Malian-Songhai Wars

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Malian-Songhai Wars
Date1450s-1570
Location
Sahel, West Africa
Belligerents
Flag of the Mali Empire.svg Mali Empire Songhai Empire
Commanders and leaders
Uli II
Mahmud III
Sulayman Dama
Sunni Ali
Askia Muhammad I
Askia Daoud

The Malian-Songhai Wars were a series of conflicts during the Late Medieval and early modern periods between the Mali Empire and the Songhai Empire.

Contents

Late Middle Age

The Mali Empire had begun withdrawing from the area during the 1430s, giving Sulayman Dama room to occupy Gao and establish the Sunni dynasty. During the 1450s he invaded the region of Méma. [1] :n38,xxxviii Around 1469-1470 Sonni Ali successfully laid siege to Djenné, taking it out of Mali's sphere of influence. [2] He afterwards attempted two invasions deeper into Malian territory in 1475 but was met with serious defeats that temporarily halted the attacks into Mali's core. [3] In 1483 Sonni Ali captured Wagadu, the region of the ancient Ghana Empire. [3]

Early Modern Period

Between the late 15th and mid 16th century, the emergence of independent dynasties such as the Askiya dynasty of Songhai and the Tengella of Futa Toro challenged Mali's control of its northern provinces, and several battles were fought in the region between the three powers. Between 1501 and 1507, Mali lost its northern provinces of Baghana, Dialan, and Kalanbut to Askia Muhammad of the Songhai Empire, just as the regions of Masina and Futa Toro in the northwest fell to the Tengella rulers and other local potentates. [1] :108–110,113

In 1501-2 Askia Muhammad sent his brother Umar Komadiakha to Dialan to fight Qama Fati Qalli, a governor on behalf of Mahmud III. This initial attack was repelled, leading Askia Muhammad with his army to come in person, defeating Qama and sacking the town. [4]

Mali still remained a threat to Songhai and would often invade the regions west of Djenné. In 1544 the Songhai general, and later ruler of Songhai Daoud, led an invasion against Mali and sacked its capital. The Askia of Songhai launched more raids against them in 1550. The two would clash again in 1558, ending in the defeat of the Malian general Ma’ Kanti Faran and the marriage of the Mansas daughter to Askia Daoud. [5] Mali was able to push the Songhai border back, with Bendugu and Kala falling back under its authority and seemed to be sheltering opponents of the Askiya's. [6]

Sources

  1. 1 2 John Hunwick. John O. Hunwick Timbuktu And The Songhay Empire Al Sa' Di's Ta' Rikh Al Sudan Down To 1613 And Other Contemporary Documents ( 2003, Brill Academic Publishers) Libgen.lc.
  2. Gomez, Michael Angelo (2018). African dominion: a new history of empire in early and medieval West Africa. Princeton (N. J.): Princeton university press. p. 187. ISBN   978-0-691-17742-7.
  3. 1 2 Person, Yves (1981). "Nyaani Mansa Mamudu et la fin de l 'empire du Mali". Publications de la Société française d'histoire des outre-mers. 5 (2): 617.
  4. John Hunwick. John O. Hunwick Timbuktu And The Songhay Empire Al Sa' Di's Ta' Rikh Al Sudan Down To 1613 And Other Contemporary Documents ( 2003, Brill Academic Publishers) Libgen.lc. pp. 108–109.
  5. John Hunwick. John O. Hunwick Timbuktu And The Songhay Empire Al Sa' Di's Ta' Rikh Al Sudan Down To 1613 And Other Contemporary Documents ( 2003, Brill Academic Publishers) Libgen.lc. p. 148.
  6. Person, Yves (1981). "Nyaani Mansa Mamudu et la fin de l 'empire du Mali". Publications de la Société française d'histoire des outre-mers. 5 (2): 618.