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{{Short description|1415–1577 Muslim sultanate in the Horn of Africa}}
{{POV|date=August 2021}}
{{short description|Former Somali kingdom and sultanate located in the Horn of Africa}} {{about|the sultanate in the Horn of Africa|the historic region|Adal (historical region)}}
{{pp|small=yes}}
{{Over-quotation|many=y|date=April 2024}}
{{Infobox country {{Infobox country
|native_name ={{lang|ar|سلطنة العدلية|rtl=yes}} | native_name = {{native name|ar|سلطنة عدل|rtl=yes}}
|conventional_long_name = Sultanate of Adal | conventional_long_name = Sultanate of Adal
|common_name = Adal | common_name = Adal
|era = ] | era = ]
|year_start = 1415 | year_start = 1415
|year_end = 1577 | year_end = 1577
|life_span = 1415–1577 | life_span = 1415–1577
|event1= ] returns from exile in ] Capital moved to ] | event1 = ] returns from exile in ]
|date_event1 = 1415 | date_event1 = 1415
|event2 = War with ] | event2 = War with ]
|date_event2 = 1415–1429 | date_event2 = 1415–1429
|event3 = Capital moved to ] | event3 = Succession Crisis
|date_event3 = 1433 | date_event3 = 1518–1526
|event4 = Succession Crisis | event4 = ]
|date_event4 = 1518–1526 | date_event4 = 1529–1543
|event5 = ] | p1 = Sultanate of Ifat
| s1 = Imamate of Aussa
|date_event5 = 1520
| image_flag = Flag of Adal Sultanate.svg
|event6 =
| flag_type = The combined three banners used by Ahmad al-Ghazi's forces
|date_event6 = 1529–1543
| image_map = Map of the Adal Sultanate (1540).svg
|event_pre =
| image_map_caption = The Adal Sultanate in {{circa|1540}}
|date_pre =
|p1 = Ifat Sultanate | capital = *] (1415–1520)
*]<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dtYWAAAAQAAJ|last=Telles|title=The Travels of the Jesuits in Ethiopia|first=Balthazar|year=1710|publisher=J. Knapton |edition=1st|quote=It might perhaps be to called from Abaxa, the Capital City of the Kingdom of Adel.}}</ref> (1500s ~)
|flag_p1 =
*] (1520–1577)
|s1 = Ottoman Empire
*] (1577)
|flag_s1 = Flag of the Ottoman Empire (1453-1844).svg
| official_languages = ]
|s2 = Sultanate of Harar
| common_languages = {{unbulleted list|]|]}}
|flag_s2 =
{{unbulleted list|]|]}}
|s3 = Isaaq Sultanate
| government_type = ]
|flag_s3= Isaaq Flag.svg
| leader1 = ]
|s4 =
| leader2 = ]
|flag_s4 =
| year_leader1 = 1415–1423 (first)
|image_flag = Flag of Adal Sultanate.svg
|flag = | year_leader2 = 1577 (last)
| title_leader = ]
|flag_type = The combined three banners used by Ahmad al-Ghazi's forces
|image_coat = | religion = {{Plainlist|
* ] (])
|image_map = The Adal Sultanate.png
* ]: ]
|image_map_caption = Approximate extension of the Adal Sultanate.
