no conversion."(Martin A. Klein)[48]

This division is not just religious but also has an ethnic dimension. As opponents of Islam for nearly a millennia, anti-Serer sentiments are not uncommon.[49] However, the Serer countries, especially the Sine area of Senegal, is reported to be a true bastion of the anti-Islamic.[47][50]

Present Edit

At present, the Serer population is estimated to be over 1.8 million based on population figures for Senegal, Gambia and Mauritania (2011) – excluding the Serers living in the West and elsewhere. They are more numerous in Senegal than in Gambia and Mauritania. Though traditionally mixed-farmers, boat builders and land owners, the Serers are found in all major professions including politics, medicine, literature, commerce, law, agriculture, etc.[51] Polyculture and boat building is still practiced by some Serers. Due to their Lamanic land inheritance system, they tend to have valuable land. Recently however, President Abdoulaye Wade's land reform law has affected many Serer farming communities in Senegal and they've lost their properties.[52]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ See Mwakikagile, Ethnic Diversity and Integration in the Gambia:, p224 & The Gambia and Its People:, p 138; Klein, Islam and Imperialism in Senegal Sine-Saloum, 1847–1914, pp 7 & 63, Gravrand, vol. 1. La Civilisation sereer, Cossan pp 115–18; & La civilisation Sereer, Pangool p 13
  2. ^ Klein, Martin, Islam and Imperialism in Senegal, Sine-Saloum, 1847–914 pp 62–93
  3. ^ Sarr, Histoire du Sine Saloum, pp 37–39
  4. ^ Diouf, Niokhobaye. pp 727–729 (pp 16–18)
  5. ^ a b c Galvan, Dennis Charles, The State Must Be Our Master of Fire: How Peasants Craft Culturally Sustainable Development in Senegal Berkeley, University of California Press, 2004 p.51
  6. ^ Van de Walle, Étienne (2006). African Households: Censuses And Surveys. M.E. Sharpe. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-7656-1619-7.
  7. ^ David Robinson. Muslim Societies in African History. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  8. ^ Lombard, Maurice, The golden age of Islam p 84. Markus Wiener (2003), ISBN 1-55876-322-8
  9. ^ Diouf, Mamadou, & Leichtman, Mara, "New perspectives on Islam in Senegal: conversion, migration, wealth, power, and femininity", Palgrave Macmillan (2009), the University of Michigan, ISBN 0-230-60648-2
  10. ^ Diouf, Mamadou, "History of Senegal: Islamo-Wolof model and its outskirts", Maisonneuve & Larose (2001), ISBN 2-7068-1503-5
  11. ^ Oliver, Roland Anthony, & Fage, J. D., "Journal of African History", Volume 10, Cambridge University Press (1969)
  12. ^ "The African archaeological review", Volumes 17–18, Plenum Press (2000)
  13. ^ Hopkins, J. F. P., & Levtzion, Nehemia, "Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History", pp 77–79, Cambridge University Press (1981) (Scholar)
  14. ^ Trimingham, John Spencer, "A history of Islam in West Africa", pp 174, 176 & 234, Oxford University Press, USA (1970)
  15. ^ For more information about Serer Lamanic lineage and class, see : Galvan, Dennis Charles, "The State Must Be Our Master of Fire:"
  16. ^ Gregg, Emma, Trillo, Richard Rough guide to the Gambia, p 247, Rough Guides, 2003, ISBN 1-84353-083-X
  17. ^ Mwakikagile, Godfrey, The Gambia and its people, p 11; & Ethnic diversity p 97
  18. ^ See : Gamble, David P. & Salmon, Linda K. (with Alhaji Hassan Njie); (in French) Becker, Charles, "Vestiges historiques, trémoins matériels du passé clans les pays sereer"', Dakar, 1993., CNRS – ORS TO M
  19. ^ Mwakikagile, Godfrey, "The Gambia and Its People: Ethnic Identities and Cultural Integration in Africa", p 136. (2010), ISBN 9987-16-023-9
  20. ^ Mwakikagile, Godfrey, "Ethnic Diversity and Integration in the Gambia", p225
  21. ^ Mwakikagile, Godfrey, "Ethnic Diversity and Integration in the Gambia", p 224
  22. ^ Klein, Martin A. Islam and Imperialism in Senegal. Sine-Saloum, 1847-1914, Stanford: Stanford University Press.[1] ISBN 978-0-8047-0621-6 p.8
  23. ^ a b Sarr, Alioune, Histoire du Sine-Saloum (Sénégal) Introduction, bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker. 1986-87, p 19
  24. ^ For Maysa Wali's reign, see : Sarr, Alioune, "Histoire du Sine-Saloum" (Sénégal), (introduction, bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker), in Bulletin de l'IFAN, tome 46, série B, nos 3–4, 1986–1987. p 19. See also : (in French) Éthiopiques, Volume 2, pp 100–101, Grande imprimerie africaine (1984)
  25. ^ a b Ngom, Biram,(Babacar Sédikh Diouf). "La question Gelwaar et l’histoire du Siin", Dakar, Université de Dakar, 1987, 69 p.
