Zaylac history

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In antiquity, it was identified with the commercial port of Avalites described in the 1st century Greco-Roman travelogue the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, an area that was situated in the historic northern Barbara region. The town evolved into an early Islamic center with the arrival of Muslims shortly after the hijra. By the 9th century, Zeila was the capital of the Ifat Sultanate, and a major port for its successor state the Adal Sultanate, it would attain its height of prosperity a few centuries later in the 16th century. The city subsequently came under Ottoman and British protection in the 18th century.


Avalites:
Zeila is an ancient city, and has been identified with what was referred to in classical antiquity as the town of Avalites (Αβαλίτες in Greek), situated in the erstwhile Barbara geographical region on the northern Somali coast. Along with the neighboring Habash(Habesha or Abyssinians) of Al-Habashto the west, the Barbaroi or Berber to the west, the Barbaroi or Berber (ancestral Somalis) who inhabited the area are recorded in the 1st century CE Greek document the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea as engaging in extensive commercial exchanges with Egypt and pre-Islamic Arabia. The travelogue mentions the Barbaroi trading frankincense, among various other commodities, through their port cities such as Avalites (modern Zeila). Competent seamen, the Periplus' author also indicates that they sailed throughout the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden for trade. The document describes the Barbaroi's system of governance as decentralized, and essentially consisting of a collection of autonomous city-states.It also suggests that "the Berbers who live in the place are very unruly".an apparent reference to their independent streak.

Adal kingdom
Main article: Adal Sultanate
Islam was introduced to the area early on from the Arabian peninsula, shortly after the hijra. Zeila's two-mihrab Masjid al-Qiblatayn dates to the 7th century, and is the oldest mosque in the city.In the late 9th century, Al-Yaqubi wrote that Muslims were living along the northern Somali seaboard.He also mentioned that the Adal kingdom had its capital in the city,suggesting that the Adal Sultanate with Zeila as its headquarters dates back to at least the 9th or 10th centuries. According to I.M. Lewis, the polity was governed by local dynasties consisting of Somalized Arabs or Arabized Somalis, who also ruled over the similarly-established Sultanate of Mogadishu in the Benadir region to the south. Adal's history from this founding period forth would be characterized by a succession of battles with neighbouring Abyssinia.


By 1330, the Moroccan historian and traveler Ibn Batutta would describe the city as dominated by Muslims from the Zaidi Shi'ite denomination. Shi'ia influence can still be seen in various areas, as in the southern Somalia veneration of Fatimah, the Prophet Muhammad's daughter.

IMG_0999.JPG

Zeila's importance as a trading port is further confirmed by Al-Idrisi and Ibn Said, who describe it as a town of considerable size and a center of the local slave trade. Pankhurst, amongst other writers, thought Marco Polo was referring to Zeila (then the capital of Adal) when he recounts how the Sultan of Aden seized a bishop of Abyssinia traveling through his realm, attempted to convert the man by force, then had him circumcised according to Islamicpractice.

IMG_7639.JPG

Through extensive trade with Abyssinia and Arabia, Adal attained its height of prosperity during the 14th century.It sold incense, myrrh, slaves, gold, silver and camels, among many other commodities.
In 1332, the Zeila-based King of Adal was slain in a military campaign aimed at halting the Abyssinian Emperor Amda Seyon's march toward the city.When the last Sultan of Ifat, Sa'ad ad-Din II, was also killed by Dawit I of Ethiopia in Zeila in 1410, his children escaped to Yemen, before later returning in 1415.[17] In the early 15th century, Adal's capital was moved further inland to the town of Dakkar, where Sabr ad-Din II, the eldest son of Sa'ad ad-Din II, established a new base after his return from Yemen.Adal's headquarters were again relocated the following century, this time to Harar. From this new capital, Adal organised an effective army led by Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi (Ahmad "Gurey" or "Gran") that invaded the Abyssinian empire.This campaign is historically known as the Conquest of Abyssinia (Futuh al Habash). During the war, Imam Ahmad pioneered the use of cannons supplied by the Ottoman Empire, which he imported through Zeila and deployed against Abyssinian forces and their Portuguese allies led by Cristóvão da Gama.Some scholars argue that this conflict proved, through their use on both sides, the value of firearms like the matchlock musket, cannons and the arquebus over traditional weapons.
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Travellers' reports, such as the memoirs of the Italian Ludovico di Varthema, indicate that Zeila continued to be an important marketplace during the 16th century,despite being sacked by the Portuguese in 1517 and 1528.
16th century Zeila, along with several other settlements on the East African coast, had been visited by the Portuguese explorer and writer Duarte Barbosa, describing the city as such: "Having passed this town of Berbara, and going on, entering the Red Sea, there is another town of the Moors, which is named Zeyla, which is a good place of trade, whither many ships navigate and sell their cloths and merchandise. It is very populous, with good houses of stone and white-wash, and good streets ; the houses are covered with terraces, the dwellers in them are black. They have many horses, and breed much cattle of all sorts, which they make use of for milk, and butter, and meat. There is in this country abundance of wheat, millet, barley, and fruits, which they carry thence to Aden."
IMG_7642.JPG