* ]: ]}}
|national_motto =
| currency = ]<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Zekaria |first=Ahmed |date=1991 |title=Harari Coins: A Preliminary Survey |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41965992 |journal=Journal of Ethiopian Studies |volume=24 |pages=24 |jstor=41965992 |issn=0304-2243 |access-date=2024-01-15 |archive-date=2022-12-31 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221231143951/https://www.jstor.org/stable/41965992 |url-status=live }}</ref>
|national_anthem =
| today = {{unbulleted list|]|]|]|]}}
|capital =
}}
{{plainlist
The '''Adal Sultanate''', also known as the '''Adal Empire''' or '''Bar Saʿad dīn''' (alt. spelling ''Adel Sultanate'', ''Adal Sultanate'') ({{Langx|ar|سلطنة عدل}}), was a medieval ] ] ] which was located in the ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ta'a |first1=Tesema |title="Bribing the Land": An Appraisal of the Farming Systems of the Maccaa Oromo in Wallagga |journal=Northeast African Studies |year=2002 |volume=9 |issue=3 |publisher=Michigan State University Press |page=99 |doi=10.1353/nas.2007.0016 |jstor=41931282 |s2cid=201750719 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41931282 |access-date=2021-09-07 |archive-date=2021-05-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210520123343/https://www.jstor.org/stable/41931282 |url-status=live }}</ref> It was founded by ] on the ] plateau in ] after the fall of the ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ahmed |first1=Hussein |title=Reflections on Historical and Contemporary Islam in Ethiopia and Somalia: A Comparative and Contrastive Overview |journal=Journal of Ethiopian Studies |year=2007 |volume=40 |issue=1/2 |publisher=Institute of Ethiopian Studies |page=264 |jstor=41988230 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41988230 |access-date=2023-03-22 |archive-date=2023-02-01 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230201151444/https://www.jstor.org/stable/41988230 |url-status=live }}</ref> The kingdom flourished {{Circa|1415}} to 1577.<ref name="The Cross and the River: Ethiopia, Egypt, and the Nile">{{harvnb|Elrich|2001|p=36}}.</ref> At its height, the polity under Sultan ] controlled the territory stretching from ] in ] to the port city of ] in ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pradines |first1=Stéphane |title=Historic Mosques in Sub-Saharan Africa From Timbuktu to Zanzibar |date=7 November 2022 |publisher=BRILL |page=127 |isbn=9789004472617 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f1ebEAAAQBAJ&dq=suakin+adal&pg=PA127 |access-date=7 July 2023 |archive-date=22 May 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522133227/https://books.google.com/books?id=f1ebEAAAQBAJ&dq=suakin+adal&pg=PA127#v=onepage&q=suakin%20adal&f=false |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Braukamper |first1=Ulrich |title=Islamic History and Culture in Southern Ethiopia |year=2002 |publisher=Lit |page=33 |isbn=9783825856717 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HGnyk8Pg9NgC&dq=concluded+that+adal+at+the+time+of+its+greatest+expansion+comprised&pg=PA33 |access-date=2023-07-07 |archive-date=2024-05-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522133115/https://books.google.com/books?id=HGnyk8Pg9NgC&dq=concluded+that+adal+at+the+time+of+its+greatest+expansion+comprised&pg=PA33#v=onepage&q=concluded%20that%20adal%20at%20the%20time%20of%20its%20greatest%20expansion%20comprised&f=false |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Owens |first1=Travis |title=BELEAGUERED MUSLIM FORTRESSES AND ETHIOPIAN IMPERIAL EXPANSION FROM THE 13TH TO THE 16TH CENTURY |publisher=NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL |page=23 |url=https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a483490.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201112020204/https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a483490.pdf|url-status=live|archive-date=November 12, 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Pouwels |first1=Randall |title=The History of Islam in Africa |date=31 March 2000 |publisher=Ohio University Press |page=229 |isbn=9780821444610 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J1Ipt5A9mLMC&q=Sawakin+adal&pg=PA229 |access-date=15 October 2020 |archive-date=18 September 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230918091324/https://books.google.com/books?id=J1Ipt5A9mLMC&q=Sawakin+adal&pg=PA229 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Leo |first1=Africanus |url=http://archive.org/details/historyanddescr03porygoog |title=The history and description of Africa |last2=Pory |first2=John |last3=Brown |first3=Robert |date=1896 |publisher=London, Printed for the Hakluyt society |others=Harvard University |pages=51–53}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Hassan |first=Mohamed |title=The Oromo of Ethiopia: A History, 1570-1860. |location= |pages=35}}</ref> The Adal Empire maintained a robust commercial and political relationship with the ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Salvadore|first1=Matteo|title=The African Prester John and the Birth of Ethiopian-European Relations, 1402–1555|date=2016|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1317045465|page=158|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BQ5qDAAAQBAJ|access-date=18 March 2018}}</ref> Sultanate of Adal was alternatively known as the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Brill |first1=E. J. |title=E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913-1936. A - Bābā Beg · Volume 1 |year=1993 |publisher=Brill |page=126 |isbn=9789004097872 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GEl6N2tQeawC&dq=adal+or+zaila&pg=PA126 |access-date=2023-07-07 |archive-date=2024-05-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522133217/https://books.google.com/books?id=GEl6N2tQeawC&dq=adal+or+zaila&pg=PA126#v=onepage&q=adal%20or%20zaila&f=false |url-status=live }}</ref>
|*] (temporary capital/meeting point of Adal on ]'s return to Somali lands)
*] (former ] capital, Adal capital from 1415–1420)
*] (new capital, as Sultanate from 1420–1520) <br><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wagner |first1=Ewald |title=The Genealogy of the later Walashma' Sultans of Adal and Harar |journal=Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft |year=1991 |volume=141 |issue=2 |pages=376–386 |publisher=Harrassowitz Verlag |jstor=43378336 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/43378336}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Chekroun |first1=Amélie |title=Dakar, capitale du sultanat éthiopien du Barr Sa'd ad-dīn (1415-1520) |publisher=Cahiers d’Études africaines |url=https://journals.openedition.org/etudesafricaines/18225}}</ref>
*] 1520–1577
*] 1577–1577}}
|common_languages = ], ], ], ], and ]
|government_type = ]
|title_leader = ], ], ]
|religion = ]
|currency =
|demonym =
|area_km2 =
|area_rank =
|GDP_PPP =
|GDP_PPP_year =
|HDI =
|HDI_year = |Native name=}}
The '''Adal Sultanate''', or '''Kingdom of Adal''' or ʿAdal or '''Bar Saʿad dīn''' (alt. spelling ''Adel Sultanate,'' ʿAdal ''Sultanate'') ({{Lang-so|Saldanadda Cadal}}) was a ] kingdom and ] located in the ]. <ref>Statebuilding in the Somali Horn by Dr.Michael Walls page 7</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=The Portion of Somali Territory Under Ethiopian Colonization |year=1974 |publisher=Government Publications, Somali Democratic Republic |pages=11 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SFoMAQAAIAAJ&q=zeila |access-date= |language=en}}</ref><ref>A Short History of Africa, Volum 10 Roland Anthony Oliver, J. D. Fage Page 83</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Jama |first1=Mohamed |title=An Introduction to Somali History from 5000 Years B.C. Down to the Present Time |year=1962 |pages=27 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Y14MAQAAIAAJ&q=An+Introduction+to+Somali+History+from+5000+Years+B.C+adal+somali+kingdom |access-date= |language=en}}</ref> It was founded by ] after the fall of the ]. The kingdom flourished circa 1415 to 1577.<ref name="The Cross and the River: Ethiopia, Egypt, and the Nile">{{cite journal | last =Elrik | first =Haggai | title =The Cambridge History of Africa: From c. 1050 to c. 1600 | journal =Basic Reference | volume =28 | pages =36 | publisher =Lynne Rienner | location = USA | year =2007 | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=mhCN2qo43jkC&pg=PA36 | doi = 10.1017/S0020743800063145| access-date =2012-04-27}}</ref> The sultanate and state were established by the local inhabitants of ].<ref name="Shinn">{{cite book|author=David Hamilton Shinn & Thomas P. Ofcansky|title=Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia|year=2004|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=0810849100|pages=5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ep7__RWqq4IC&pg=PA5 }}</ref> or the ] plateau.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Newman |first1=James |title=The Peopling of Africa A Geographic Interpretation |publisher=Yale University press |page=96 |url=https://www.google.ca/books/edition/The_Peopling_of_Africa/pDjlC1ws158C?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=adal+harar+plateau&pg=PA96&printsec=frontcover}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Adal |publisher=Encyclopaedia Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Adal}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Symes |first1=Caroyl |title=Legal Encounters on the Medieval Globe |publisher=Arc Humanities Press |page=100 |url=https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Legal_Encounters_on_the_Medieval_Globe/W6C4DgAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=adal+plateau+adal+legal+encounters&pg=PA100&printsec=frontcover}}</ref> At its height, the polity under Sultan ] controlled the territory stretching from ] to the port city of ] in ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Owens |first1=Travis |title=BELEAGUERED MUSLIM FORTRESSES AND ETHIOPIAN IMPERIAL EXPANSION FROM THE 13TH TO THE 16TH CENTURY |publisher=NAVAL POSTGRADUATE SCHOOL |page=23 |url=https://apps.dtic.mil/dtic/tr/fulltext/u2/a483490.