Bwana Mkuu was a Sultan of Pate, Kenya, 1688 to 1713. At the time Pate dominated Lamu. Bwana Mkuu set up residency at Lamu, complete with a Lamu lady as one of his wives and a private mosque. [1] Bwana Mkuu was the youth name of Sultan Abubakar.
In the year 1738 (1151 Hijra) the civil wars between the Arabs worsen until the Oman were unable to cope with the affairs in East Africa. The Quarrel between the Arabs and the Nabahans amongst the two tribes Henawi and Ghafr then the Yorubi fought the Nabahan and they gained strength and defeated the ruling Nabahany. [2] Suleiman bin Muthafar fled away and landed in Pate by that time the inhabitants of Pate were the people who had been sent by Khalifa Abdul Malik bin Murian. Suleiman Bin Muthafar made good relationship with the chief of Pate Is-haki, he went and asked for his daughter in Marriage, Suleiman Bin Muthafar married the daughter of the Pate Chief and he was given a portion in the Kingdom of Pate to ruled and he had a son by the daughter of the Pate chief and called him Mohammad. After his death his son Suleiman Bin Suleiman took over the Kingdom and took possession of all his people, his wealth and his soldiers, it was he who first took the name of Sultan of Pate and this by right, for his father came forth from their country bearing the title of Sultan. [3]
Sultan Abubaka also known as Bwana Mkuu was known to be the father of Sultan Mohammed, who took over the Sultanate after the death of His son Sultan Mohammed. Sultan Bwana Mkuu was a good friend of the Portuguese, the influence of the Portuguese grew in the kingdom of Sultan Bwana Mkuu and made them be closer to the Sultan, the attraction of the friendship made the Portuguese lived in Pate and started trading in Pate. The Portuguese advice Sultan Bwana Mkuu to introduce tax as away to rise the profit in trade. Sultan Bwana Mkuu made a custom house in Pate called Fandikani which means customs in Portuguese language.
The friendship of the Sultan Bwana Mkuu with the Portuguese had brought many benefits to Pate people. [4] [5]
Sultan Bwana Mkuu died and leaves seven children of who Mohammad reigned and he was called Bwana Fumomadi the Second then Sultan Mohammad died and Abubakar the son of Sultan Bwana Mkuu reigned, during his sultanate strife arose between him and the Portuguese. The Portuguese fought with Pate and the people of Pate were grievously afflicted. Sultan Abubakr sent a Sherif who was a very holy man who pray to Allah on behaved of Pate people against their enemies. The Sherif gave Sultan Abubakar two of his Son and they were brought to Pate. The Sherif sons settled in Pate and Married, from this time the Portuguese could not attack Pate people, they tried several time without success so they decided to make peace and came to an agreement with the Sultan of Pate. Afterwards the Sultan Abubakar died and his son Bwana Mkuu reigned.
During the Sultan Bwana Mkuu II Pate became wealthy again. Sultan Bwana Mkuu II allowed foreigners from Barawa to settled in Pate. The Barawa arrived in Pate with much wealth and they bought houses, and even bought firewood and wells in Pate.
Afterwards Sultan Bwana Mkuu II died and sultan Ahmed, the son of his cousin reigned. Sultan Ahmed was a very good man and loved his subject much. He reigned for seven years without rainfall and then he abdicated of his free will and gave the throne to Sultan Mohammad the son of sultan Abubakar. Sultan Mohammad quarreled with the Portuguese and they turned him out of the throne and gave it to the son of the Sultan Bwana Mkuu who was called Abubakar who agreed with the Portuguese very well. Sultan Abubakar loved to travel about and visited many places. Behind him the Pate people were intrigued and put Sultan Mohammad the son of his brother on the throne. When Sultan Abubakar returned he could not take over Pate again.
Sultan Mohammad married his son to the daughter of Abubakar and name him Bwana Mkuu. Who later became Sultan Bwana Mkuu III. Sultan Bwana Mkuu III consolidated Sultan Ahmed and Fomuloti in the council of elders to create peace among the two sultans, when Fumoluti Kipunga refused to accept sultan Ahmed as his Sultan.
The Portuguese took an interest in East Africa from the beginning of the 16th century. They destroyed a number of towns during the sixteenth century in their attempt to Monopolize Indian trade. The arrival of Oman made the Portuguese influence declined at the coast. In the 740 Sultan Mohamed died and his son Sultan Omar reigned, he was also known as Fumomari. Sultan Omar had a nephew who was very fond of travelling, during his tripe his servants discovered sand melt when they fire blazed while they were cooking food for Sultan Omar nephew. So they made a plan to load their ship with the sand, for this sand was a silver ore, on arrival they put the sand in a store and called a skilled workmen and showed them a little, and when they made an ornament out of it they found it was a pure silver. Now it was at this time that the Portuguese arrived in Pate again and this time they came in friendship. The Sultan showed the ore to the Portuguese because of his joy he narrated the whole story of how he found the ore, the Portuguese took the captain and went to search for the place they returned again without finding it when they came back to Pate they found sultan died and found Bwana Mkuu the Sultan in the year 825. The Portuguese stayed at Pate and Dondo and they were in friendship with Sultan Bwana Mkuu . [3] The Portuguese influence grew great in town of Pate, they traded with good and assisted the Sultan Bwana Mkuu on ways to get profits and taught people of Pate how to excavate wells in the rocks by means of gunpower.