Yemenite period
Beginning in 1630, the city became a dependency of the ruler of Mocha, who, for a small sum, leased the port to one of the office-holders of Mocha. The latter in return collected a toll on its trade. Zeila was subsequently ruled by an Emir, whom Mordechai Abir suggested had "some vague claim to authority over all of the sahil, but whose real authority did not extend very far beyond the walls of the town." Assisted by cannons and a few mercenaries armed with matchlocks, the governor succeeded in fending off incursions by both the disunited nomads of the interior, who had penetrated the area, as well as brigands in the Gulf of Aden.By the first half of the 19th century, Zeila was a shadow of its former self, having been reduced to "a large village surrounded by a low mud wall, with a population that varied according to the season from 1,000 to 3,000 people."The city continued to serve as the principal maritime outlet for Harar and beyond it in Shewa. However, the opening of a new sea route between Tadjoura and Shewa cut further into Zeila's historic position as the main regional port.
Ottoman period
Although part of the Ottoman Empire since 1559, between 1821 and 1841, Muhammad Ali, Pasha of Egypt, came to control Yemen and the sahil, with Zeila included.After the Egyptians withdrew from the Yemeni seaboard in 1841, Haj Ali Shermerki, a successful and ambitious Somali merchant, purchased from them executive rights over Zeila. Shermerki's governorship had an instant effect on the city, as he maneuvered to monopolize as much of the regional trade as possible, with his sights set as far as Harar and the Ogaden.
In 1845, Shermerki deployed a few matchlock men to wrest control of neighboring Berberafrom that town's then feuding Somali authorities. This alarmed the Emir of Harar, who, having already been at loggerheads with Shermerki over fiscal matters, was concerned about the ramifications that these movements might ultimately have on his own city's commerce. The Emir consequently urged Berbera's leaders to reconcile and mount a resistance against Shermerki's troops.
In 1874-75, the Egyptians obtained a firman from the Ottomans by which they secured claims over the city. At the same time, the Egyptians received British recognition of their nominal jurisdiction as far east as Cape Guardafui.In actuality, however, Egypt had little authority over the interior and their period of rule on the coast was brief, lasting only a few years (1870–84).
When the Egyptian garrison in Harar was evacuated in 1885, Zeila became caught up in the competition between the Tadjoura-based French and the British for control of the strategic Gulf of Aden littoral. I.M. Lewis mentions that "by the end of 1885 Britain was preparing to resist an expected French landing at Zeila."However, the two powers decided instead to turn to negotiations.
On 9 February 1888, France and Britain concluded an agreement defining the boundary between their respective protectorates.[30] As a result, Zeila and its eastern neighbor Berbera came to be part of British Somaliland.

The construction of a railway from Djibouti to Addis Ababa in the late 19th century continued the neglect of Zeila.At the beginning of the next century, the city was described in the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica as having a "good sheltered anchorage much frequented by Arab sailing craft. However, heavy draught steamers are obliged to anchor a mile and a half from the shore. Small coasting boats lie off the pier and there is no difficulty in loading or discharging cargo. The water supply of the town is drawn from the wells of Takosha, about three miles distant; every morning camels, in charge of old Somali women and bearing goatskins filled with water, come into the town in picturesque procession. ... [Zeila's] imports, which reach Zaila chiefly via Aden, are mainly cotton goods, rice, jowaree, datesand silk; the exports, 90% of which are from Abyssinia, are principally coffee, skins, ivory, cattle, ghee and mother-of-pearl".

In August 1940, Zeila was captured by advancing Italian troops. It would remain under their occupation for over six months.
In the post-independence period, Zeila was administered as part of the official Awdal region of Somalia.