  26. ^ a b Sarr, Alioune, "Histoire du Sine-Saloum" (Sénégal), (introduction, bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker), in Bulletin de l'IFAN, tome 46, série B, nos 3-4, 1986–1987. p 19
  27. ^ Gravrand, Henry, "Le Gabou dans les traditions orales du Ngabou", Éthiopiques 28 special issue No, socialist journal of Black African culture (1981)
  28. ^ Sarr, Alioune, p 19
  29. ^ Innes, Gordon, Suso, Bamba, Kanute, Banna , Kanute, Dembo, ""Sunjata: three Mandinka versions", p128, Psychology Press, 1974. ISBN 0-7286-0003-X
  30. ^ Fage, J. D., Oliver, Roland Anthony, "The Cambridge history of Africa", p282, Cambridge University Press, 1975. ISBN 0-521-20413-5
  31. ^ A.A. Bartran (1979). John Ralph Willis (ed.). Studies in West African Islamic History: Volume 1: The Cultivators of Islam. Routledge. p. 102. ISBN 978-0-7146-1737-4.
  32. ^ Searing, JAMES (2003). West African Slavery and Atlantic Commerce: The Senegal River Valley, 1700-1860. Cambridge University Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-521-53452-9.
  33. ^ Fiona Mc Laughlin; Salikoko S. Mufwene (2008). "The Ascent of Wolof as an Urban Vernacular and National Lingua Franca in Senegal". In Cécile B. Vigouroux, Salikoko S. Mufwene (ed.). Globalization and Language Vitality: Perspectives from Africa. Continuum. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-8264-9515-0. Archived from the original on 9 July 2009.
  34. ^ Anyidoho, Kofi, "Cross rhythms", Volume 1, "Occasional papers in African folklore", p 118, Trickster Press (1983)
  35. ^ Sallah, Tijan M., Wolof: (Senegal), The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc (1995), p. 21 ISBN 9780823919871 [2]
  36. ^ Fage, John Donnelly (1997). "Upper and Lower Guinea". In Roland Oliver (ed.). The Cambridge History of Africa, Volume 3. Cambridge University Press. p. 484. ISBN 978-0-521-20981-6.
  37. ^ Hair, Paul Edward Hedley, "The Use of African Languages in Afro-European contacts in Guinea : 1440-1560", [in] "Sierra Leone Language Review", no. 5, 1966, p. 13 [3]
  38. ^ Hair, Paul Edward Hedley, "Africa encountered: European contacts and evidence, 1450-1700", Variorum, 1997, pp 213–15 & 248, ISBN 0-86078-626-9
  39. ^ Sarr, Alioune, "Histoire du Sine-Saloum", Introduction, bibliographie et Notes par Charles Becker, BIFAN, Tome 46, Serie B, n° 3-4, 1986–1987. pp 37-39
  40. ^ Diouf, Niokhobaye. "Chronique du royaume du Sine" Suivie de notes sur les traditions orales et les sources écrites concernant le royaume du Sine par Charles Becker et Victor Martin. (1972). Bulletin de l'Ifan, Tome 34, Série B, n° 4, (1972). (pp 727–729, pp 16–18)
  41. ^ Sarr, Alioune, "Histoire du Sine-Saloum " (Sénégal) Introduction, bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker. 1986-87, pp 37-39
  42. ^ Klein, pp 90-91 & 103
  43. ^ Diouf, Niokhobaye, pp 728–29
  44. ^ a b Lipschutz, Mark R., & Rasmussen, R. Kent, "Dictionary of African historical biography", p 128, 2nd Edition, University of California Press (1989), ISBN 0-520-06611-1
  45. ^ Olson, James Stuart (1996). The Peoples of Africa: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary. Greenwood. p. 516. ISBN 978-0313279188.
  46. ^ Thiaw, Issa Laye, "La Religiosité des Sereer, Avant et Pendant Leur Islamisation", Éthiopiques, No: 54, Revue Semestrielle de Culture Négro-Africaine. Nouvelle Série, Volume 7, 2e Semestre 1991.