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Pouwels |first1=Randall |title=The History of Islam in Africa |date=31 March 2000 |publisher=Ohio University Press |page=229 |isbn=9780821444610 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J1Ipt5A9mLMC&q=Sawakin+adal&pg=PA229}}</ref> The Adal Empire maintained a robust commercial and political relationship with the ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Salvadore|first1=Matteo|title=The African Prester John and the Birth of Ethiopian-European Relations, 1402–1555|date=2016|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1317045465|page=158|url=https://www.google.com/books?id=BQ5qDAAAQBAJ|access-date=18 March 2018}}</ref>


==Etymology== ==Etymology==
Adal is believed to be an abbreviation of ].<ref>{{cite journal | last1=Gifford| first1=William| title=Forster on Arabia| journal=The Quarterly Review| date=1844| volume=74| page=338| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CE1OAQAAMAAJ&q=adal+havilah&pg=PA338}}</ref> Eidal or ] Abdal, was the Emir of ] in the eleventh century which the lowlands outside the city of Harar is named.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mohammed |first1=Duri |title=The Mugads of Harar |date=4 December 1955 |publisher=University College of Addis Abeba Ethnological Bulletin |page=1 |url=https://everythingharar.com/images/pdf/publication/Mugads%20Of%20Harar-Mohammed.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210710195739/https://everythingharar.com/images/pdf/publication/Mugads%20Of%20Harar-Mohammed.pdf |access-date=10 July 2021|archive-date=2021-07-10 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book| last1=Wehib| first1=Ahmed| title=History of Harar and the Hararis| date=October 2015| publisher=Harari People Regional State Culture, Heritage And Tourism Bureau| page=105| url=http://www.everythingharar.com/files/History_of_Harar_and_Harari-HNL.pdf| access-date=26 July 2017| archive-date=21 March 2020| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200321065415/http://www.everythingharar.com/files/History_of_Harar_and_Harari-HNL.pdf| url-status=live}}</ref> In the thirteenth century, the Arab writer ] refers to the city of ],<ref name="Lewispd">{{cite book|last=Lewis|first=I. M.|title=A Pastoral Democracy: A Study of Pastoralism and Politics Among the Northern Somali of the Horn of Africa|year=1999|publisher=James Currey Publishers|isbn=0852552807|pages=17|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eK6SBJIckIsC&pg=PA17|access-date=2015-10-14|archive-date=2023-01-23|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230123104930/https://books.google.com/books?id=eK6SBJIckIsC&pg=PA17|url-status=live}}</ref> by its Somali name "Awdal" ({{langx|so|"Awdal"}}).<ref>{{harvnb|Tamrat|1977|p=139}}.</ref> The modern ] region of ], which was part of the Adal Sultanate, bears the kingdom's name.
Adal is believed to be an abbreviation of ].<ref>{{cite journal | last1=Gifford| first1=William| title=Forster on Arabia| journal=The Quarterly Review| date=1844| volume=74| page=338| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CE1OAQAAMAAJ&q=adal+havilah&pg=PA338}}</ref>


Locally the empire was known to the Muslims as ''Bar Sa'ad ad-din'' meaning "The country of Sa'ad ad-din" in reference to the Sultan ], who was killed in ] while fighting the Ethiopian Emperor ].<ref>The "Futuh al-Habasa" : the writing of history, war and society in the "Bar Sa'ad ad-din" (Ethiopia, 16th century)</ref><ref>Burton, ''First Footsteps in East Africa'', 1856; edited with additional material by Gordon Waterfield (New York: Praeger, 1966), p. 75.</ref><ref>{{Cite book|last=Pankhurst |first=Richard |year=1982 |title=History Of Ethiopian Towns |page=57 |publisher=Steiner |isbn=9783515032049 }}</ref>
Eidal or Aw Abdal, was the Emir of ] in the eleventh century.<ref>{{cite book | last1=Wehib| first1=Ahmed| title=History of Harar and the Hararis| date=October 2015| publisher=Harari People Regional State Culture, Heritage And Tourism Bureau|page=105| url=http://www.everythingharar.com/files/History_of_Harar_and_Harari-HNL.pdf| access-date=26 July 2017}}</ref> In the thirteenth century, Arab writer Al Dimashqi refers to the Adal Sultanate's capital, ],<ref name="Lewispd">{{cite book|last=Lewis|first=I. M.|title=A Pastoral Democracy: A Study of Pastoralism and Politics Among the Northern Somali of the Horn of Africa|year=1999|publisher=James Currey Publishers|isbn=0852552807|pages=17|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eK6SBJIckIsC&pg=PA17}}</ref> by its Somali name "Awdal" ({{lang-so| "Awdal"}}).<ref>{{cite journal | last =Fage | first =J.D | title = The Cambridge History of Africa: From c. 1050 to c. 1600 | journal =ISIM Review | issue =Spring 2005 | pages =139 | publisher = Cambridge University Press | location =UK | year =2010}}</ref> The modern ] region of ], which was part of the Adal Sultanate, bears the kingdom's name.


