Ndiadiane Ndiaye

Last updated

Ndiadiane Ndiaye
Buurba Jolof
PredecessorNone
Successor Sare Ndiaye
Born Futa Toro
ConsortOula, Marema Ndoye Gueye
Issue Goor Ndiadiane, Sare Ndiadiane, Nget Ndiadiane
House Ndiaye dynasty
FatherAbu Darday, Boukar Ndiaye or Bubakar Omar
MotherFatoumata Sall
Religion Islam

Ndiadiane Ndiaye, frequently spelled Njaajan Njaay or Njai in English, is the legendary founder of the Jolof Empire. The story of Ndiadiaye Ndiaye is recorded in the oral histories of the Wolof and Serer peoples. Although the exact dates of his reign are unknown, he founded the Ndiaye dynasty that ruled Jolof until the 19th century. His epic says he grew up In what is now the Bakel Department of Senegal, as the son of Fatumata Sall, the daughter of a local chief. His father is variously named Abu Darday, Bubakar Omar and Boukar Ndiaye. According to the legend, when his mother remarried following her husband's death, Ndiadiane left his home and travelled, via the Senegal River, to Waalo, where his ability to make good judgements led to the people appointing him their leader. After ruling the Waalo for 16 years, he founded the Jolof Empire by peaceful means. On his death, the empire passed to his son, Sare Ndiadiane. He is called the ancestor of the peoples of Senegal and the term Ndiadiane Ndiaye is used as a colloquial term for the country.

Contents

Historicity

Like many founders of nations, there is no evidence of the existence of Ndiadiane Ndiaye in any written archive. [1] His story is recorded in the oral histories of Wolof and Serer peoples as the founder of the Jolof Empire. The legend highlights Ndiaye's role as the unifier of previously divided people and the creator of relatively democratic governance institutions. [2] Fearing writes that " most versions of the myth explain how the new dynasty superimposed itself upon a preexisting social structure dominated by the Laman, Wolof elders who claimed 'ownership' of the land as the descendants of the founders of village communities." There is evidence that the laman retained many of their functions under the new monarchical order, becoming in effect a lesser nobility within the new state, and serving as electors when the time came to choose a new king from the Njaay dynasty. [3]

Scholars disagree on the dates of Ndiadiane Ndiaye's reign. Dates in the early thirteenth century are often ascribed to him, but John Donnelly Fage claimed that a more likely scenario is that the rise of the empire was associated with the growth of Wolof power at the expense of the ancient Sudanese state of Takrur, which was essentially a development that took place in the fourteenth-century. [4] The kings lists of Waalo and Jolof also point to a date in the second half of the fourteenth century. [5] Historian Jean Boulegue adjusted these same lists using early written sources to estimate a date around 1300. [6] The Rao archaeological site, near the ancient village of Mboyu-Gar where Ndiaye first appeared in Waalo, dates to the period between 1300 and 1350, and could be linked to the foundation of Jolof. [7]

Legend

The epic of Ndiadiane Ndiaye begins with the story of his father, Bubakar Omar, and his Mandinka slave, Mbarik Bo, and their adventure as they travel from the Levant to the Senegal River. Once at his destination, Bubakar Omar marries Fatumata Sall, the daughter of the Waalo chief, Abraham Sall. Born in Futa Toro, Ndiaye is their son, who grows up in what is now the Bakel Department of Senegal. His father is mortally injured in a fight with a rival king named Hamar. After his father dies, Ndiadiane avenges the death by killing Hamar, but his mother marries Mbarik Bo. Ashamed and hurt by the match, Ndiaye responds by jumping into the Senegal River and beginning to live an aquatic life. Endowed with superhuman qualities, he makes his way downstream to the area that would become the Kingdom of Waalo, living in the river or on an island. [8] [9] [10]

At this time, Waalo was divided into villages ruled by separate kings using the Serer title Lamane , [11] some of whom were engaged in a dispute over a wood near a prominent lake. This almost led to bloodshed among the rulers but was stopped by the mysterious appearance of a stranger from the lake. The stranger divided the wood fairly and disappeared, leaving the people in awe. Other versions have Ndiaye emerging from the water to fairly divide a disputed catch of fish. [12] [13] In both versions, the people then feigned a second dispute and kidnapped the stranger when he returned. Ndiaye initially refused to speak, but was eventually coaxed out of silence by a woman, Bate Boye. When these events were reported to the ruler of the Sine, Maad a Sinig Maysa Wali, he is reported to have exclaimed "lahi ndiadiane!" in his native Serer language in amazement. [13] [14]