  47. ^ a b Thiam, Iba Der, "Maba Diakhou Ba Almamy du Rip" (Sénégal), Paris, ABC, Dakar-Abidjan, NEA, 1977, p44
  48. ^ a b Klein, p 7
  49. ^ Thiaw, Issa Laye, "La Religiosité des Sereer, Avant et Pendant Leur Islamisation", Éthiopiques, No: 54, Revue Semestrielle de Culture Négro-Africaine, Nouvelle Série, Volume 7, 2e Semestre 1991
  50. ^ Galvan, "The state must be our master of fire:", pp 41, 44, 65, 260 & 305
  51. ^ Blanchet, Gilles "Élites et changements en Afrique et au Sénégal", ORSTOM (1983) pp 182–185
  52. ^ Ubink, Janine M, Hoekema, André J, Assies, Willem J, "Legalising Land Rights: Local Practices, State Responses and Tenure Security in Africa, Asia and Latin America", pp 259–287, Amsterdam University Press, 2010. ISBN 90-8728-056-4

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  • Azumah, John Alembillah, "The legacy of Arab-Islam in Africa:" a quest for inter-religious dialogue, neworld (2001), ISBN 1-85168-273-2
  • Thiaw, Issa Laye, "La Religiosité des Sereer, Avant et Pendant Leur Islamisation", Éthiopiques, No: 54, Revue Semestrielle de Culture Négro-Africaine. Nouvelle Série, Volume 7, 2e Semestre 1991.
  • Thiam, Iba Der, "Maba Diakhou Bâ Almamy du Rip" (Sénégal), Paris, ABC, Dakar-Abidjan, NEA, (1977)
  • Blanchet, Gilles "Élites et changements en Afrique et au Sénégal", ORSTOM (1983)
  • Ubink, Janine M; Hoekema, André J; & Assies, Willem J, "Legalising Land Rights: Local Practices, State Responses and Tenure Security in Africa, Asia and Latin America", Amsterdam University Press, 2010. ISBN 90-8728-056-4

serer, history, medieval, history, serer, people, senegambia, partly, characterised, resisting, islamization, from, perhaps, 11th, century, during, almoravid, movement, which, would, later, result, serers, takrur, migration, south, 19th, century, marabout, mov. The medieval history of the Serer people of Senegambia is partly characterised by resisting Islamization from perhaps the 11th century during the Almoravid movement which would later result in the Serers of Takrur migration to the south 1 to the 19th century Marabout movement of Senegambia 2 3 4 and continuation of the old Serer paternal dynasties A 19th century war and ceremonial drum called junjung from the Kingdom of Sine Contents 1 Resistance to Islam 11th century 2 In Senegambia southward migration 3 Migration from Kabuu to Sine 4 King Njaajan Njie 5 Defeat of Portuguese slave raiders 6 19th century Marabout Movement 7 The effects of Islam 8 Present 9 See also 10 Notes 11 BibliographyResistance to Islam 11th century EditFurther information Islamization of the Sudan region According to Galvan 2004 The oral historical record written accounts by early Arab and European explorers and physical anthropological evidence suggest that the various Serer peoples migrated south from the Fuuta Tooro region Senegal River valley beginning around the eleventh century when Islam first came across the Sahara 5 p 51 Over generations these people possibly Pulaar speaking herders originally migrated through Wolof areas and entered the Siin and Saluum river valleys This lengthy period of Wolof Serer contact has left us unsure of the origins of shared terminology institutions political structures and practices 5 p 52 Professor Etienne Van de Walle gave a slightly later date writing that The formation of the Sereer ethnicity goes back to the thirteenth century when a group came from the Senegal River valley in the north fleeing Islam and near Niakhar met another group of Mandinka origin called the Gelwar who were coming from the southeast Gravrand 1983 The actual Sereer ethnic group is a mixture of the two groups and this may explain their complex bilinear kinship system 6 After the Arab invasion of North Africa the Berbers of the north advanced Islam via the Almoravid movement penetrating parts of Africa Europe and Asia 7 8 After the fall of the Ghana empire the Serers resisted conversion and engaged in the battlefield to defend not only the Serer religion but also their own power and wealth especially the Serer Lamanic class whose wealth and power was achieved through the Lamanic lineage 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 The Serer earned their living from agriculture animal husbandry fishing boat building an ancient Serer tradition and transporting people over the river 16 17 The jihads that had affected Tekrur in the 11th century which led to the Serers of Tekrur exodus only affected those Serers living in Tekrur at the time It did not apply to all Serer people The Serer people are very diverse and spread throughout the Senegambia founding towns and villages the Serer names of these