@Idilinaa do we have any chronciles for the warsangeli sultnate. I was just on their Wikipedia page. It seems so strange to me that we have the names and dates of all their sultans from 1298 onwards . I'm assuming there must be some source.
Also I'm confused on how the majerergan sultnate was founded in the late 14th century . But the warsangeli Has their sultante founded in the late 13th century?
I just looked all the other clana/sultnates. None of them go as far back Why is the warsangeli one so well documented? I don't want to slander anybody but could there be something off ?
It strikes me as incredible weird that both ifat/awdal and the warsangeli sultnate seem to have been founded in the late 13th century
Warsangeli might have originally been just a province governed by a Garaad that broke of from the Eastern Sultanate in 1620 or shortly after.
Before then it would just have been Harti as they are mentioned in Futuh. 1400s date of founding of the sultanate refers to this and is connected to the arrival of Darod Ibn Ismail. But the 1620 foundation where Uthman Mahamuud the 17th sultan in line re-organized it, that Sultanate probably refers to Majerteen Sultanate as we know it.
The 13th century date comes from the number of succeeding Garaad's , so people are counting the number of generations. But yeah i have no idea if there is chronicle out there or not about Warsangeli.
Also most of the chronicles we do have always relate back to Jihad for some reason.
Even the Gadabursi chronicle that I'M Lewis was lucky to review contains bits about Jihad
The same manuscript records Ugas Ali Makahil's Jihad against the Oromo invasion in year 1575
As i have explained this in different thread, what might be the case:
A lot of the chronicles/documents about that regions history do not always come from Harar, a big chunk of them were written on the northern coast or produced/survived elsewhere even as far as Yemen and then was brought there to Harar. There was widespread circulation of texts and Harar sometimes acted as a central collection place.
It's likely that the written historical production in Northern-Western Somalia took a different nature from South-Central(Mogadishu area) as it was mostly a state led enterprise concerned with documenting the struggle(Jihad) and political formation by central state actors as an extension of the political conflict and resistance to the Christian Abyssinia.
So if we were to find any new chronicles , odds are they would be narratives around conquest and jihad.