How tribalism is being used to undermine our shared ethnicity.

1. Yes, I’ve actually shared that exact map before. It doesn’t contradict my point , it supports it. The map shows how both the coastal and interior regions were referred to under the umbrella of Mogadishu. It clearly links them as a single political-cultural unit, which is consistent with historical accounts that describe a powerful inland-extending polity with Mogadishu as its urban and commercial hub.




2. No one is claiming that there was a state named “Ajuran” as a unified, formal, imperial institution that stretched coast-to-coast under one ruler. What was passed down and often misunderstood is more likely the recollection of an interconnected system of administration, tax collection, and political cohesion. The name Ajuran, as I’ve explained before, was likely a nickname or title for tax administrators, and not the official name of a polity.

The screen I posted was to show you that Ajuran = taxation in Arabic , that’s the core etymology.

I never quoted Aydarus. The thread i linked show's Lee Cassanelli’s work, who cites actual Arabic historical documents held by Southern Somali families. These aren’t myths, these are documented local histories, preserved in writing.

View attachment 364808

And here:



3. The existence of an Imam ruling the interior is corroborated by a Portuguese letter from 1624.

View attachment 364809


What the locals were trying to explain was a bureaucratic administration that was engaged in taxation, coordination of production, and governance across a wide region.

We’ve seen a similar structure in Adal, where Imam Ahmed Gurey deployed officials to collect taxes and manage production among both herders and farmers. This type of governance was not limited to military conquest but included highly organized internal administration.
View attachment 364830

Additionally, titles found on tombs like “Awal Amir,” “Naib Sammow,” and others provide further evidence of an administrative hierarchy rooted in both religious and political authority. These weren’t just symbolic names they represented actual functions within a broader governance system that linked coast and interior.

View attachment 364832

This all points to a governance model during the medieval period one that deserves far more scholarly attention than the dismissive “Ajuran myth” label often thrown at it.

It's something that is clearly also seen in when you look at Futuh and other written sources from that period:

''The written sources of the fifteenth to sixteenth centuries show a hierarchized, complex society that included several administrative and political titles, as well as the existence of elites
View attachment 364834
Youre jure repeating the same thing I say and you misunderstood me

Just forget about this ajuran thing nio, iska iloow


There was a civilization in the south, I never denied that

On the Juba as well as the shabelle, it just lacks documentation and archeological research way more than the north, + the ruins are victim of erosion from the nearby rivers and are hidden by denser vegetation

Between these coasts and the mountains inland are cities and settlements, and along the river — which flows through this region — are fifty settlements, each inhabited, some large and others small. Among them are towns of 5,000 to 7,000 souls, others with 500 to 1,000, and others with only a few hundred." "Trade flows from these towns toward Aden, and from there to Mecca and further. The road from Saylac to ‘Adan (Aden) is well-trodden and known, and takes several days. The people here trade in gold, ivory, camels, and aromatic gums. Boats sail from here to Jeddah, and the inhabitants are Muslims, learned in matters of religion."

1750785450406.png
 
Youre jure repeating the same thing I say and you misunderstood me

Just forget about this ajuran thing nio, iska iloow


There was a civilization in the south, I never denied that

On the Juba as well as the shabelle, it just lacks documentation and archeological research way more than the north, + the ruins are victim of erosion from the nearby rivers and are hidden by denser vegetation

Between these coasts and the mountains inland are cities and settlements, and along the river — which flows through this region — are fifty settlements, each inhabited, some large and others small. Among them are towns of 5,000 to 7,000 souls, others with 500 to 1,000, and others with only a few hundred." "Trade flows from these towns toward Aden, and from there to Mecca and further. The road from Saylac to ‘Adan (Aden) is well-trodden and known, and takes several days. The people here trade in gold, ivory, camels, and aromatic gums. Boats sail from here to Jeddah, and the inhabitants are Muslims, learned in matters of religion."

View attachment 364863

We are in agreement. I am just saying Ajanabi scholars misrepresented what Somalis were telling them that they just remembered people with administrative titles governing them with armies, putting them to work and levying taxes from them, that it was a region wide system. They just got caught up on this ajuuran name that they completely missed it .

Thats an Amazing find. We have direct description that there were many settlements, cities and towns in the interior that are linked with eachother through trade with the coast and in the riverrerine regions.

It also says:
"Among these towns are known ones, each with different populations, and they are numerous in trade and production."

It's always really surprising to read these descriptions and then seeing the ruins left behind, because it almost sounds like the collapse of trade, production and the mass abandonment/destruction must have been some apocalyptic event.

