Sayfawa dynasty or more properly Sefuwa dynasty is the name of the kings (or mai, as they called themselves) of the Kanem-Bornu Empire, centered first in Kanem in western Chad, and then, after 1380, in Borno (today north-eastern Nigeria).
Theories on the origins of this dynasty vary. Many scholars assert that it may have been rooted in a Tubu expansion or comprised an indigenous dynasty. Other theories have also been made. The German historian Dierk Lange has argued that the advent of the Sayfawa dynasty came in the 11th century, when Hummay consolidated Islam in Kanem. Lange adds that Hummay's advent represented the ascent of a Berber dynasty over the previous Duguwa Zaghawa one.[1]
In the Islamic period the Sayfawa themselves claimed as their eponymous ancestor the late pre-Islamic Yemenite hero Sayf ibn Dhi Yazan, hence their amended name Sayf-awa. This tradition was first mentioned by the Andalusian scholar Ibn Said in the 13th century, and Lange believes it to be mainly the fruit of the reinterpretation of an indigenous tradition by Muslim scholars who arrived to Kanem from regions where Himyarite traditions were strong.[2] Formerly most historians thought, that the leaders of this new dynasty belonged to the indigenous Kanembu.[3]
According to recent research, Kanem was founded by immigrants from the collapsing Assyrian Empire, claiming descent from Sef (1)/Sargon of Akkad, hence their name Sef-uwa. The Duguwa traced their ancestry in addition to Duku (2), the third figure of the list, and should therefore be properly designated as Sefuwa-Duguwa. From Hummay (12) onward the Sefuwa should more properly be called Sefuwa-Humewa or Sayfawa-Humewa, according to the ancestral figures Sef/Sipa (Sargon of Akkad) - in the Islamic period identified with Sayf b. Dhi Yazan - and the dynastic founder Hume (1068-1080).[4]
The dynasty, one of Africa's longest living, lost the throne in 1846.
Contents |
Name of the king | Earlier dating [5] | Historical name and dating [6] | Historical identity |
---|---|---|---|
(1) Sef | c. 700 | Sargon of Akkad (2334-2279) | Founder of the Akkadian Empire |
(2) Ibrahim | c. 740 | Abraham | Legendary Israelite patriarch |
(3) Dugu | c. 785 | Hammurabi (1792-1750) | Founder of the Amorite Empire |
(4) Fune | c. 835 | Pûl/Tiglath-pileser III (744-727) | Founder of Neo-Assyrian Empire |
(5) Arsu | c. 893 | Rusâ/Ursâ I (730-713) | 6th Urartian king |
(6) Katur | c. 942 | Kutir-Nahhunte (1185-1155) | 85th Elamite king |
(7) Buyuma | c. 961 | Bunuma-Addu (c. 1770) | 1st king of Nihrija/Nairi |
(8) Bulu | c. 1019 | Nabopolassar (626-605) | 1st Neo-Babylonian king |
(9) Arku | c. 1035 | Assur-uballit II (612-609) | Last king of Assyria |
(10) Shu | c. 1077 | Sammuramat (810-807) | Regent during the infancy of Adad-nirari III (810-783) |
Unknown | ? | ? | |
Kak.r.ah | . | . | Local king c. 870 CE[7] |
Unknown | ? | ? | |
(11) Abd al-Jalil/Selma | c. 1081 | First Duguwa king (1064-1068) | First Muslim ruler of Kanem |
Hume or Hummay | 1068–1080[8] |
Dunama I ibn Hummay | 1080–1133 |
Bir I or Biri I | 1133–1160 |
Abdallah I or Bikorom or Dala I | 1160–1176 |
Salmama I or Abd al-Jalil | 1176–1203 |
Dunama II Dabbalemi | 1203–1242 |
Kaday I | 1242–1270 |
Biri I or Kashim Biri | 1270–1290 |
Ibrahim I | 1290–1310 |
Abdallah II | 1310–1328 |
Salmama II | 1328–1332 |
Kuri Ghana | 1332–1333 |
Kuri Kura | 1334–1335 |
Muhammad I | 1334–1335 |
Idris I Nigalemi | 1335–1359 |
Dawud Nigalemi | 1359–1369 |
Uthman I | 1369–1373 |
Uthman II | 1373–1375 |
Abu Bakr Liyatu | 1375–1376 |
Umar I or Umar ibn Idris | 1376–1381 |
Said | 1381–1382[9] |
Kaday II | 1382–1383 |
Bir III | 1383-1415 |
Uthman III Kaliwama | 1415-1415 |
Dunama III | 1415-1417 |
Abdallah III Dakumuni | 1417-1425 |
Ibrahim II | 1425-1433 |
Kaday III | 1433-1434 |
Ahmad Dunama IV | 1434-1438 |
Muhammad II | 1438 |
Amr | 1438-1439 |
Muhammad III | 1439 |
Ghazi or Ghaji | 1439-1444 |
Uthman IV | 1444-1449 |
Umar II | 1449-1450 |
Muhammad IV | 1450-1455 |
Ali Gazi or Ali Ghajideni | 1455-1487 |
Idris Katarkamabi | 1487-1509 |
Muhammad V Aminami | 1509-1538 |
Ali II of Bornu | 1538-1539 |
Dunama V Ngumarsmma | 1539-1557 |
Dala or Abd Allah | 1557-1564 |
Aissa Kili | (legendary) |
Idris III Alauma or Idris Alooma | 1564-1596[10] |
Muhammed VI Bukalmarami | 1596-1612 |
Ibrahim III of Bornu | 1612-1619 |
Umar| (Hadj) | 1619-1639 |
Ali II | 1639-1677 |
Idris IV of Bornu | 1677-1696 |
Dunama VII | 1696-1715 |
Hamdan (Hadj) | 1715-1729 |
Muhammad VII of Bornu | 1729-1744 |
Dunama VIII Gana | 1744-1447 |
Ali III | 1747-1792 |
Ahmad | 1792-1808 |
Dunama IX Lefiami | 1808-1816 |
Muhammad VIII | 1816-1820 |
Ibrahim IV of Bornu | 1820-1846 |
Ali V Dalatumi | 1846 |