A great magician, Maysa Wali foresaw the Ndiaye family's great future, and advised the people to take him as their first king, which they did. [15] In some versions, all the rulers between the Senegal and Gambia Rivers voluntarily submitted to him. [16] Ndiaye ruled wisely for 16 years over Waalo when his half brother, Barka Bo or Mbodj, who had heard of his success, came to join him. Ndiaye rejected his relation as a son of a slave, and so left for Jolof. His fame preceded him, and so he was welcomed there, founding the Jolof Empire when the rulers of the region voluntarily submitted to him. [17] [18] His empire consisted of a number of semi-autonomous states, each with their own ruler, as the existence of king lists from Cayor and Baol after his ascension attest. [19] [20] He was known as a peacemaker rather than as a conqueror who obtained his kingdom by force. [21]

Family

Ndiaye's ancestry varies across the different versions of the legend. The consensus is that his mother, an African woman named Fatoumatu Sall, married a foreign person of noble birth. [3] [22] Sallah writes: "Some say that Njajan was the son of Abu Darday, an Almoravid conqueror who came from Mecca to preach Islam in Senegal ... Some say that Ndiadiane Ndiaye was a mysterious person of Fulani origin. Others say he was a Serer prince." [23] Some oral histories equate Abu Darday with Abu Bakr ibn Umar, but this is likely a later invention as Abu Bakr ibn Umar died at least a hundred years before Ndiaye ruled and Ndiaye is never mentioned in Arabic sources. [24] [9] [25] [26] [27]

Sereer traditions maintain that Ndiadiane Ndiaye was of Fulani origin and had no family connection with either Arabs or Berbers. [28] Some of these further advance that his father was Lamane Boukar Ndiaye, a Serer from Waalo, and his mother Fatoumata Sall was the daughter of the Lamtoro Ambraham Sall of Takrur. The name 'Abu Bakr' would have arisen as a corruption of the Serer name 'Boukar'. [29]

According to the legend, Ndiaye had sons from multiple wives who became the rulers of kingdoms. When he settled in Ndiayene Sagour, he married a Fula woman called Oula. They has a son named Goor Ndiadiane, from whom the Fulani nobility of Jolof were descended. His second wife was named Marema Ndoye Gueye. They had two chidlren, Sare Ndiadiane, who succeeded him, and Nget Ndiadiane, the ancestor of the Diop of Cayor, Sine, Saloum and Waalo. [15]

Legacy

Ndiadiane Ndiaye is seen as the founder of what is the nation of Senegal today, the ancestor of most of the Senegalese peoples and remains an important folk hero in the country today. [30] [31] His name is used as a colloquial term to refer to all of Senegal. [32] An important part of the coronation ceremonies in Waalo and Jolof was the royal bath, known as xulixuli taken as Ndaseew, where Ndiaye first emerged from the river. [33]

Wolof oral traditions hold that the Wolof language was created at Ndiaye's court by mixing the diverse languages of the empire including Fula, Serer and Mandinka. [34] The Wolof people originated in part from the mixing of Serer, Toucouleur and other peoples, and so contemporary ethnic and linguistic labels may have had very different meanings, or no meaning at all, in Ndiaye's time. [5] This is reflected in the epic by Ndiaye's origins. [25] [35] [36] According to James Searing, "in all versions of the myth, Njaajaan Njaay speaks his first words in Pulaar rather than Wolof, emphasizing once again his character as a stranger of noble origins." [3]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">History of Senegal</span>

The history of Senegal is commonly divided into a number of periods, encompassing the prehistoric era, the precolonial period, colonialism, and the contemporary era.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cayor</span> Former country in present-day Senegal

Cayor was from 1549 to 1876 the largest and most powerful kingdom that split off from the Jolof Empire in what is now Senegal. Cayor was located in northern and central Senegal, southeast of Waalo, west of the kingdom of Jolof, and north of Baol and the Kingdom of Sine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Baol</span> Former kingdom in central Senegal

