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Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... - Culture (12) - Nairaland

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Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by DaddyBlack: 3:38am On Apr 20, 2013
This is so retardedd....
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by DaddyBlack: 3:39am On Apr 20, 2013
Somali....

*Closes Eyes*
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by DaddyBlack: 3:40am On Apr 20, 2013
Everytime i wrote somali the damn thing banned me.

Oh well.

I left the culture section because weirdos are talking to themselves on Alternate Accounts About Goddamn Somalians

For why has that post got 7 names banned, is beyond me.

1 Like

Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 3:43am On Apr 20, 2013
^^^^lmaoooo i can't believe he banned all yo handles, is that the last one? grin grin
roflmaoooo @ DaddyBlack killin his father

who u r talkin about? Ayanle is the only one that talk about somali evrytime
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 3:45am On Apr 20, 2013
is that spambot for fvckin real angry angry angry
wtf man angry undecided
nonsense mtcheeeewwww
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by juman(m): 6:24am On Apr 20, 2013
pazienza: There is really a need to re-draw the colonial map of africa. There is no need why people of the same stock should be balkanized by people who know nothing about them.

Hmmmm.

That supposed to be nigeria responsibility to lead, but nigeria turned out to be a failed country.

Infact, west africa supposed to be one country.
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by juman(m): 6:37am On Apr 20, 2013
This is a beautiful thread. Hope one day west africa would become one country.

1 Like

Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 2:34am On Apr 28, 2013
Aicha Dosso
that's my babes she rocks! cool


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqswYWnkU1U
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 2:43pm On Apr 28, 2013
smiley
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 1:39am On May 01, 2013
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 1:59am On May 01, 2013
Madjene Fitini, i like that woman, she can sing


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=koi33Pon8qE
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 12:06am On May 21, 2013
Bah Kouyate, Mandingue singer from Mali


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IMq9pun5H0k
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 12:16am On May 21, 2013
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 2:04am On May 21, 2013
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 11:47pm On May 24, 2013
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 2:13pm On May 25, 2013
Sonni Ali Ber and the Songhai Empire


[img]http://www.islammuslim.lv/Atteli/MapWAEmpires.gif[/img]

West African monarch who ruled Songhai from 1464 to 1492, expanding a small kingdom along the Niger River into one of medieval Africa's greatest empires.

Date of birth: unknown
Date of death: 1492

Also known as Sunni Ali, Sonni Ali Ber (The Great).

Interpretations of Sonni Ali's Origins
There are two main sources of information about Sonni Ali. One is in the Islamic chronicles of the period, the other is through Songhai oral tradition. These sources reflect two different interpretations of Sonni Ali's role in the development of the Songhai Empire.

Sonni Ali was schooled in the traditional African arts of the region and was well versed in the forms and techniques of warfare when he came to power in 1464 in the small kingdom of Songhai, which was centred around its capital city of Gao on the Niger River. He was the 15th consecutive ruler of the Sonni dynasty, which had begun in 1335. One of Ali's ancestors, Sonni Sulaiman Mar, is said to have wrested Songhai away from the Mali Empire towards the end of the 14th century.

Songhai Empire takes over
Although Songhai had once paid tribute to the rulers of Mali, the Mali Empire was now crumbling, and the time was right for Sonni Ali to lead his kingdom through a series of conquests at the old empires expense. By 1468 Sonni Ali had repulsed attacks by the Mossi to the south, and defeated the Dogon in the hills of Bandiagara. His first major conquest occurred the in following year when the Muslim leaders of Timbuktu, one of the great cities of the Mali Empire, asked for help against the Tuareg, the nomadic desert Berbers who had occupied the city since 1433. Sonni Ali took the opportunity not only to strike decisively against the Tuareg, but also against the city itself. Timbuktu became part of the fledgling Songhai Empire in 1469.

Sonni Ali and Oral Tradition
Sonni Ali is remembered in Songhai oral tradition as a magician of great power. Rather than following the Mali Empire system of Islamic city rule over a non-Islamic rural people, Sonni Ali mixed an unorthodox observance of Islam with traditional African religion. He was a man of the people rather than the elite ruling class of Muslim clerics and scholars. He is regarded as a great military commander who carried out a strategic campaign of conquest along the Niger River. He is said to have retaliated against the Muslim leadership within Timbuktu after they failed to provide promised transport for his troops to cross the river.

Sonni Ali and Islamic Chronicles
The chroniclers have a different viewpoint - Sonni Ali is portrayed as a capricious and cruel leader. In the 16th century chronicle of Abd ar Rahmen as-Sadi, a historian based in Timbuktu, Sonni Ali is described as an impious and unscrupulous tyrant. He is recorded as having massacred hundreds whilst plundering the city of Timbuktu - killing or driving out the Tuareg and Sanhaja clerics who had acted as civil servants, teachers, and as preachers at the Sankore mosque. In later years he is said to have turned on court favourites, ordering executions during temper tantrums.