Following the outbreak of the civil war in the early 1990s, much of the city's historic infrastructure was destroyed and many residents left the area. However, remittance funds sent by relatives abroad have contributed toward reconstruction of the town, as well as the local trade and fishing industries.
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Zaylac doesn't belong to certain clan or tribe but belongs to every Somali. It is our history and our old capital during the Adal sultanate. It belongs to each of us.
 
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بلاد زيلع (الصومال )

Posted on 10 ديسمبر,2016 by somalia history قياسي
أطلق المؤرخون القدامى على الممالك التي نشأت في القرن الإفريقي اسم ممالك الطراز الإسلامي. ذكر ذلك القلقشندي في صبح الأعشى، وهي البلاد المسماة ببلاد الزيلع، إذ لم تكن الأسماء الأخرى معروفة في القرون الوسطى، قال القلقشندي: وبلاد الزيلع هي ((البلاد المقابلة لبر اليمن على أعالى بحر القلزم (البحر الأحمر)، وما يتصل به بحر الهند) (المحيط الهندي). ويعبر عنها باسم ((الطراز الاسلامى لأنها على جانب البحر كالطراز له)). وقال العمرى أن ((هذه البلاد يقال لها بمصر والشام بلاد الزيلع… وأن طولها برا وبحرا خاصا بها نحو شهرين وعرضا يمتد أكثر من ذلك))

وقال المقريزى أن جبرت (أوفات) من البلاد وهديه في أقصى حدودها الغربية جنوبى أديس أبابا الحالية. وهكذا حدد القلقشندى موقع بلاد الزيلع*، وحدد العمرى طولها وعرضها، وهو طول وعرض يتناسب مع الحدود التي أوردناها لتلك البلاد، وأشار المقريزى إلى أقصى حدودها الغربية وهي مملكة هدية الإسلامية التي كانت تقع غرب الأخدود الأفريقى.وكان سكان بلاد الزيلع الاسلاميه يتكونون من عناصر حامية وعربية. وأغلب هذه العناصر الحامية .

الزيالعة مملكة واحدة في العصور الوسطى،
بل توزعوا بين عدة ممالك وسلطنات إسلامية لم تكن متحدة أو متعاونة في معظم الأحيان، وكان يحكم كلا منهم ملك مستقبل.
والزيالعة أو الصوماليون مغايرون ومتميزون عما حولهم سواء من ناحية اللغة أو الدين أو العادات والتقاليد. فهم جميعاً مسلمون وتجمعهم تقريباً وحدة الأصل والتاريخ، وهم يعتقدون أنهم ينتمون لسلالة معينة. ولذلك كان التمايز واضحا بينهم وبين جيرانهم سواء في بر الحبش (اثيوبيا) أم في بر الزنج (كينيا وما وراءها)، وإن كانت هناك اختلافات داخلية فيما بين فصائلهم وجماعاتهم
المصادر
العمري: جزء (2) ص 485
نور الدين عوض الكريم، ص 15
المقريزي: الإلمام، ص 14.

فتحي غيث: الإسلام والحبشة عبر التاريخ، ص 9-14 نقلاً عن رجب محمد عبد الحليم.
عرب فقيه: ص 2.2، 2.3شهاب الدين أحمد، فتوح الحبشة، الهيئة المصرية للكتاب 1394هـ 1974م..
العمري: مسالك الأبصار جزء (2) ص 481، 482

حسن محمود: الإسلام والثقافة العربية في إفريقيا،
فتوح الحبشة: ص99.

ابن بطوطة: نقلاً عن المؤرخ العربي، مرجع سابق، ص 111/112.


 
View attachment 21902 In antiquity, it was identified with the commercial port of Avalites described in the 1st century Greco-Roman travelogue the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, an area that was situated in the historic northern Barbara region. The town evolved into an early Islamic center with the arrival of Muslims shortly after the hijra. By the 9th century, Zeila was the capital of the Ifat Sultanate, and a major port for its successor state the Adal Sultanate, it would attain its height of prosperity a few centuries later in the 16th century. The city subsequently came under Ottoman and British protection in the 18th century.