towns and villages still remain today 18 the Serer traversed vast expanses of territory during pre colonial times and saw the entire region the Senegambia region as their home as their history of migration in the area clearly shows Godfrey Mwakikagile 19 In Senegambia southward migration EditIn the Senegambia region the Serer people were ruled by Lamanes The Serer who have migrated from Tekrur to join their distant Serer relatives created a southward migration for Mandinka migrants Godfrey Mwakikagile proposed that the Mandinkas were either defeated in battle or incorporated into Serer society 20 The Serers ruled over the Wolof kingdom of Jolof They were ruling Jolof before the Jaw Ngom Mengue or Mbengue and Njie dynasties who were all Serers with the exception of the Mengue dynasty who were Lebou Mengue or Mbengue is a Lebou surname 21 However these Serer and Lebou rulers of Jolof predominantly a Wolof area became assimilated into Wolof culture Migration from Kabuu to Sine EditThe actual foundation of the Kingdom of Sine is unclear but in the late 14th century Mandinka migrants entered the area They were led by a matrilineal clan known as the Gelwaar Here they encountered the Serer who had already established a system of lamanic authorities and established a Gelwaar led state with its capital in or near a Serer lamanic estate centred at Mbissel 5 p 54 22 23 Marriages between the Serer paternal clans such as Faye and Joof to the Guelwar women created the Serer paternal dynasties and a Guelowar maternal dynasty According to Serer oral tradition a king named Maad a Sinig Maysa Wali Jaxateh Manneh many variations in spelling Maissa Wali Maissa Wally also known as Maysa Wali Jon or Maysa Wali Dione reigned 1350 24 was the first Guelowar king of Sine Having served for several years as legal advisor to The Great Council of Lamans and assimilated into Serer culture he was elected and crowned the firstking of Sine in 1350 25 26 His sisters and nieces were married off to the Serer nobility and the offspring of these unions where the kings of Sine and later Saloum Maad a Sinig and Maad Saloum respectively 25 26 27 28 Henry Gravrand reported an oral tradition describing what he called the Battle of Troubang a dynastic war between the two maternal royal houses of Naanco and the Guelowar an off shot and relatives of the Naanco Nyanthio or Nyanco maternal dynasty of Kaabu in modern day Guinea Bissau 29 30 In reporting this tradition Henry Gravrand did not notice that this is actually a description of the 1867 or 1865 Battle of Kansala 23 King Njaajan Njie EditThe examples and perspective in this section may not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section may be unbalanced towards certain viewpoints Please improve the article or discuss the issue on the talk page August 2015 See also Kingdom of Jolof Kingdom of Sine and Waalo Njaajan Njie English spelling in Gambia Ndiandiane Ndiaye or N Diadian N Diaye French spelling in Senegal or Njaajaan Njaay in the Serer language also known as Amudu Bubakar b Umar 31 is the traditional founder of the Jolof Empire by the Wolof people Traditional stories of the ancestry of this leader vary One suggests that he was the first and only son of a noble and saintly Arab father Abdu Darday and a Tukuler woman Fatamatu Sail This gives him an Almoravid lineage ie a Berber and Islamic background on his father s side and a link on his mother s side to Takrur 32 33 James Searing adds that In all versions of the myth Njaajaan Njaay speaks his first words in Pulaar rather than Wolof emphasizing once again his character as a stranger of noble origins Njaajan Njie was the founder of the first Wolof kingdom and claimed by the Wolof as their ancestor 34 On the topic of his origins Sallah adds that Some say that Njajan Njai was a mysterious person of Fulani origin Others say he was a Serer prince 35 John Donnelly Fage suggests although dates in the early 13th century and others say 12th century are usually ascribed to this king and the founding of the empire a more likely scenario is that the rise of the empire was associated with the growth of Wolof power at the expense of the ancient Sudanese state of Takrur and that this was essentially a fourteenth century development 36 Defeat of Portuguese slave raiders EditIn 1446 a Portuguese caravel carrying the Portuguese slave trader Nuno Tristao and his party attempted to enter Serer territory in order to carry out slave raiding None of the adult passengers of that caravel survived They all succumbed to Serer poisoned arrows except five young Portuguese or fewer One of them was left with the task to charter the caravel