Songhai and Trade
Regardless of the circumstances, Sonni Ali learnt his lesson well. Never again was he left at the mercy of someone else's fleet. He built up a river-based navy of over 400 boats, and used them to good effect in his next conquest - the trading city of Jenne (now Djenné). The city was placed under siege, with the fleet blockading the port. Although it took seven years for the siege to work, the city fell to Sonni Ali in 1473. The Songhai Empire now incorporated three of the greatest trading cities on the Niger: Gao, Timbuktu, and Jenne. (All three had once been part of the Mali Empire.)

The Songhai Empire now had effective control over the lucrative Niger River trade (rivers formed the major trading routes within west Africa at that time) of gold, kola, grain, and slaves. The cities were also part of the important trans-Saharan trade route system which brought south caravans of salt and copper, as well as goods from the Mediterranean coast.

By 1476 Sonni Ali controlled the inland delta region of the Niger to the west of Timbuktu, and the lakes region to the south. Regular patrols by his 'navy' kept the trade routes open and tribute paying kingdoms peaceful. This is an extremely fertile region of west Africa, and it became a major producer of grain under his rule.

Slavery in Songhai
A 17th century chronicle tells the tale of Sonni Ali's slave-based farms. When he died 12 'tribes' of slaves were bequeathed to his son, at least three of which had been obtained when Sonni Ali initially conquered parts of the old Mali empire. Whereas under the Mali Empire slaves were individually required to cultivate a measure of land and provide grain for the king; Sonni Ali grouped the slaves into 'villages', each to fulfil a common quota, with any surplus to be used by the village. Under Sonni Ali's rule children born in such villages automatically became slaves, expected to work for the village or to be transported to the trans-Saharan markets.

Sonni Ali the Warrior
Sonni Ali was brought up as part of an exclusive ruling class, a warrior horseman - the region was the best in Africa south of the Sahara for breeding horses. As such he commanded an elite cavalry, with which he was able to pacify the nomadic Tuareg to the north. With cavalry and navy he repulsed several attacks by the Mossi to the south -- including one major attack which reached all the way to the Walata region north west of Timbuktu! -- and defeated the Fulani of the Dendi region, which was then assimilated into the Empire.

Under Sonni Ali the Songhai Empire was divided up into territories which he placed under the rule of trusted lieutenants from his army. Traditional African cults and the observance of Islam were combined, much to the annoyance of Muslim clerics in the cities -- and plots were hatched against his rule. On at least one occasion a group of clerics and scholars at an important Muslim centre were executed for treason.

End of the Legend
Sonni Ali died in 1492 as he returned from a punitive expedition against the Fulani. Oral tradition has him poisoned by Muhammad Ture, one of his commanders. A year later Muhammad Ture staged a coup d'etat against Sonni Ali's son, Sonni Baru, and founded a new dynasty of Songhai rulers. Askiya Muhammad Ture and his descendants were strict Muslims, who reinstated orthodox observance of Islam and outlawed traditional African religions.

In the centuries which followed his death Muslim historians recorded Sonni Ali as "The Celebrated Infidel" or "The Great Oppressor". Songhai Oral tradition records that he was the righteous ruler of a mighty empire which stretched over 3,200 kilometres (2,000 miles) along the Niger River.
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 2:15pm On May 25, 2013
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 7:44pm On May 30, 2013
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 8:27pm On May 30, 2013
Nice couples smiley



Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 11:48pm On May 31, 2013
smiley
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 11:49pm On May 31, 2013
Young Bride from Mali smiley

Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 11:50pm On May 31, 2013
I like what she is wearing, very nice

Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 12:49am On Jun 08, 2013

1 Like

Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 11:50am On Jun 09, 2013
Heyyy Sybellah cheesy,

1 Like

Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 5:15pm On Jun 09, 2013
thiendella: Heyyy Sybellah cheesy,

eeehhh Thiendella! cheesy
hier meme je demandais ou t'etais passe cherie, t'es bcp occupe ces 2 jours la ou koi?
miss u lot <3 kiss
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 6:37pm On Jun 09, 2013
Sysy:

eeehhh Thiendella! cheesy
hier meme je demandais ou t'etais passe cherie, t'es bcp occupe ces 2 jours la ou koi?
miss u lot <3 kiss
Miss u more cherie

1 Like

Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 6:47pm On Jun 09, 2013
Hey sybellah, est ce que tu vas pas créer thread sur mandjack men parce que Remi Gomis il est trop bogosse *essuie un filet de bave * shocked shocked shocked , je viens de m'en rendre compte grin

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UXahqC2uZo

1 Like

Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 6:55pm On Jun 09, 2013
Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 7:15pm On Jun 09, 2013
ahh SO YOu like mAnjack Men Ayye?.....

Ahhh's my heart is broken

1 Like

Re: Mandinka/Malinke/Dioula people of Mali, Cote d'Ivoire, Guinea, Burkina... by Nobody: 7:26pm On Jun 09, 2013
thiendella: Hey sybellah, est ce que tu vas pas créer thread sur mandjack men parce que Remi Gomis il est trop bogosse *essuie un filet de bave * shocked shocked shocked , je viens de m'en rendre compte grin

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9UXahqC2uZo

Raaaaaiiii lmao grin mais je t'ai dit non la derniere foi tu faisais comme si on avait attache tes yeux la tongue
ya pas l'homme pr Remi, he is sweet like an ice cream
imma create one for sure, but except him, i don't know any, so i suppose u ll help me

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