Avalites:
Zeila is an ancient city, and has been identified with what was referred to in classical antiquity as the town of Avalites (Αβαλίτες in Greek), situated in the erstwhile Barbara geographical region on the northern Somali coast. Along with the neighboring Habash(Habesha or Abyssinians) of Al-Habashto the west, the Barbaroi or Berber to the west, the Barbaroi or Berber (ancestral Somalis) who inhabited the area are recorded in the 1st century CE Greek document the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea as engaging in extensive commercial exchanges with Egypt and pre-Islamic Arabia. The travelogue mentions the Barbaroi trading frankincense, among various other commodities, through their port cities such as Avalites (modern Zeila). Competent seamen, the Periplus' author also indicates that they sailed throughout the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden for trade. The document describes the Barbaroi's system of governance as decentralized, and essentially consisting of a collection of autonomous city-states.It also suggests that "the Berbers who live in the place are very unruly".an apparent reference to their independent streak.

Adal kingdom
Main article: Adal Sultanate
Islam was introduced to the area early on from the Arabian peninsula, shortly after the hijra. Zeila's two-mihrab Masjid al-Qiblatayn dates to the 7th century, and is the oldest mosque in the city.In the late 9th century, Al-Yaqubi wrote that Muslims were living along the northern Somali seaboard.He also mentioned that the Adal kingdom had its capital in the city,suggesting that the Adal Sultanate with Zeila as its headquarters dates back to at least the 9th or 10th centuries. According to I.M. Lewis, the polity was governed by local dynasties consisting of Somalized Arabs or Arabized Somalis, who also ruled over the similarly-established Sultanate of Mogadishu in the Benadir region to the south. Adal's history from this founding period forth would be characterized by a succession of battles with neighbouring Abyssinia.


By 1330, the Moroccan historian and traveler Ibn Batutta would describe the city as dominated by Muslims from the Zaidi Shi'ite denomination. Shi'ia influence can still be seen in various areas, as in the southern Somalia veneration of Fatimah, the Prophet Muhammad's daughter.

View attachment 21903
Zeila's importance as a trading port is further confirmed by Al-Idrisi and Ibn Said, who describe it as a town of considerable size and a center of the local slave trade. Pankhurst, amongst other writers, thought Marco Polo was referring to Zeila (then the capital of Adal) when he recounts how the Sultan of Aden seized a bishop of Abyssinia traveling through his realm, attempted to convert the man by force, then had him circumcised according to Islamicpractice.

View attachment 21904
Through extensive trade with Abyssinia and Arabia, Adal attained its height of prosperity during the 14th century.It sold incense, myrrh, slaves, gold, silver and camels, among many other commodities.
In 1332, the Zeila-based King of Adal was slain in a military campaign aimed at halting the Abyssinian Emperor Amda Seyon's march toward the city.When the last Sultan of Ifat, Sa'ad ad-Din II, was also killed by Dawit I of Ethiopia in Zeila in 1410, his children escaped to Yemen, before later returning in 1415.[17] In the early 15th century, Adal's capital was moved further inland to the town of Dakkar, where Sabr ad-Din II, the eldest son of Sa'ad ad-Din II, established a new base after his return from Yemen.Adal's headquarters were again relocated the following century, this time to Harar. From this new capital, Adal organised an effective army led by Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi (Ahmad "Gurey" or "Gran") that invaded the Abyssinian empire.This campaign is historically known as the Conquest of Abyssinia (Futuh al Habash). During the war, Imam Ahmad pioneered the use of cannons supplied by the Ottoman Empire, which he imported through Zeila and deployed against Abyssinian forces and their Portuguese allies led by Cristóvão da Gama.Some scholars argue that this conflict proved, through their use on both sides, the value of firearms like the matchlock musket, cannons and the arquebus over traditional weapons.
View attachment 21906