back to Portugal Nuno was amongst those killed 37 38 19th century Marabout Movement EditMain article The Battle of Fandane Thiouthioune The Battle of Fandane Thiouthioune also known as The Battle of Somb was a religious war but also partly motivated by conquest empire building between the Muslim Marabout movement of Senegambia and the Serer people of Sine 39 40 On 18 July 1867 the leader of the Marabouts Maba Diakhou Ba launched a jihad in the Serer Kingdom of Sine but was defeated and killed by the forces of Maad a Sinig Kumba Ndoffene Famak Joof King of Sine 41 42 43 Maba Diakhou a rather charismatic leader in the Marabout sect saw the propagation of Islam in Senegambia and an Islamic empire as his divine mission 44 Although he did not achieve an Islamic empire he had managed to conquer several villages in Senegal and Gambia and his movement was responsible for the Islamization of many Senegambians 44 The effects of Islam EditAlthough by the end of the twentieth century most Serer had converted to Islam about 85 by the 1990s 45 Serer people s medieval to 19th century history in resisting Islamization has created a division between believers of Islam and non believers such as the orthodox Serers who adhere to Serer religion 46 47 48 Klein notes that The most important factor dividing the peoples of Senegambia was the differential impact of Islam In this the Serer stood out as the one group that had undergone no conversion Martin A Klein 48 This division is not just religious but also has an ethnic dimension As opponents of Islam for nearly a millennia anti Serer sentiments are not uncommon 49 However the Serer countries especially the Sine area of Senegal is reported to be a true bastion of the anti Islamic 47 50 Present EditMain article Serer people At present the Serer population is estimated to be over 1 8 million based on population figures for Senegal Gambia and Mauritania 2011 excluding the Serers living in the West and elsewhere They are more numerous in Senegal than in Gambia and Mauritania Though traditionally mixed farmers boat builders and land owners the Serers are found in all major professions including politics medicine literature commerce law agriculture etc 51 Polyculture and boat building is still practiced by some Serers Due to their Lamanic land inheritance system they tend to have valuable land Recently however President Abdoulaye Wade s land reform law has affected many Serer farming communities in Senegal and they ve lost their properties 52 See also EditSerer ancient history Timeline of Serer history Roog Serer deity Serer religion Serer people nbsp Senegal portal nbsp Gambia portal nbsp Mauritania portal nbsp History portal nbsp Middle Ages portalNotes Edit See Mwakikagile Ethnic Diversity and Integration in the Gambia p224 amp The Gambia and Its People p 138 Klein Islam and Imperialism in Senegal Sine Saloum 1847 1914 pp 7 amp 63 Gravrand vol 1 La Civilisation sereer Cossan pp 115 18 amp La civilisation Sereer Pangool p 13 Klein Martin Islam and Imperialism in Senegal Sine Saloum 1847 914 pp 62 93 Sarr Histoire du Sine Saloum pp 37 39 Diouf Niokhobaye pp 727 729 pp 16 18 a b c Galvan Dennis Charles The State Must Be Our Master of Fire How Peasants Craft Culturally Sustainable Development in Senegal Berkeley University of California Press 2004 p 51 Van de Walle Etienne 2006 African Households Censuses And Surveys M E Sharpe p 80 ISBN 978 0 7656 1619 7 David Robinson Muslim Societies in African History a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Lombard Maurice The golden age of Islam p 84 Markus Wiener 2003 ISBN 1 55876 322 8 Diouf Mamadou amp Leichtman Mara New perspectives on Islam in Senegal conversion migration wealth power and femininity Palgrave Macmillan 2009 the University of Michigan ISBN 0 230 60648 2 Diouf Mamadou History of Senegal Islamo Wolof model and its outskirts Maisonneuve amp Larose 2001 ISBN 2 7068 1503 5 Oliver Roland Anthony amp Fage J D Journal of African History Volume 10 Cambridge University Press 1969 The African archaeological review Volumes 17 18 Plenum Press 2000 Hopkins J F P amp Levtzion Nehemia Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History pp 77 79 Cambridge University Press 1981 Scholar Trimingham John Spencer A history of Islam in West Africa pp 174 176 amp 234 Oxford University Press USA 1970 For more information about Serer Lamanic lineage and class see Galvan Dennis Charles The State Must Be Our Master of Fire Gregg Emma Trillo Richard Rough guide to the Gambia p 247 Rough Guides 2003 ISBN 1 84353 083 X Mwakikagile Godfrey The Gambia and its people p 11 amp Ethnic diversity p 97 See Gamble David P