It really must have been similar to the Roman empires collapse i shared in another thread a while back : watch from @2:09



Transcripts:
Thus , the 27 years of war, the famine and the plague, had utterly reduced the population of Italy, entire cities were abandoned, Mediolanum for example was completely razed in 539, even Rome stood almost empty at some point in the 550s after being sacked numerous times in that lenghty war, the old roman infrastructure that was still perfectly intact in the Ostrogothic Kingdom now was given price to unchecked decay, street networks cumbled.... Aqueducts were falling into disuse left and right, many cities had to rely on frech water from rivers and wells such as in Rome for example, where the population was henceforth concentrated near the Tiber river and all other parts of the humongous city were left completely abandoned.
A similar picture would occur in the whole of Italy. The population now being so utterly reduced compared to only some decades earlier, would now retreat to small cores in the once big cities or to the countryside. Small dwellings would now have to do , the living standards fell dramatically. Where stoned housing with bricks and mortar had been standard, now small wooden shakcks .....such as for example nicely visible theater of Marcellus in Rome , where people had built their dwellings into this once mighty amphiteater , now replaced the previous domus and insula structures. Wood construction had in many parts completely replaced stone and mortar housing, especially for private dwellings. Churches were now the only structures that were still built out of solid stone, but even here we can witness how much smaller they had become in those times , as archeological evidence from Italy shows.
Life became more rural, the old urbanized society had started to vanish. Trade would collapse in many parts, so that food had to be produced locally. Peasants would often start sowing their feilds amids the old towering decaying buildings of the old imperial times.

You start to see a lot of parallels with what happened throughout the Somali regions.

The part about food needed to be produced locally as trade collapsed, explains even Aden's decline as well because it was also depended on the food and trade that went through the Somali regions.
 
Last edited:
We are in agreement. I am just saying Ajanabi scholars misrepresented what Somalis were telling them that they just remembered people with administrative titles governing them with armies, putting them to work and levying taxes from them, that it was a region wide system. They just got caught up on this ajuuran name that they completely missed it .

Thats an Amazing find. We have direct description that there were many settlements, cities and towns in the interior that are linked with eachother through trade with the coast and in the riverrerine regions.

It also says:
"Among these towns are known ones, each with different populations, and they are numerous in trade and production."

It's really surprising to read this , because it almost sounds like the collapse of trade, production and the mass abandonment/destruction must have been some apocalyptic event.

It really must have been similar to the Roman empires collapse i shared in another thread a while back : watch from @2:09



Transcripts:




It also explains Aden's decline as well because it was also depended on the food and trade that went through the Somali regions.
Whatever you think happened it was way worse, balaayo times wallahi
 
Btw @Barkhadle1520
I've been meaning to ask you or others what you think about my categorization/grouping of Somali history. Into two separate periods.

The Era of Amirs - 800-1650
(A period in which political and economic power was largely held by state formations led by Amirs centralized authorities, dynasties, and sultanates that shaped much of the region’s development and external relations.)
An emir was like a mini-sultan who presided over his region/or district.
Qt8Jqg3.png
One of the supremacy battles between Emir Mansur and Emir Abun, with Emir Abun being victorious
O2wever.png



The Era of Shayukhs - 1700-1930
(Following the collapse or weakening of those earlier states, Sufi orders and religious networks led by influential Shaykhs became the dominant social and political institutions.)
 
Last edited:
Btw @Barkhadle1520
I've been meaning to ask you or others what you think about my categorization/grouping of Somali history. Into two separate periods.

The Era of Amirs - 800-1650
(A period in which political and economic power was largely held by state formations led by Amirs centralized authorities, dynasties, and sultanates that shaped much of the region’s development and external relations)








The Era of Shayukhs - 1700-1930
(Following the collapse or weakening of those earlier states, Sufi orders and religious networks led by influential Shaykhs became the dominant social and political institutions)

When it comes to the sufi orders. These religious structures filled the vacuum left by the fallen states, much like the Catholic Church did in Europe after the fall of the Roman Empire.
 
Whatever you think happened it was way worse, balaayo times wallahi
I've only seen a few excerpts shared by Hornaristocrat from Tarikh al-Mulūk, but even from those fragments, you can vaguely start to trace key patterns and developments.

It would be incredibly valuable to compile and synthesize these scattered historical sources from Arabic chronicles to traditions, to travelogues and record books and then cross-reference them with archaeological findings. Doing so could help build a more coherent and evidence based historical narrative of the Somali regions and their political and cultural evolution.

There’s so much potential in combining textual analysis with material evidence , especially when many written records remain underexplored or untranslated.
 
Last edited:

Trending

Top