Travellers' reports, such as the memoirs of the Italian Ludovico di Varthema, indicate that Zeila continued to be an important marketplace during the 16th century,despite being sacked by the Portuguese in 1517 and 1528.
16th century Zeila, along with several other settlements on the East African coast, had been visited by the Portuguese explorer and writer Duarte Barbosa, describing the city as such: "Having passed this town of Berbara, and going on, entering the Red Sea, there is another town of the Moors, which is named Zeyla, which is a good place of trade, whither many ships navigate and sell their cloths and merchandise. It is very populous, with good houses of stone and white-wash, and good streets ; the houses are covered with terraces, the dwellers in them are black. They have many horses, and breed much cattle of all sorts, which they make use of for milk, and butter, and meat. There is in this country abundance of wheat, millet, barley, and fruits, which they carry thence to Aden."
View attachment 21905
Yemenite period
Beginning in 1630, the city became a dependency of the ruler of Mocha, who, for a small sum, leased the port to one of the office-holders of Mocha. The latter in return collected a toll on its trade. Zeila was subsequently ruled by an Emir, whom Mordechai Abir suggested had "some vague claim to authority over all of the sahil, but whose real authority did not extend very far beyond the walls of the town." Assisted by cannons and a few mercenaries armed with matchlocks, the governor succeeded in fending off incursions by both the disunited nomads of the interior, who had penetrated the area, as well as brigands in the Gulf of Aden.By the first half of the 19th century, Zeila was a shadow of its former self, having been reduced to "a large village surrounded by a low mud wall, with a population that varied according to the season from 1,000 to 3,000 people."The city continued to serve as the principal maritime outlet for Harar and beyond it in Shewa. However, the opening of a new sea route between Tadjoura and Shewa cut further into Zeila's historic position as the main regional port.
Ottoman period
Although part of the Ottoman Empire since 1559, between 1821 and 1841, Muhammad Ali, Pasha of Egypt, came to control Yemen and the sahil, with Zeila included.After the Egyptians withdrew from the Yemeni seaboard in 1841, Haj Ali Shermerki, a successful and ambitious Somali merchant, purchased from them executive rights over Zeila. Shermerki's governorship had an instant effect on the city, as he maneuvered to monopolize as much of the regional trade as possible, with his sights set as far as Harar and the Ogaden.
In 1845, Shermerki deployed a few matchlock men to wrest control of neighboring Berberafrom that town's then feuding Somali authorities. This alarmed the Emir of Harar, who, having already been at loggerheads with Shermerki over fiscal matters, was concerned about the ramifications that these movements might ultimately have on his own city's commerce. The Emir consequently urged Berbera's leaders to reconcile and mount a resistance against Shermerki's troops.
In 1874-75, the Egyptians obtained a firman from the Ottomans by which they secured claims over the city. At the same time, the Egyptians received British recognition of their nominal jurisdiction as far east as Cape Guardafui.In actuality, however, Egypt had little authority over the interior and their period of rule on the coast was brief, lasting only a few years (1870–84).
When the Egyptian garrison in Harar was evacuated in 1885, Zeila became caught up in the competition between the Tadjoura-based French and the British for control of the strategic Gulf of Aden littoral. I.M. Lewis mentions that "by the end of 1885 Britain was preparing to resist an expected French landing at Zeila."However, the two powers decided instead to turn to negotiations.
On 9 February 1888, France and Britain concluded an agreement defining the boundary between their respective protectorates.[30] As a result, Zeila and its eastern neighbor Berbera came to be part of British Somaliland.

The construction of a railway from Djibouti to Addis Ababa in the late 19th century continued the neglect of Zeila.At the beginning of the next century, the city was described in the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica as having a "good sheltered anchorage much frequented by Arab sailing craft. However, heavy draught steamers are obliged to anchor a mile and a half from the shore. Small coasting boats lie off the pier and there is no difficulty in loading or discharging cargo. The water supply of the town is drawn from the wells of Takosha, about three miles distant; every morning camels, in charge of old Somali women and bearing goatskins filled with water, come into the town in picturesque procession. ... [Zeila's] imports, which reach Zaila chiefly via Aden, are mainly cotton goods, rice, jowaree, datesand silk; the exports, 90% of which are from Abyssinia, are principally coffee, skins, ivory, cattle, ghee and mother-of-pearl".

In August 1940, Zeila was captured by advancing Italian troops. It would remain under their occupation for over six months.
In the post-independence period, Zeila was administered as part of the official Awdal region of Somalia.

Following the outbreak of the civil war in the early 1990s, much of the city's historic infrastructure was destroyed and many residents left the area. However, remittance funds sent by relatives abroad have contributed toward reconstruction of the town, as well as the local trade and fishing industries.
View attachment 21910
Ifat or Yifat, once the easternmost district of Shewa Sultanate, is located in a strategic position between the central highlands and the Sea, and includes diverse population.[9][26] It's predecessor state Shewa Sultanate is believed to be the first inland Muslim state and by the time it was incorporated into Ifat much of the inhabitants of Shewa land were Muslims.[26][12]According to the chronicle of Shewa Sultanate converting the inhabitants in the area begun in 1108, and the first to convert were the Gbbh people whom Trimingham suggested them being the ancestors of Argobbas.[27] A few years later after the conversion of the Gbbh people, the chronicle of Shewa sultanate mentions that in 1128 the Amhara fled from the land of Werjih people. The Werjih were a pastoral people, and in the fourteenth century they occupied the Awash Valley east of Shewan Plateau.[28]