==History ==
Locally the empire was known to the Muslims as ''Bar Sa'ad ad-din'' meaning "The country of Sa'ad ad-din" <ref>The "Futuh al-Habasa" : the writing of history, war and society in the "Bar Sa'ad ad-din" (Ethiopia, 16th century)</ref>


==History== ===Early history===
{{main|Adal (historical region)}}
===Sultanate established===
{{anchor|Kingdom of Adal}}] (also ''Awdal'', ''Adl'', or ''Adel'')<ref name="Somalia">{{cite book |last1=Mukhtar |first1=Mohamed Haji |title=Historical dictionary of Somalia |date=2003 |publisher=Scarecrow Press |location=Lanham, Md. |isbn=0810843447 |pages=44 |edition=New |chapter=Awdal |series=African Historical Dictionary Series|volume=87}}</ref> was situated east of the province of ] and was a general term for a region of lowlands inhabited by Muslims. It was used ambiguously in the medieval era to indicate the Muslim inhabited low land portion east of the ]. Including north of the ] towards ] as well as the territory between ] and ] on the coast of ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Josef |first1=Josef |title=Medieval Islamic Civilization |date=12 January 2018 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9781351668224 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QepGDwAAQBAJ&dq=but+some+returned+and+ruled+further+east+of+yifat&pg=PT133 |access-date=2 April 2023 |archive-date=2 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230402042337/https://books.google.com/books?id=QepGDwAAQBAJ&dq=but+some+returned+and+ruled+further+east+of+yifat&pg=PT133 |url-status=live }}</ref>{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=52}}<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WU92d6sB8JAC&q=%22and+the+lowlands+between+shoa+province+and+the+port+of+zeila+in+present-day+somaliland%22&pg=PA20|title=Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia|last1=Shinn|first1=David H.|last2=Ofcansky|first2=Thomas P.|date=2013-04-11|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=9780810874572|language=en|access-date=2020-10-15|archive-date=2024-05-22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522133241/https://books.google.com/books?id=WU92d6sB8JAC&q=%22and+the+lowlands+between+shoa+province+and+the+port+of+zeila+in+present-day+somaliland%22&pg=PA20#v=snippet&q=%22and%20the%20lowlands%20between%20shoa%20province%20and%20the%20port%20of%20zeila%20in%20present-day%20somaliland%22&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref> According to Ewald Wagner, Adal region was historically the area stretching from Zeila to ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Wagner |first1=Ewald |title=Legende und Geschichte: der Fath Madinat Hara von Yahya Nasrallah |publisher=Verlag}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Trimingham |first1=J.Spencer |title=Islam in Ethiopia |date=13 September 2013 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=9781136970290 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Kd3bAAAAQBAJ&dq=adal+bordered+on+shoa&pg=PT162 |access-date=2 April 2023 |archive-date=2 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230402042335/https://books.google.com/books?id=Kd3bAAAAQBAJ&dq=adal+bordered+on+shoa&pg=PT162 |url-status=live }}</ref>
The Walashma dynasty of the Ifat and Adal sultanates possessed Somali genealogical traditions.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mire |first1=Sada |title=Divine Fertility: The Continuity in Transformation of an Ideology of Sacred Kinship in Northeast Africa |date=5 February 2020 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-429-76924-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J6nODwAAQBAJ&q=Walashma+somali+genealogies&pg=PA69 |access-date= |language=en}}</ref> Ethiopian historian ] states Adal's central authority in the fourteenth century comprised of the ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Tamrat |first1=Taddesse |title=Review: Place Names in Ethiopian History |date=November 1991 |publisher=Journal of Ethiopian Studies |page=120 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41965996?seq=1}}</ref> According to Patrick Gikes, Adal in the sixteenth century designated the ancient ] and ] people.<ref name="University of Lisbon">{{Cite journal |last1=Gikes |first1=Patrick |date=2002 |title=Wars in the Horn of Africa and the dismantling of the Somali State |url=https://cea.revues.org/1280 |journal=African Studies |publisher=University Institute of Lisbon |volume=2 |pages=89–102}}</ref> Adal was governed by an alliance between ] of ] and the ] of Harar.