• This website is being upgraded. Theme is temporary.

HISTORY Unknown eras in Somali history

There are unknown eras in Somali history. We know almost everything that happened in the last 300 years and the period of conflict with Axum, but there are two unknown periods. The first is the period of the emergence of modern tribes in the 12th century
According to oral history, names of regions and monuments
It is said that there were Abyssinians ruling the Somalis or other non-Muslim Somalis??!
Like yufle it's ha tuulo in sanaag They say it is the name of a Haishi king who was killed there
Also damal And he is, as they say, the tax collector of the King of Abyssinia or gaalo madow who was killed.
Here in badweyne it's in sool Where this happen And explains the story
Somali name and his wife speaks Somali It seems that they demolished an old mosque and found books in it.
The second part is the destruction of cities and who destroyed the cities
Who lived in these cities and who destroyed these cities? Currently Somalis say that those who destroyed the cities were not Somalis, and also those who lived in them were not Somalis. So who are they and where did they go?
This is maduun a city old in sanaag The old man was really cultured and dealt with the Erikologus, but he said they were not Somalis.
Also fardawasa A city that was on the site of the city of Sheikh. It is said that it had a great wall that was closed and opened, but a woman opened the wall by mistake, so an army came down from the mountain and destroyed it and killed everyone in it. Only two people survived and fled to Barbara.
4:30
There soo many others With the same similar stories, a non-Muslim king was ruling and cities were destroyed.
But it is difficult to believe that the Abyssinians reached this far east, at a time when the conflict in Hargaya
1000186858.jpg
 
I don't share that view, sxb. Somalis lived in any city. They were, for the most part, not destroyed but abandoned after the Ifat-Adal period.

The Habash factor was never any direct rule, and their presence is little even in the coastal margins where we did extensively trade with them at times, and neither did Habash go to Sanaag for conflict, if I read it right. You had Habash in the medieval go to western Somaliland to have conflict sometimes, but these were lesser skirmishes, iirc, and had no apparatus capable of taking over or maintaining control. Jus tminor level conflict that deals with ambush. There are writings in the Habash description that explain how a small band failed, with 5 becoming captives, but somehow they all conveniently escaped independently and found each other on the roads due to some sort of Christian revelation.

I have written something about Fardowsa. Check it out. It shows that Fardowsa had no evidence of violence on it. The prevalence of violence in cities was overstated by a high amount, according to the archaeological record.
 
I don't share that view, sxb. Somalis lived in any city. They were, for the most part, not destroyed but abandoned after the Ifat-Adal period.

The Habash factor was never any direct rule, and their presence is little even in the coastal margins where we did extensively trade with them at times, and neither did Habash go to Sanaag for conflict, if I read it right. You had Habash in the medieval go to western Somaliland to have conflict sometimes, but these were lesser skirmishes, iirc, and had no apparatus capable of taking over or maintaining control. Jus tminor level conflict that deals with ambush. There are writings in the Habash description that explain how a small band failed, with 5 becoming captives, but somehow they all conveniently escaped independently and found each other on the roads due to some sort of Christian revelation.

I have written something about Fardowsa. Check it out. It shows that Fardowsa had no evidence of violence on it. The prevalence of violence in cities was overstated by a high amount, according to the archaeological record.
Give me sources and links please.
So who do you think we were fighting with?
 

Trending

Top