Baol or Bawol was a kingdom in what is now central Senegal. Founded in the 11th century, it was a vassal of the Jolof Empire before becoming independent in the mid-16th century. The ruler bore the title of Teigne and reigned from the capital in Lambaye. The kingdom encompassed a strip of land extending east from the ocean and included the towns of Touba, Diourbel, and Mbacke. It was directly south of the Kingdom of Cayor and north of the Kingdom of Sine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Waalo</span> Former kingdom in West Africa

Waalo was a kingdom on the lower Senegal River in West Africa, in what is now Senegal and Mauritania. It included parts of the valley proper and areas north and south, extending to the Atlantic Ocean. To the north were Moorish emirates; to the south was the kingdom of Cayor; to the east was Jolof.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Takrur</span> Historical state in West Africa

Takrur, Tekrur or Tekrour was a state based in the Senegal River valley in modern day Mauritania and Northern Senegal, Northwestern Africa, which was at its height in the 10th and 11th centuries, roughly parallel to the Ghana Empire. It lasted in some form into the 18th century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jolof Empire</span> West African state (1350–1549)

The Jolof Empire, also known as Great Jolof, or the WolofEmpire, was a Wolof state that ruled parts of West Africa situated in modern-day Senegal, Mali, Gambia and Mauritania from around the 12th century to 1549. Following the 1549 battle of Danki, its vassal states were fully or de facto independent; in this period it is known as the Jolof Kingdom.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Serer people</span> West African ethnic group

The Serer people are a West African ethnoreligious group. They are the third-largest ethnic group in Senegal, making up 15% of the Senegalese population. They are also found in northern Gambia and southern Mauritania.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kingdom of Sine</span> Post-classical Serer kingdom in Senegal

The Kingdom of Sine was a post-classical Serer kingdom along the north bank of the Saloum River delta in modern Senegal. The inhabitants are called Siin-Siin or Sine-Sine.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kingdom of Jolof</span> West African rump state

The Kingdom of Jolof, also known as Wolof and Wollof, was a West African rump state located in what is today the nation of Senegal. For nearly two hundred years, the Wolof rulers of the Jolof Empire collected tribute from vassal kings' states who voluntarily agreed to the confederacy. At the 1549 Battle of Danki, however, the Buurba Jolof was defeated by the lord of Kayor, resulting in the rapid disintegration of the empire. Jolof survived as a rump state, unable to access the Atlantic trade between its former vassal territories and the Portuguese.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Serer history</span> Medieval history of the Serer people of Senegambia

The medieval history of the Serer people of Senegambia is partly characterised by resisting Islamization from perhaps the 11th century during the Almoravid movement, to the 19th century Marabout movement of Senegambia and continuation of the old Serer paternal dynasties.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Teigne</span>

Teigne was a Serer title for the monarchs of the pre-colonial Kingdom of Baol, now part of present-day Senegal. The Kingdoms of Baol and Cayor became intricately linked especially post 1549 when the Faal family came to into prominence, and it was the same family that eventually ruled both Kingdoms with the exception of few interruptions, notably Lat Joor Ngoneh Latir Jobe who was of a different patrilineage.

This is a timeline of the history and development of Serer religion and the Serer people of Senegal, The Gambia and Mauritania. This timeline merely gives an overview of their history, consisting of calibrated archaeological discoveries in Serer countries, Serer religion, politics, royalty, etc. Dates are given according to the Common Era. For a background to these events, see Roog, Serer religion, Serer creation myth, Serer prehistory, Lamane, States headed by Serer Lamanes, Serer history and Serer people.