amp Salmon Linda K with Alhaji Hassan Njie in French Becker Charles Vestiges historiques tremoins materiels du passe clans les pays sereer Dakar 1993 CNRS ORS TO M Mwakikagile Godfrey The Gambia and Its People Ethnic Identities and Cultural Integration in Africa p 136 2010 ISBN 9987 16 023 9 Mwakikagile Godfrey Ethnic Diversity and Integration in the Gambia p225 Mwakikagile Godfrey Ethnic Diversity and Integration in the Gambia p 224 Klein Martin A Islam and Imperialism in Senegal Sine Saloum 1847 1914 Stanford Stanford University Press 1 ISBN 978 0 8047 0621 6 p 8 a b Sarr Alioune Histoire du Sine Saloum Senegal Introduction bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker 1986 87 p 19 For Maysa Wali s reign see Sarr Alioune Histoire du Sine Saloum Senegal introduction bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker in Bulletin de l IFAN tome 46 serie B nos 3 4 1986 1987 p 19 See also in French Ethiopiques Volume 2 pp 100 101 Grande imprimerie africaine 1984 a b Ngom Biram Babacar Sedikh Diouf La question Gelwaar et l histoire du Siin Dakar Universite de Dakar 1987 69 p a b Sarr Alioune Histoire du Sine Saloum Senegal introduction bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker in Bulletin de l IFAN tome 46 serie B nos 3 4 1986 1987 p 19 Gravrand Henry Le Gabou dans les traditions orales du Ngabou Ethiopiques 28 special issue No socialist journal of Black African culture 1981 Sarr Alioune p 19 Innes Gordon Suso Bamba Kanute Banna Kanute Dembo Sunjata three Mandinka versions p128 Psychology Press 1974 ISBN 0 7286 0003 X Fage J D Oliver Roland Anthony The Cambridge history of Africa p282 Cambridge University Press 1975 ISBN 0 521 20413 5 A A Bartran 1979 John Ralph Willis ed Studies in West African Islamic History Volume 1 The Cultivators of Islam Routledge p 102 ISBN 978 0 7146 1737 4 Searing JAMES 2003 West African Slavery and Atlantic Commerce The Senegal River Valley 1700 1860 Cambridge University Press p 11 ISBN 978 0 521 53452 9 Fiona Mc Laughlin Salikoko S Mufwene 2008 The Ascent of Wolof as an Urban Vernacular and National Lingua Franca in Senegal In Cecile B Vigouroux Salikoko S Mufwene ed Globalization and Language Vitality Perspectives from Africa Continuum p 148 ISBN 978 0 8264 9515 0 Archived from the original on 9 July 2009 Anyidoho Kofi Cross rhythms Volume 1 Occasional papers in African folklore p 118 Trickster Press 1983 Sallah Tijan M Wolof Senegal The Rosen Publishing Group Inc 1995 p 21 ISBN 9780823919871 2 Fage John Donnelly 1997 Upper and Lower Guinea In Roland Oliver ed The Cambridge History of Africa Volume 3 Cambridge University Press p 484 ISBN 978 0 521 20981 6 Hair Paul Edward Hedley The Use of African Languages in Afro European contacts in Guinea 1440 1560 in Sierra Leone Language Review no 5 1966 p 13 3 Hair Paul Edward Hedley Africa encountered European contacts and evidence 1450 1700 Variorum 1997 pp 213 15 amp 248 ISBN 0 86078 626 9 Sarr Alioune Histoire du Sine Saloum Introduction bibliographie et Notes par Charles Becker BIFAN Tome 46 Serie B n 3 4 1986 1987 pp 37 39 Diouf Niokhobaye Chronique du royaume du Sine Suivie de notes sur les traditions orales et les sources ecrites concernant le royaume du Sine par Charles Becker et Victor Martin 1972 Bulletin de l Ifan Tome 34 Serie B n 4 1972 pp 727 729 pp 16 18 Sarr Alioune Histoire du Sine Saloum Senegal Introduction bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker 1986 87 pp 37 39 Klein pp 90 91 amp 103 Diouf Niokhobaye pp 728 29 a b Lipschutz Mark R amp Rasmussen R Kent Dictionary of African historical biography p 128 2nd Edition University of California Press 1989 ISBN 0 520 06611 1 Olson James Stuart 1996 The Peoples of Africa An Ethnohistorical Dictionary Greenwood p 516 ISBN 978 0313279188 Thiaw Issa Laye La Religiosite des Sereer Avant et Pendant Leur Islamisation Ethiopiques No 54 Revue Semestrielle de Culture Negro Africaine Nouvelle Serie Volume 7 2e Semestre 1991 a b Thiam Iba Der Maba Diakhou Ba Almamy du Rip Senegal Paris ABC Dakar Abidjan NEA 1977 p44 a b Klein p 7 Thiaw Issa Laye La Religiosite des Sereer Avant et Pendant Leur Islamisation Ethiopiques No 54 Revue Semestrielle de Culture Negro Africaine Nouvelle Serie Volume 7 2e Semestre 1991 Galvan The state must be our master of fire pp 41 44 65 260 amp 305 Blanchet Gilles Elites et changements en Afrique et au Senegal ORSTOM 1983 pp 182 185 Ubink Janine M Hoekema Andre J Assies Willem J Legalising Land Rights Local Practices State Responses and Tenure Security in Africa Asia and Latin America pp 259 287 Amsterdam University Press 2010 ISBN 90 8728 056 4Bibliography EditBecker Charles Vestiges