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Wehib |first1=Ahmed |title=History of Harar and the Hararis |publisher=HARARI PEOPLE REGIONAL STATE CULTURE, HERITAGE AND TOURISM BUREAU |page=48 |url=https://www.everythingharar.com/files/History_of_Harar_and_Harari-HNL.pdf}}</ref> Marriage alliances between Argobba, Harari and Somali people were also common within the Adal Sultanate.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ferry |first1=Robert |title=Quelques hypothèses sur les origines des conquêtes musulmanes en Abyssinie au XVIe siècle |publisher=Cahiers d'Études africaines |pages=28-30 |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/cea_0008-0055_1961_num_2_5_2961}}</ref>


In 1288, the region of Adal was conquered by the ]. Despite being incorporated into the Ifat Sultanate, Adal managed to maintain a source of independence under ] rule, alongside the provinces of ], ], Sawans, ], and ].<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dR5yCmUejWEC&dq=hargaya+ethiopia&pg=PA184|title=Muslim society's in Africa|isbn=9780253007971|last1=Loimeier|first1=Roman|date=5 June 2013|publisher=Indiana University Press|access-date=22 March 2023|archive-date=15 March 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230315220617/https://books.google.com/books?id=dR5yCmUejWEC&dq=hargaya+ethiopia&pg=PA184|url-status=live}}</ref> In 1332, Adal was invaded by the Ethiopian Emperor ]. His soldiers were said to have ravaged the province.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pankhurst |first=Richard |year=1982 |title=History Of Ethiopian Towns |page=63 |publisher=Steiner |isbn=9783515032049 }}</ref><ref name="Houtsma">{{cite book |last=Houtsma |first=M. Th |title=E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936 |year=1987 |publisher=BRILL |isbn=9004082654 |pages=125–126 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zJU3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA125 |access-date=2015-10-14 |archive-date=2023-01-23 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230123104929/https://books.google.com/books?id=zJU3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA125 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Somaliland">{{cite journal | last =mbali | title =Somaliland | journal =Basic Reference | volume =28 | pages =217–229 | publisher =mbali | location =London, UK | year =2010 | url =http://www.mbali.info/doc328.htm | doi =10.1017/S0020743800063145 | s2cid =154765577 | access-date =2012-04-27 | url-status =dead | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20120423062326/http://www.mbali.info/doc328.htm | archive-date =2012-04-23 }}</ref>
===Kingdom established===
{{anchor|Kingdom of Adal}}] (also ''Awdal'', ''Adl'', or ''Adel'')<ref name="Somalia"> {{cite book |last1=Mukhtar |first1=Mohamed Haji |title=Historical dictionary of Somalia |date=2003 |publisher=Scarecrow Press |location=Lanham, Md. |isbn=0810843447 |pages=44 |edition=New |chapter=Awdal |series=African Historical Dictionary Series|volume=87}}</ref> was centred around ], its capital.<ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eK6SBJIckIsC&q=%22Adal+was+based+on+the+port+of+Zeila%27%2C+%22&pg=PA17|title=A Pastoral Democracy: A Study of Pastoralism and Politics Among the Northern Somali of the Horn of Africa|last=Lewis|first=I. M.|date=1999-01-01|publisher=James Currey Publishers|isbn=9780852552803|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WU92d6sB8JAC&q=%22and+the+lowlands+between+shoa+province+and+the+port+of+zeila+in+present-day+somaliland%22&pg=PA20|title=Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia|last1=Shinn|first1=David H.|last2=Ofcansky|first2=Thomas P.|date=2013-04-11|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=9780810874572|language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=f2R8AgAAQBAJ&q=%22area+where+the+state+of+djibouti%22&pg=PA347|title=Africa A to Z: Continental and Country Profiles: Third Edition|last=Pieter|first=Esterhuysen|date=2013-12-07|publisher=Africa Institute of South Africa|isbn=9780798303446|language=en}}</ref> It was established by the local ] tribes in the early 9th century. Zeila attracted merchants from around the world, contributing to the wealth of the city. Zeila is an ancient city and it was one of the earliest cities in the world to embrace ].<ref name="Historical sources">{{cite web | url=https://image.prntscr.com/image/OhfIs5KhR-yhBdrzIq922w.png| format=PNG |title=Image: The Travels of Al-Yaqubi| website=Image.prntsacr.com| access-date=28 November 2018}}</ref><ref name="Somalia"/><ref>{{cite book |last1=Mukhtar |first1=Mohamed Haji |title=The Encyclopedia of Empire |date=2016-01-11 |publisher=American Cancer Society |location=Oxford, UK |isbn=9781118455074 |pages=1–3 |doi=10.1002/9781118455074.wbeoe145 |language=en |chapter=Adal Sultanate}}</ref>


