Saleh
Armchair Historian
you are trying to make it seem those small gradual migration into oromo territory was apart of some grand scheme to eventually conquer the land which is not true, those migrations were unrelated to the later conquest which took place.hose screenshots literally support what I said. They even state that Somalis “began to cross in small numbers” and expanded through the sheegad system which, by the way, is a Somali institution, not an Oromo one. Somalis were already present north of the Juba, and had relations with the Oromo on the south side before any major raids or expansions even began.
i never said the baradheere sultans were garre, i mentioned garre because garre were the people warring with oromo the most along the jubba before the 1860s because they shared a border.And let’s clarify: the Bardheere Sultans were not Garre. They led a coalition of Somali clans under the leadership of shaykhs, engaging in military campaigns and frequently joined by other Somali groups. These were coordinated operations, not isolated clan-based actions.
I only mention darood because they made up the overwhelming majority of the conquest, not because I want to give them credit or anything.As for the Darood, yes they were involved, but it wasn’t a ''Darood only'' expansion. It was a multi-clan movement, once again rooted in the sheegad system, which allowed various clans to unify under a shared agenda.
Another lieit was also strategically structured and economically driven. Different clans were brought in for different roles: some to develop coastal trade, others to control the caravan routes, some to utilize grazing lands, establish interior markets, and others to develop farmland and agriculture.