In 1332, the King of Adal was slain in a military campaign aimed at halting Amda Seyon's march toward Zeila.[14] When the last Sultan of Ifat, Sa'ad ad-Din II, was also killed by Dawit I of Ethiopia at the port city of Zeila in 1410, his children escaped to Yemen, before later returning in 1415.[18] In the early 15th century, Adal's capital was moved further inland to the town of Dakkar, where Sabr ad-Din II, the eldest son of Sa'ad ad-Din II, established a new Adal administration after his return from Yemen.[2][19] During this period, Adal emerged as a center of Muslim resistance against the expanding Christian Abyssinian kingdom.[2]Adal would thereafter govern all of the territory formerly ruled by the Ifat Sultanate,[20] as well as the land further east all the way to Cape Guardafui, according to Leo Africanus.[10]

After 1468, a new breed of rulers emerged on the Adal political scene. The dissidents opposed Walashma rule owing to a treaty that Sultan Muhammad ibn Badlay had signed with Emperor Baeda Maryam of Ethiopia, wherein Badlay agreed to submit yearly tribute. This was done to achieve peace in the region, though tribute was never sent. Adal's Emirs, who administered the provinces, interpreted the agreement as a betrayal of their independence and a retreat from the polity's longstanding policy of resistance to Abyssinian incursions. The main leader of this opposition was the Emir of Zeila, the Sultanate's richest province. As such, he was expected to pay the highest share of the annual tribute to be given to the Abyssinian Emperor.[21] Emir Laday Usman subsequently marched to Dakkar and seized power in 1471. However, Usman did not dismiss the Sultan from office, but instead gave him a ceremonial position while retaining the real power for himself. Adal now came under the leadership of a powerful Emir who governed from the palace of a nominal Sultan.[22]

As you can clearly seee both were Ethiopian Muslim sultanates in origin who continually been subservient to the Ethiopian empire. Stop claiming Ethiopian history.
 

Rooble

Suldaanka Gobyare
VIP
@Menelik III the Gbbh are originally Gadabuursi. They are a subclan under Gadabuursi. We call them Gobe. The Gbbh or Argbbh mountains. Lies South from Zeila and that is were the Argobba claim to originate from.
 
Ifat or Yifat, once the easternmost district of Shewa Sultanate, is located in a strategic position between the central highlands and the Sea, and includes diverse population.[9][26] It's predecessor state Shewa Sultanate is believed to be the first inland Muslim state and by the time it was incorporated into Ifat much of the inhabitants of Shewa land were Muslims.[26][12]According to the chronicle of Shewa Sultanate converting the inhabitants in the area begun in 1108, and the first to convert were the Gbbh people whom Trimingham suggested them being the ancestors of Argobbas.[27] A few years later after the conversion of the Gbbh people, the chronicle of Shewa sultanate mentions that in 1128 the Amhara fled from the land of Werjih people. The Werjih were a pastoral people, and in the fourteenth century they occupied the Awash Valley east of Shewan Plateau.[28]

In 1332, the King of Adal was slain in a military campaign aimed at halting Amda Seyon's march toward Zeila.[14] When the last Sultan of Ifat, Sa'ad ad-Din II, was also killed by Dawit I of Ethiopia at the port city of Zeila in 1410, his children escaped to Yemen, before later returning in 1415.[18] In the early 15th century, Adal's capital was moved further inland to the town of Dakkar, where Sabr ad-Din II, the eldest son of Sa'ad ad-Din II, established a new Adal administration after his return from Yemen.[2][19] During this period, Adal emerged as a center of Muslim resistance against the expanding Christian Abyssinian kingdom.[2]Adal would thereafter govern all of the territory formerly ruled by the Ifat Sultanate,[20] as well as the land further east all the way to Cape Guardafui, according to Leo Africanus.[10]

After 1468, a new breed of rulers emerged on the Adal political scene. The dissidents opposed Walashma rule owing to a treaty that Sultan Muhammad ibn Badlay had signed with Emperor Baeda Maryam of Ethiopia, wherein Badlay agreed to submit yearly tribute. This was done to achieve peace in the region, though tribute was never sent. Adal's Emirs, who administered the provinces, interpreted the agreement as a betrayal of their independence and a retreat from the polity's longstanding policy of resistance to Abyssinian incursions. The main leader of this opposition was the Emir of Zeila, the Sultanate's richest province. As such, he was expected to pay the highest share of the annual tribute to be given to the Abyssinian Emperor.[21] Emir Laday Usman subsequently marched to Dakkar and seized power in 1471. However, Usman did not dismiss the Sultan from office, but instead gave him a ceremonial position while retaining the real power for himself. Adal now came under the leadership of a powerful Emir who governed from the palace of a nominal Sultan.[22]

As you can clearly seee both were Ethiopian Muslim sultanates in origin who continually been subservient to the Ethiopian empire. Stop claiming Ethiopian history.