historiques tremoins materiels du passe clans les pays sereer Dakar 1993 CNRS ORS TO M Asante Molefi K The history of Africa the quest for eternal harmony Routledge 2007 ISBN 0 415 77139 0 Mwakikagile Godfrey Ethnic Diversity and Integration in the Gambia The Land the People and the Culture 2010 ISBN 9987 9322 2 3 Mwakikagile Godfrey The Gambia and Its People Ethnic Identities and Cultural Integration in Africa 2010 ISBN 9987 16 023 9 Klein Martin A Islam and Imperialism in Senegal Sine Saloum 1847 1914 Edinburgh University Press 1968 ISBN 0 85224 029 5 Gravrand Henry La Civilisation sereer Cossan les origines vol 1 Nouvelles Editions africaines 1983 ISBN 2 7236 0877 8 Gravrand Henry La civilisation Sereer Pangool Nouvelles Editions africaines du Senegal 1990 ISBN 2 7236 1055 1 Sarr Alioune Histoire du Sine Saloum Senegal Introduction bibliographie et notes par Charles Becker BIFAN Tome 46 Serie B n 3 4 1986 1987 Diouf Niokhobaye Chronique du royaume du Sine Senegal Suivie de notes sur les traditions orales et les sources ecrites concernant le royaume du Sine par Charles Becker et Victor Martin 1972 Bulletin de l Ifan Tome 34 Serie B n 4 1972 Phillips Lucie Colvin Historical dictionary of Senegal Scarecrow Press 1981 ISBN 0 8108 1369 6 Clark Andrew F amp Philips Lucie Colvin Historical Dictionary of Senegal Second Edition Scarecrow Press 1994 ISBN 0 8108 2747 6 Institut fondamental d Afrique noire Bulletin de l Institut fondamental d Afrique noire Volume 38 IFAN 1976 Gamble David P amp Salmon Linda K with Alhaji Hassan Njie Gambian Studies No 17 People of The Gambia I The Wolof with notes on the Serer and the Lebou San Francisco 1985 Stride G T Ifeka Caroline Peoples and empires of West Africa West Africa in history 1000 1800 Africana Pub Corp 1971 Lombard Maurice The golden age of Islam Markus Wiener Publishers 2003 ISBN 1 55876 322 8 Page Willie F Encyclopedia of African history and culture African kingdoms 500 to 1500 Vol 2 Facts on File 2001 ISBN 0 8160 4472 4 Hopkins J F P Levtzion Nehemia Corpus of early Arabic sources for West African history al Umari in Levtzion and Hopkins eds and trans Corpus Markus Wiener Publishers 2000 ISBN 1 55876 241 8 Hopkins J F P amp Levtzion Nehemia Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History Cambridge University Press 1981 Scholar Streissguth Thomas Senegal in Pictures Visual Geography Second Series Twenty First Century Books 2009 ISBN 1 57505 951 7 Ajayi J F Ade amp Crowder Michael History of West Africa Vol 1 Longman 1985 ISBN 0 582 64683 9 Holt Peter Malcolm The Indian Sub continent south East Asia Africa and the Muslim West Vol 2 Part 1 Cambridge University Press 1977 ISBN 0 521 29137 2 Oliver Roland Anthony Fage J D Journal of African history Volume 10 Cambridge University Press 1969 Catchpole Brian Akinjogbin I A A history of West Africa in maps and diagrams Collins Educational 1983 Trimingham John Spencer A history of Islam in West Africa Oxford University Press USA 1970 Woodson Carter Godwin The African background outlined or Handbook for the study of the Negro The Association for the Study of Negro Life and History inc 1936 Ayalon David amp Sharon Moshe Studies in Islamic history and civilization in honour of Professor David Ayalon BRILL 1986 ISBN 965 264 014 X Olson James Stuart The peoples of Africa an ethnohistorical dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group 1996 ISBN 0 313 27918 7 Behrman Lucy C Muslim brotherhoods and politics in Senegal Harvard University Press 1970 Buah F K West Africa since A D 1000 history notes Volumes 1 2 Macmillan An introduction to the history of West Africa p 21 CUP Archive Diouf Mamadou amp Leichtman Mara New perspectives on Islam in Senegal conversion migration wealth power and femininity Palgrave Macmillan 2009 the University of Michigan ISBN 0 230 60648 2 Diouf Mamadou History of Senegal Islamo Wolof model and its outskirts Maisonneuve amp Larose 2001 ISBN 2 7068 1503 5 The African archaeological review Volumes 17 18 Plenum Press 2000 Gregg Emma Trillo Richard Rough guide to the Gambia Rough Guides 2003 ISBN 1 84353 083 X Julien Charles Andre amp Le Tourneau Roger Histoire de L Afrique du Nord vol 2 Praeger 1970 Institut fondamental d Afrique noire Bulletin Volumes 26 27 IFAN 1964 Institut fondamental d Afrique noire Memoires de l Institut fondamental d Afrique noire Issue 91 Part 2 IFAN 1980 Diouf Marcel Mahawa Lances males Leopold Sedar Senghor et les traditions Sereres Centre d etudes linguistiques et historiques par tradition orale 1996 Sonko Godwin Patience Ethnic groups of the Senegambia a brief history Sunrise Publishers 1988 ISBN 9983 86 000 7 Oliver Roland Fage John