The Bilala dynasty [1] [2] is the royal lineage of the traditional leaders of the Bilala people, an ethnic group today concentrated around Lake Fitri in Chad. The Bilala monarchs have historically ruled different territories, and varied in authority and titles used. Lists of Bilala rulers, preserved through oral tradition, are inconsistent and contradictory before the late 19th century.
In the 14th century, the Bilala conquered Kanem, a territory immediately northeast of Lake Chad, from the Sayfawa dynasty of the Kanem–Bornu Empire. Bilala rulers of Kanem are referred to with titles such as mai , emir, and sultan in the sources, titles also applied to Sayfawa monarchs. The Bilala lost Kanem in the 17th century, whereafter they migrated to their present-day lands around Lake Fitri. The traditional capital of the Bilala has since then been the town of Yao. Bilala rulers since the 17th century are thus commonly referred to as the sultans of Yao, [3] though other titles are sometimes also used, such as mai of Fitri [4] or sultan of Fitri. [5]
The traditional origin stories of the Bilala rulers are similar, and often connected to, the origin stories or rulers of the Sayfawa dynasty, which ruled the Kanem–Bornu Empire. Like the Sayfawa, the Bilala have from the time of their conversion to Islam onwards claimed fictitious Arab ancestry as a source of prestige. [3] There are various contradictory versions of the origin tale, with different names given to the progenitor of the Bilala dynasty:
A general outline of Bilala history can be produced through both Bilala and foreign sources. The Bilala are first recorded to have been in conflict with the Sayfawa in the reign of the 14th-century Sayfawa mai Dawud Nikalemi. [11] Dawud was defeated and killed by the Bilala c. 1363, [a] and the Bilala were able to capture Njimi, the capital of Kanem. [12] [10] Njimi was retaken by Dawud's successor, Uthman I, [12] but lost again to the Bilala some years later, in the time of the Sayfawa mai Umar I Idrismi, c. 1380. [13] The loss of Kanem prompted the Sayfawa to re-establish themselves west of Lake Chad, in the Bornu region. [12]
The Bilala established their own kingdom in Kanem, which rivaled that of the Sayfawa in Bornu. [14] The Bilala ruled Kanem until they lost the country c. 1630, [15] whereafter they relocated to their present lands around Lake Fitri. [16]
The history of the Kanem–Bornu Empire and its rulers is mainly recorded in the girgam , a royal chronicle preserved over the centuries mainly through oral history. Girgams recording the line of the Sayfawa rulers also mention several Bilala rulers, though a complete line of rulers is not recorded. Similar names and details of these rulers are given in girgams translated by Heinrich Barth in 1857 [12] and Richmond Palmer in 1928: [11]
| Name (Barth, 1857) [12] | Name (Palmer, 1928) [11] | Sayfawa contemporary [12] | Details [12] |
|---|---|---|---|
| ʿAbd el Jélil | Abd ul Jalil of the seed of Ume (Jilmi) [b] | Dawud Nikalemi | Killed Dawud in battle |
| Mohammed, son of ʿAbd Allah | "The Eanemma" | Gaji | Killed Gaji in battle |
| Selma or ʿAbd el Jélil | Not mentioned | Ali I Gaji | Barth stated that the contemporary Leo Africanus mistakenly [c] identifed this ruler as ʿOmár. |
| Dunama, son of Selma or ʿAbd el Jélil | Not mentioned | Idris III Katagarmabe | Son of Selma, defeated by Idris III |
| A'dim, brother of Dunama | Not mentioned) | Idris III Katagarmabe | Took the throne after his brother Dunama's death, defeated by Idris III |
| Kadé, son of ʿAbd el Jélil and Lifiya | Kadai ibn Lefia | Muhammad VI Aminami | Rose up against Muhammad VI and was defeated |
| ʿAbd el Jélil, son of Kade | Abd ul Jalil ibn Gumsu | Dunama VI Muhammad Abdullah IV Dunamami | Son of Kadé, rose up against Dunama VI and was defeated |
| ʿAbd Allah, son of ʿAbd el Jélil | Not mentioned | Abdullah IV Dunamami Aissa Koli Idris IV Alooma | Son of ʿAbd el Jélil, concluded a peace treaty with Idris IV |
| Mohammed, son of ʿAbd Allah | Not mentioned | Idris IV Alooma | Son of ʿAbd Allah, died after a short reign |
| ʿAbd el Jélil ben ʿAbd el Jélil | Abd ul Jalil the son of the daughter of Gargar | Idris IV Alooma | Uncle of Mohammed, broke off negotiations with Idris IV and fought a war against him |
The Bilala have their own girgam tradition to record the royal line, though the sequence of rulers differs considerably between different versions. Some traditional short histories of specific episodes in Bilala history also record a handful of rulers. Several royal lists and short histories were translated by Richmond Palmer in his Sudanese Memoirs (1928). [4] [7] [8] [17] [18]
One of the tales translated by Palmer (in several versions) is The Bilala Secession from the Mais of Kanem, which records the Bilala conquest of Kanem and the decades that followed. Depending on the version, The Bilala Secession records a single Bilala ruler (eponymously named "Bilala" or "Bulala") as conquering Kanem and ruling for a century, or a succession of three rulers: [17]
To make the chronology fit, Palmer identified "Ali Gaji" not as the Sayfawa mai otherwise recorded as Ali I Gaji, but as the earlier Sayfawa ruler Gaji, [17] who the Sayfawa girgam contradictorily describes as having been killed by a Bilala ruler named Mohammed. [12] Palmer suggested that Yari and Mohammed were two names for the same ruler, and that both names were later nicknames. [17]
Another tale, The War Between the Bilala and Sayfawa, records Bilala history around the time of the Sayfawa mai Idris IV Alooma. [8] This tale includes a confused account of Sayfawa history; the Sayfawa mais Ali I Gaji (builder of Ngazargamu) and Ali II Zainami (Idris's father) are erroneously equated as the same person and Aissa Koli is erroneously identified as the daughter of Dunama II Dibalemi. [8] The War Between the Bilala and Sayfawa records that Ali married Amsa, daughter of the Bilala ruler Umr (Umar), [d] who was Idris's mother. Idris eventually becomes ruler of the Sayfawa and later leads a campaign in which he defeats and kills his maternal grandfather Umr, also becoming ruler of the Bilala. [8] After Idris, Mai Kunuma (or Mai Mala Ganami), son of Umr, becomes ruler of the Bilala and the Bilala relocate to the Lake Fitri region. [8]
In Sudanese Memoirs, Palmer translated three lists of Bilala rulers. These lists included a Bilala girgam, with regnal years and some notes, as well as two name lists of rulers. Palmer titled the two name lists as List of Bilala Mais of Kanem (List A) and Origin of the Bilala Kings of Fitri According to the Manuscript of Sarkin Gulfei (List B). The lists do not differentiate between ancestral figures, Bilala rulers of Kanem, and Bilala rulers of Yao (Fitri).