In the fourteenth century ] transferred Ifat's capital to the ] plateau thus he is regarded by some to be the true founder of the Adal Sultanate.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Cambridge History of Africa |year=1975 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=150 |isbn=9780521209816 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GWjxR61xAe0C&dq=haqedin%27s+transfer+of+his+political+centre+from+Ifat+to+the+Harar+area&pg=PA150 |access-date=2023-03-22 |archive-date=2023-03-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230322220639/https://books.google.com/books?id=GWjxR61xAe0C&dq=haqedin%27s+transfer+of+his+political+centre+from+Ifat+to+the+Harar+area&pg=PA150 |url-status=live }}</ref> In the late 14th century, the Ethiopian Emperor ] collected a large army, branded the Muslims of the surrounding area "enemies of the Lord", and invaded Adal.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Fage |first1=J.D. |title=The Cambridge History of Africa: From c. 500 B.C. to A.D. 1050 |year=1975 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=154 |isbn=9780521209816 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GWjxR61xAe0C&dq=dawit+led+a+series+of+energetic+campaigns+into+the+very+heart+of+the+harar+plateau&pg=PA154 |access-date=2023-03-22 |archive-date=2023-03-16 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230316181744/https://books.google.com/books?id=GWjxR61xAe0C&dq=dawit%20led%20a%20series%20of%20energetic%20campaigns%20into%20the%20very%20heart%20of%20the%20harar%20plateau&pg=PA154 |url-status=live }}</ref> After much war, Adal's troops were defeated in 1403 or 1410<ref>] gives the former date, while the Walashma chronicle gives the latter.</ref> (under Emperor ] or Emperor ], respectively), during which the ] ruler, ], was captured and executed in Zeila, which was sacked.<ref name="Somaliland" /> His children and the remainder of the ] would flee to ] where they would live in exile until 1415.<ref>Pankhurst. ''Ethiopian Borderlands'', pp.57</ref><ref>Budge, ''A History of Ethiopia: Nubia and Abyssinia'', 1928 (Oosterhout, the Netherlands: Anthropological Publications, 1970), p. 302.</ref> According to ] tradition numerous Argobba had fled Ifat and settled around Harar in the ] lowlands during their conflict with Abyssinia in the fifteenth century, a gate was thus named after them called the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=ABUBAKER |first1=ABDULMALIK |title=THE RELEVANCY OF HARARI VALUES IN SELF REGULATION AND AS A MECHANISM OF BEHAVIORAL CONTROL: HISTORICAL ASPECTS |publisher=The University of Alabama |page=44 |url=https://everythingharar.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/RelevanceofhararivaluesAbdumalik.pdf |access-date=2023-06-06 |archive-date=2024-05-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522133027/https://everythingharar.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/RelevanceofhararivaluesAbdumalik.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>
In the late 9th century, ], an Armenian Muslim scholar and traveller, wrote that the Kingdom of Adal was a small wealthy kingdom and that Zeila served as the headquarters for the kingdom, which dated back to the beginning of the century.<ref name="Encyamer">{{cite book | title=Encyclopedia Americana, Volume 25| year=1965| publisher=Americana Corporation| pages=255| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OP5LAAAAMAAJ}}</ref><ref name="Lewispohoa">{{cite book | last=Lewis| first=I.M.| title=Peoples of the Horn of Africa: Somali, Afar and Saho| year=1955| publisher=International African Institute| pages=140| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Cd0mAQAAMAAJ}}</ref>


====Islamic influence==== ===Rise of the Sultanate===