Take your Ethiopian shit with you, you claimed every Somali leader and nationalist even the Sayyid you didn't spare him claiming that he is nationalist leader from Ogaden and put your Ethiopian flags around his statue.
 
Take your Ethiopian shit with you, you claimed every Somali leader and nationalist even the Sayyid you didn't spare him claiming that he is nationalist leader from Ogaden and put your Ethiopian flags around his statue.
I don't know what you're talking about. We never claim him, we like that he destroyed Somalia tho. Cheers. My last comment still stands, both sultanates orginated in Ethiopia and were afar in origin!
 

Rooble

Suldaanka Gobyare
VIP
You filthy shemale Qumayo. You want us to believe suddenly a Amhara named Menelik who can't even speak Amharigna pops up in a Zeila related thread which you opened?

Your thread was fucking dry!

So you resorted to getting your "Ethiopian" account to comment here and try to fearmonger and increase xenophobia among the Somalis on this forum all for your tribalist agenda coated with a fake layer of Somali nationalism which even a goat can see through.

You are a repugnant qumayo and it is you who suffers from a severe case of inferiority complex.
 
You filthy shemale Qumayo. You want us to believe suddenly a Amhara named Menelik who can't even speak Amharigna pops up in a Zeila related thread which you opened?

Your thread was fucking dry!

So you resorted to getting your "Ethiopian" account to comment here and try to fearmonger and increase xenophobia among the Somalis on this forum all for your tribalist agenda coated with a fake layer of Somali nationalism which even a goat can see through.

You are a repugnant qumayo and it is you who suffers from a severe case of inferiority complex.


Seek help and stop derailing my thread
 
You filthy shemale Qumayo. You want us to believe suddenly a Amhara named Menelik who can't even speak Amharigna pops up in a Zeila related thread which you opened?

Your thread was fucking dry!

So you resorted to getting your "Ethiopian" account to comment here and try to fearmonger and increase xenophobia among the Somalis on this forum all for your tribalist agenda coated with a fake layer of Somali nationalism which even a goat can see through.

You are a repugnant qumayo and it is you who suffers from a severe case of inferiority complex.

Remember when she said K5 only belongs to Ogaden ? :pachah1: hypocrisy at its best.:mjlol:
 
Remember when she said K5 only belongs to Ogaden ? :pachah1: hypocrisy at its best.:mjlol:


Ogaden was not capital of Somali sultanate like zaylac. Don't derail my thread again. And I was talking about name of Ogaden for region every body knows that Ogaden is shared by many Somali tribes.
 
Zaylac was the capital city of north Somalia and belongs to our Somali and it was not one clan history like the ignorant people claim!!!!!!
 
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Rooble

Suldaanka Gobyare
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Remember when she said K5 only belongs to Ogaden ? :pachah1: hypocrisy at its best.:mjlol:
:mjlol:Never say "She" cuz it's a Shemale. It is the biggest hypocrite on this forum with many multiple accounts trying to spread it's(the shemale) agenda and ideology, hence this Menelik you see appears and dissappears whenever it's around.

-Canuck: Saylac for all Somalis
-Canucks Ethiopian Account: No for Amhara!
-Canuck: Look Somalis look Amhara want our cities!

:mjlol:So desperate
 
:mjlol:Never say "She" cuz it's a Shemale. It is the biggest hypocrite on this forum with many multiple accounts trying to spread it's(the shemale) agenda and ideology, hence this Menelik you see appears and dissappears whenever it's around.

-Canuck: Saylac for all Somalis
-Canucks Ethiopian Account: No for Amhara!
-Canuck: Look Somalis look Amhara want our cities!

:mjlol:So desperate


Seek help crazy alcoholic man, it is not my fault that your Clan doesn't have political power in Somalia or even in shitopia.
 
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