Donnelly amp Sanderson G N The Cambridge History of Africa Cambridge University Press 1985 ISBN 0 521 22803 4 Faal Dawda Peoples and empires of Senegambia Senegambia in history AD 1000 1900 Saul s Modern Printshop 1991 Galvan Dennis C The state must be our master of fire how peasants craft sustainable development in Senegal University of California Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 520 23591 5 Gastellu Jean Marc L egalitarisme economique des Serer du Senegal Volume 128 Travaux et documents de l ORSTOM IRD Editions 1981 ISBN 2 7099 0591 4 Ngom Biram Babacar Sedikh Diouf in Biram Ngom La question Gelwaar et l histoire du Siin Dakar Universite de Dakar 1987 Boulegue Jean Le Grand Jolof XVIIIe XVIe Siecle Paris Edition Facades Karthala 1987 Dyao Yoro Legendes et coutumes senegalaises Cahiers de Yoro Dyao publies et commentes par Henri Gaden E Leroux 1912 Comite scientifique international pour la redaction d une histoire generale de l Afrique Histoire generale de l Afrique UNESCO 1980 ISBN 92 3 201710 5 Innes Gordon Suso Bamba Kanute Banna amp Kanute Dembo Sunjata three Mandinka versions Psychology Press 1974 ISBN 0 7286 0003 X Gravrand Henry Le Gabou dans les traditions orales du Ngabou Ethiopiques 28 special issue No socialist journal of Black African culture 1981 Colvin Lucie Gallistel Historical Dictionary of Senegal Scarecrow Press Metuchen NJ London 1981 ISBN 0 8108 1885 X Ethiopiques Volume 2 Grande imprimerie africaine 1984 Ning amp Sain 1972 in Colvin Lucie Gallistel Historical Dictionary of Senegal Scarecrow Press Metuchen NJ London 1981 ISBN 0 8108 1885 X Anyidoho Kofi Cross rhythms Volume 1 Occasional papers in African folklore Trickster Press 1983 Taal Ebou Momar Senegambian Ethnic Groups Common Origins and Cultural Affinities Factors and Forces of National Unity Peace and Stability 2010 Foltz William J From French West Africa to the Mali Federation Volume 12 of Yale studies in political science Yale University Press 1965 Diop Anta Cheikh amp Modum Egbuna P Towards the African renaissance essays in African culture amp development 1946 1960 Karnak House 1996 ISBN 0 907015 85 9 Hair Paul Edward Hedley The Use of African Languages in Afro European contacts in Guinea 1440 1560 in Sierra Leone Language Review no 5 1966 Hair Paul Edward Hedley Africa encountered European contacts and evidence 1450 1700 Variorum 1997 ISBN 0 86078 626 9 Coifman Victoria Bomba History of the Wolof state of Jolof until 1860 including comparative data from the Wolof state of Walo University of Wisconsin Madison 1969 Hindson Ed amp Caner Ergun The Popular Encyclopedia of Apologetics Surveying the Evidence for the Truth of Christianity Harvest House Publishers 2008 ISBN 0 7369 2084 6 Ham Anthony West Africa Lonely Planet 2009 ISBN 1 74104 821 4 Messier Ronald A The Almoravids and the meaning of jihad ABC CLIO 2010 ISBN 0 313 38589 0 Powell John Magill s Guide to Military History A Cor Salem Press 2001 ISBN 0 89356 015 4 Johnson G Wesley The emergence of Black politics in Senegal the struggle for power in the four communes 1900 1920 Stanford University Press 1971 ISBN 0 8047 0783 9 Research in African literatures Volume 37 University of Texas at Austin African and Afro American Studies and Research Center University of Texas at Austin African and Afro American Studies and Research Center University of Texas at Austin 2006 Lipschutz Mark R amp Rasmussen R Kent Dictionary of African historical biography p 128 2nd Edition University of California Press 1989 ISBN 0 520 06611 1 Senate U S Committee on Foreign Relations Annual Report on International Religious Freedom 2004 Compiled by State Dept U S Government Printing Office 2005 ISBN 0 16 072552 6 Grolier Incorporated The encyclopedia Americana Volume 12 Grolier 2000 ISBN 0 7172 0133 3 Azumah John Alembillah The legacy of Arab Islam in Africa a quest for inter religious dialogue neworld 2001 ISBN 1 85168 273 2 Thiaw Issa Laye La Religiosite des Sereer Avant et Pendant Leur Islamisation Ethiopiques No 54 Revue Semestrielle de Culture Negro Africaine Nouvelle Serie Volume 7 2e Semestre 1991 Thiam Iba Der Maba Diakhou Ba Almamy du Rip Senegal Paris ABC Dakar Abidjan NEA 1977 Blanchet Gilles Elites et changements en Afrique et au Senegal ORSTOM 1983 Ubink Janine M Hoekema Andre J amp Assies Willem J Legalising Land Rights Local Practices State Responses and Tenure Security in Africa Asia and Latin America Amsterdam University Press 2010 ISBN 90 8728 056 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Serer history amp oldid 1177474160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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