Linguere Ndoye Demba Joos Fadiou, also known as Ndoye Demba in Senegambian dynastic history, was a Serer princess from the Kingdom of Sine, from the later half of the 14th century to the 15th century. The royal title – "Lingeer" means Queen or Royal Princess. She was given in marriage to the Brak of Waalo – Caaka Mbaar Mbooj. The surname Mbooj is the English spelling in the Gambia, variation include Mboge. In French speaking Senegal, it is spelt Mbodj. Differences in spelling is due to the colonial past of the Gambia and Senegal. France colonized Senegal, whilst Britain colonized the Gambia, thus the division of the two countries. Caaka Mbaar was the second king of Waalo from the Mbooj patrilineage, who ruled in the second half of the 14th century, around 1367. Brak was the title of the kings of Waalo. Lingeer Ndoye Demba was the founder of the Serer Joos Maternal Dynasty of Waalo. In the Wolof Kingdom of Waalo, Lingeer Ndoye Demba is considered the matriarch of the Joos maternal clan. In the Serer Kingdom of Sine, it is her grandmother Lingeer Fatim Beye who is considered to be the matriarch of this maternal dynasty. In the Serer language, the word "Fa-tim" means "the maternal clan of ... ". The Serer surname Beye is also one of the many Serer maternal clans.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lingeer</span> Title given to the mother or sister of a king

Lingeer was the title given to the mother or sister of a king in the Serer kingdoms of Sine, Saloum, and previously the Kingdom of Baol; and the Wolof kingdoms of Cayor, Jolof, Baol and Waalo in pre-colonial Senegal. The word "Lingeer" means "queen" or "princess" in Serer and Wolof language. The Lingeer was considered the “great princess of royal courts.” These kingdoms utilized a bilineal system, as a candidate for kingship could not succeed to the throne if he was not a member of the reigning materlineage, and thus, the Lingeer's maternal lineage was highly significant. In similarity, a candidate could not succeed to the throne as king if he was not a member of the noble reigning patriclans. That was particular so among the Serer who retained much of their old culture, customs and traditional religion where women played a significant role compared to the Wolof who adopted Islam. Various Lingeers have been noted for their resistance efforts to colonial conquest.

Maad a Sinig Maysa Wali Jaxateh Manneh was a king described in the oral tradition of the Serer pre-colonial Kingdom of Sine and the first of the Guelowar maternal dynasty to rule in Serer country. He reigned as Maad a Sinig from c. 1350 to 1370.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lingeer Fatim Beye</span> Lingeer of Sine

Lingeer Fatim Beye Joos Fadiou was a 14th-century Serer princess and queen (Lingeer) from the Kingdom of Sine. She is the matriarch and early ancestor of the Joos Maternal Dynasty of Waalo. She is usually regarded by some sources as the founder of the Joos Maternal Dynasty. The pre-colonial Kingdoms of Sine and Waalo now lies within present-day Senegal. Her surname is Beye (English-Gambia) or Bèye (French-Senegal). Joos Fadiou is her maternal clan. In Serer, "Fa-tim" means "the maternal clan of..."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joos Maternal Dynasty</span> Serer maternal dynasty from the Serer pre-colonial Kingdom of Sine in the 14th century

The Joos Maternal Dynasty was a Serer maternal dynasty which originated from the Serer pre-colonial Kingdom of Sine in the 14th century and spread to the Wolof Kingdom of Waalo. The matriarch or founder of this maternal dynasty was Lingeer Fatim Beye, a princess and queen originally from the Kingdom of Sine. In Waalo, it was founded by the princess Lingeer Ndoye Demba of Sine. Lingeer Ndoye Demba was the maternal granddaughter of Lingeer Fatim Beye. They both came from the Serer ethnic group. The pre-colonial Kingdoms of Sine and Waalo now forming a part of modern-day Senegal maintained good relations with other pre-colonial kingdoms.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ndaté Yalla Mbodj</span>

Ndaté Yalla Mbodj, also known as Ndateh Yalla Mbooj, was the last Lingeer (Queen) of Waalo, a Jolof kingdom located in what is now northwest Senegal. During her reign, she fought against French colonization and Moorish invasion of her kingdom. Ndaté Yalla and her sister Ndjeumbeut Mbodj were two of the most powerful women of 19th century Senegalese dynastic history.

Sare Ndiadiane, also known as Sare N'Dyaye, was the second ruler, or Burba, of the Jolof Empire. He was the son of Ndiadiane Ndiaye, the founder of the empire, and Marema Ndoye Gueye of the Begedji lineage, born after his father left Waalo for Djolof.

Rao is a village in northern Senegal, approximately 15km from Saint-Louis. It is the seat of the eponymous Rao Arrondissement.

References

Bibliography

Preceded by
None
Burba Jolof
Jolof Empire

c.1360-1370
Succeeded by