Everything about Adal Sultanate totally explained
Adal (
Somali:
Adaal,
Ge'ez: አዳል
ʾAdāl,
Arabic: عدل) was a
sixteenth century province-cum-
sultanate located in present-day northwestern
Somalia, southern
Djibouti, and the
Somali,
Oromia, and
Afar regions of
Ethiopia. Prior to its invasion of Abyssinia under
Ahmad ibn Ibrihim al-Ghazi in 1527, it was a province of the
Solomonic dynasty of Ethiopia. At its height, the sultanate controlled large portions of Abyssinia and Somaliland.
Ethnicity
There is still debate over the ethnic composition of the kingdom. I.M Lewis states,
» Somali forces contributed much to the Imām’s victories. Shihab ad-Din, the Muslim chronicler of the period, writing between 1540 and 1560, mentions them frequently (
Futūḥ al-Ḥabasha, ed. And trs. R. Besset Paris, 1897.). The most prominent Somali groups in the campaigns were the Geri, Marrehān, and Harti---all Dārod clans. Shihāb d-Dīn is very vague as to their distribution and grazing areas, but describes the Harti as at the time in possession of the ancient eastern port of Mait. Of the Isāq only the Habar Magādle clan seem to have been involved and their distribution isn't recorded. Finally several Dir clans also took part.
This finding is supported in the more recent
Oxford History of Islam:
The sultanate of Adal, which emerged as the major Muslim principality from 1420 to 1560, seems to have recruited its military force mainly from among the Somalis.
Lewis, on the other hand, notes that the Imam's origins are unknown. There is also evidence that the sultanate may have been largely
Afar in nature. Ewald Wagner connects the name ʿAdäl with the Dankali (Afar) tribe Aḏaʿila and the Somali name for the clan Oda ʿAlï, proposing that the kingdom may have largely been composed of Afars. Although Afars constituted a significant part of Adal, Didier Morin notes that "the exact influence of the ʿAfar inside the Kingdom of `Adal is still conjectural due to its multiethnic basis."
Ethiopian Province
Prior to 1288, Adal was a
Muslim province of Christian
Solomonic Ethiopia. At some point afterwards, the province rebelled and had to be reconquered under the Ethiopian
negusä nägäst Amda Seyon in his 1332 campaigns. During the same campaign, the the Sultanate of
Shewa and the smaller Sultanate of
Ifat, controlling a few trading ports on the coast including
Zeila were also conquered. Adal was later controlled by Ifat, but it eventually became independent in its rebellion against Amde Seyon, but had to surrender after the death of its king and the conquest of its capital,
Talag, eventually ending in Jamal ad-Din of Ifat's death and the sultanates' subjugation. In either
1403 or
1415, the Ethiopians reconquered Ifat once again, which had recently rebelled against the Emperor, and defeating its armies under its sultan,
Sa'ad ad-Din II. Sa'ad ad-Din was chased throughout the kingdom, with the Ethiopian Emperor (either
Dawit I in 1403 or
Yeshaq I in 1415) eventually conquering the port of
Zeila and killing him. As a result, the royal
Walashma family had to flee to Yemen to avoid being caught and killed. When they later returned, however, their head took the title "Sultan of Adal," rather than "Sultan of Ifat," indicating that Ifat was a part of Adal (also called Barr Sa'ad ad-Din in the former ruler's honor, considered a
martyr) instead of the reverse as in the past.
Invasion of Ethiopia
In the mid-
1520s,
Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrihim al-Ghazi conquered Adal and launched a holy war against
Christian Abyssinia, which was then under the leadership of
Lebna Dengel. Supplied by the
Ottoman Empire with firearms, Ahmad was able to defeat the Abyssinians at the
Battle of Shimbra Kure in
1529 and seize control of the wealthy
Ethiopian highlands, though the Abyssinians continued to resist from the highlands. In
1541, the
Portuguese, who had vested interests in the
Indian Ocean, sent aid to the Abyssinians in the form of 400
musketeers. Adal, in response, received 900 from the Ottomans.
Imam Ahmad was initially successful against the Abyssinians while campaigning in the Autumn of
1542, killing the Portuguese commander
Cristóvão da Gama in August that year. However, Portuguese musketry proved decisive in Adal's defeat at the
Battle of Wayna Daga, near Lake Tana, in February
1543, where Ahmad was killed in battle. The Ethiopians subsequently retook the Amhara plateau and recouped their losses against Adal. The Ottomans, who had their own troubles to deal with in the
Mediterranean, were unable to help Ahmad's successors. In
1577, the capital of the Adal Sultanate was moved from
Zeila to
Harar, and a sharp decline in Adal's power followed.
The migration of the pagan
Oromo (
Galla at that time, now pejorative) into the
Horn of Africa affected both Adal and Abyssinia. The war-like Oromo tribes exhausted the Abyssinians in the latter part of the sixteenth century in war, and the weakened Adal sultanate was unable to cope. By
1660, the sultanate had all but disappeared.
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