| Bilala girgam [7] | List B [4] | List A [18] |
|---|---|---|
|
|
|
According to Palmer, the differences at the end of List A are due to a split in the Bilala lineage, with List A representing the branch of a Bilala prince named Shettima, not of the main line. [18] Palmer believed both List A and List B to be faulty but stated that they supplemented each other, claiming that an approximate full list could be created by combining the two. [4] Palmer also created a comparative list, where several figures were speculatively identified as the same, such as Othman ibn Affan in List A perhaps being the same figure as Muhammad el-Yamani in List B. [4]
Frank Hagenbucher wrote down a list of Bilala rulers in April 1967, published in 1968 as part of a larger collection of notes and observations on the Bilala. [3] Hagenbucher's list is limited to the Bilala rulers of Yao, i.e. after their flight from Kanem. Hagenbucher's list begins with Mahamat Djil Essa Tubo, who Hagenbucher identified as the first sultan of Yao. [3]
| Name | Regnal years | Relationship, notes | Seat |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mahamat Djil Essa Tubo | 40 years | First sultan of Yao | Yao |
| Tshéroma Mahamat | 23 years | Son of predecessor | Yao |
| Mahamat Madgashé | 30 years | Son of predecessor | Yao |
| Mada Saxaïr (a.k.a. Mat Kurtu) | 18 years | Son of predecessor | Yao |
| Mahamat Djourab el Kabir | 28 years | Son of predecessor | Yao |
| Mahamat Mortcho | 80 years | Son of predecessor | Yao |
| Djourab el Mongo | 3 years | Son of predecessor | Yao |
| Dogo Arma | 3 years | Son of Mahamat Mortcho | Am Sawasil [h] |
| Mahamat Balkashé | 60 years | Son of Mahamat Djourab el Kabir | Yao |
| Djourab Saxaïr (a.k.a. Bob Gumsu) | 1 year and 6 months | Son of predecessor | Yao |
| Moussa Mortcho | 7 months | Son of Mahamat Mortcho | Am Sawasil [h] |
| Djourab Saxaïr (second reign) | 3 years | Returned to the throne | Yao |
| Bayé Mortcho | 15 years | Son of Moussa Mortcho | Yao |
| Djourab Saxaïr (third reign) | 38 years | Returned to the throne | Yao |
| Hassan Baïkouma | 7 years | Son of predecessor | Yao |
| Djili | 3 years | Son of Djourab Saxaïr | Yao |
| Mahamat Gadaï | 12 years | Son of Djourab Saxaïr | Yao |
| Hassan Absakin | 22 years | Son of Tschéroma Abdallah, a nephew of Mahamat Balkashé | Yao |
| Mahamat Hassan Abba | 23 years | Son of Hassan Absakin | Yao |
| Oumar Mahamat Abba | 24 years | Son of predecessor | Yao |
| Hassan Absakin | Became ruler in 1967 | Yao |
Lists of Bilala rulers are largely in agreement from the death of Djourab Saxaïr (Jurab al-Saghir) in the late 19th century, though dates are inconsistent and contradictory.
This period began with a civil war over the throne between two of Djourab's sons, Hassan Baïkouma (Hassan Bekuma) and Mahamat Gadaï (Muhammad Gadai). Gadaï, based in "Auni (near Meto)", failed to take the throne and was in exile in the Wadai Sultanate for seven years until the Wadai sultan Yusuf defeated Hassan's son Djili and installed Gadaï as ruler. [7] Gadaï ruled until French colonization. [7] The throne has since then been in the hands of the line of Gadaï's relative Hassan Absakine. [3]
| Name | Reign | Relation to predecessor |
|---|---|---|
| Hassan Baïkouma (or Hassan Bekuma) | "7 years" [3] [7] | Son of Djourab Saxaïr (Jurab al-Saghir) |
| Djili (or Jiri) | "3 years" [3] [7] | Son [3] or brother [7] |
| Mahamat Gadaï (or Gudei, Kadai, Kade) | "12 years", [3] "13 years", [7] killed in 1909? [i] | Uncle or brother [j] |
| Hassan Absakine (or Hassan Absakin) | "20 years", [7] "22 years", [3] incumbent in 1917 [4] | First cousin, once removed [k] |
| Mahamat Hassan Abba (or Tchoroma) | "23 years", [3] became sultan in 1922 [7] | Son |
| Oumar Mahamat Abba | "24 years" [3] | Son |
| Hassan Absakine Oumar Mahamat Abba | 1967 [3] –1973 | Son |
| Tchoroma Hassane Absakine [5] | 1973–present | Son |