Suleiman I, commonly known as Suleiman the Magnificent in Western Europe and Suleiman the Lawgiver in his Ottoman realm, was the longest-reigning sultan of the Ottoman Empire from 1520 until his death in 1566. Under his administration, the Ottoman Empire ruled over at least 25 million people.
Suleiman is the Arabic name of the Jewish and Quranic king and Islamic prophet Solomon.
SayyidBarghash bin Said al-Busaidi, an Afro-Omani Sultan and the son of Said bin Sultan, was the second Sultan of Zanzibar. He ruled Zanzibar from 7 October 1870 to 26 March 1888.
Lamu or Lamu Town is a small town on Lamu Island, which in turn is a part of the Lamu Archipelago in Kenya. Situated 341 kilometres (212 mi) by road northeast of Mombasa that ends at Mokowe Jetty, from where the sea channel has to be crossed to reach Lamu Island, it is the headquarter of Lamu County and a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Wituland was a territory of approximately 3,000 square kilometres (1,200 sq mi) in East Africa centered on the town of Witu, just inland from the Indian Ocean port of Lamu, north of the mouth of the Tana River in what is now Kenya.
Pate (Paté) Island is located in the Indian Ocean close to the northern coast of Kenya, to which it belongs. It is the largest island in the Lamu Archipelago, which lie between the towns of Lamu and Kiunga in the former Coast Province. The island is almost completely surrounded by mangroves.
Barawa, also known as Barawe and Brava, is the capital of the South West State of Somalia. It functions as a port town in the southwestern Lower Shebelle region of Somalia. Facing the Indian Ocean, Barawa serves as the main port of the South West State.
Bwana Tamu was Sultan of Pate, Kenya, from 1713. He decided to wage a war on Lamu in order to get the guns that the Portuguese had buried on Lamu Island, on Hedabu Hill. However, his boats were overloaded with fire-arms and they sank on the way to Lamu.
The Banaadiri people are a people group in Somalia. Banaadiris largely inhabit Somalia's southern coastline.
The Kilwa Sultanate was a sultanate, centered at Kilwa, whose authority, at its height, stretched over the entire length of the Swahili Coast. According to the legend, it was founded in the 10th century by Ali ibn al-Hassan Shirazi, a Persian prince of Shiraz.
The Ottoman–Portuguese Conflicts (1586–1589) were armed military engagements which took place between the Portuguese Empire and the Ottoman Empire along the coast of eastern Africa.
The House of Busaid, also known as the House of Al Said, is the current ruling royal family of Oman, and former ruling house of the Omani Empire (1744–1856), Sultanate of Muscat and Oman (1856–1970) and the Sultanate of Zanzibar (1856–1964). It was founded by Ahmad bin Said Al Busaidi in 1744 and is currently headed by Haitham bin Tariq Al Said.
Yusuf Mahamud Ibrahim was a Somali ruler. He was the third and most powerful Sultan of the Geledi sultanate, reigning from 1798 to 1848. Under the reign of Sultan Yusuf, his kingdom entered its apex, he managed to modernize his economy and his kingdom quickly became one of the wealthiest states in East Africa. Yusuf frequently toured the sultanate and built rapport with his many clients and allies. He successfully consolidated Geledi power during conquest of Bardera and expelling extremist ideology from his region. It was under his rule he manage to establish many trading partners and allies such as the Sultanate of Witu. He also exacted tribute from Sultan Said of the Omani Empire starting from 1843.
Ahmed Yusuf Mahamud was a Somali Sultan of the Geledi sultanate, reigning from 1848 to 1878 and succeeded his father Yusuf Mahamud after his demise at the battle of Adaddey Suleyman. Ahmed was crowned as the fourth Sultan, and his rule marked a period of great prosperity in the Sultanate. The Sultan is credited as having brought over 20,000 Somali troops to free the slaves of Zanzibar.
Siyu is a settlement on the north coast of Pate Island, within the Lamu Archipelago in Kenya's Coast Province.
The Battle of Shela occurred around 1812 on the sand dunes near the village of Shela on Lamu Island, in what is now Kenya, just south of the larger village of Lamu. The people of Lamu won against superior forces from Mombasa and Pate. The battle led to the domination of the coast by the rulers of Oman.
Rasini, also known as Kikoni, is a small town in the southern Lower Juba province of Somalia.
Bida or Bido are a clan confederacy based in Baraawe, South West State of Somalia and make up one of the groups part of the "todobo Tol" also known as Bravanese people. Member clans of this clan umbrella can also be found in other confederacies further up the coast in Marka and Mogadishu.
Two or three Abbasid expeditions to East Africa are mentioned in the late Arabic Book of the Zanj. The Abbasid caliphs al-Manṣūr (754–775), Hārūn al-Rashīd (786–809) and al-Maʾmūn (813–833) are reputed to have sent punitive expeditions to the Islamized city-states of the Somali coast and set up governors there. The Book of the Zanj does not survive in any copy earlier than the 20th century and its historical reliability is highly questionable for the early Islamic period.