In 1415, ], the eldest son of ], would return to Adal from his exile in Arabia to restore his father's throne.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mordechai |first1=Abir |title=Ethiopia And The Red Sea |publisher=Hebrew University of Jerusalem |pages=26–27 |url=https://zelalemkibret.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/ethiopia-and-the-red-sea-mordichi-abir.pdf |access-date=2023-03-22 |archive-date=2021-05-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210517214033/https://zelalemkibret.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/ethiopia-and-the-red-sea-mordichi-abir.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> He would proclaim himself "king of Adal" after his return from Yemen to the ] plateau and established his new capital at ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Wagner |first1=Ewald |title=The Genealogy of the later Walashma' Sultans of Adal and Harar |journal=Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft |year=1991 |volume=141 |issue=2 |pages=376–386 |publisher=Harrassowitz Verlag |jstor=43378336 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/43378336 |access-date=2021-03-12 |archive-date=2021-05-06 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210506032705/https://www.jstor.org/stable/43378336 |url-status=live }}</ref> Sabr ad-Din III and his brothers would defeat an army of 20,000 men led by an unnamed commander hoping to restore the "lost Amhara rule". The victorious king then returned to his capital, but gave the order to his many followers to continue and extend the war against the Christians.<ref name="Encyclopaedia Aethiopica: O-X - Google Books">{{cite book |last1=Bausi |first1=Alessandro |title=Tewodros |year=2010 |publisher=Encyclopedia Aethiopica |page=930 |isbn=9783447062466 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t8VHAQAAIAAJ&q=T%C3%A9wodros+adal |access-date=2023-03-18 |archive-date=2023-03-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230322221253/https://books.google.com/books?id=t8VHAQAAIAAJ&q=T%C3%A9wodros+adal |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Cairn Info p. 117">{{cite journal |last1=Chekroun |first1=Amelie |title=Le sultan walasmaʿ Saʿd al-Dīn et ses fils |journal=Médiévales |date=2020 |volume=79 |issue=2 |pages=117–136 |publisher=Cairn Info |doi=10.4000/medievales.11082 |url=https://www.cairn.info/revue-medievales-2020-2-page-117.htm |access-date=2022-07-22 |archive-date=2022-08-04 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220804080312/https://www.cairn.info/revue-medievales-2020-2-page-117.htm |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name="Royal Names in Medieval Ethiopia and their Symbolism">{{cite journal |last1=Gusarova |first1=Ekaterina |title=Royal Names in Medieval Ethiopia and their Symbolism |journal=Scrinium |year=2021 |volume=17 |pages=349–355 |publisher=BRILL |doi=10.1163/18177565-BJA10026 |s2cid=240884465 |url=https://brill.com/view/journals/scri/17/1/article-p349_20.xml |doi-access=free |access-date=2022-07-22 |archive-date=2022-07-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220705004813/https://brill.com/view/journals/scri/17/1/article-p349_20.xml |url-status=live }}</ref> The Emperor of Ethiopia ] was soon killed by the Adal Sultanate upon the return of Sa'ad ad-Din's heirs to the Horn of Africa.<ref name="Encyclopaedia Aethiopica: O-X - Google Books" /><ref name="Cairn Info p. 117" /><ref name="Royal Names in Medieval Ethiopia and their Symbolism" /> ] died a natural death and was succeeded by his brother ] who invaded the capital and royal seat of the Solomonic Empire and drove Emperor ] to Yedaya where according to ], Sultan Mansur destroyed a Solomonic army and killed the Emperor. He then advanced to the mountains of Mokha, where he encountered a 30,000 strong Solomonic army. The Adalite soldiers surrounded their enemies and for two months besieged the trapped Solomonic soldiers until a truce was declared in Mansur's favour. During this period, Adal emerged as a centre of Muslim resistance against the expanding Christian Abyssinian kingdom.<ref name="Lewispd" /> Adal would thereafter govern all of the territory formerly ruled by the Ifat Sultanate,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Briggs|first1=Phillip|title=Somaliland|year=2012|publisher=Bradt Travel Guides|isbn=9781841623719|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M6NI2FejIuwC&q=sabr+addin+founded+adal&pg=PA152|access-date=25 April 2016|archive-date=22 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522133126/https://books.google.com/books?id=M6NI2FejIuwC&q=sabr+addin+founded+adal&pg=PA152#v=onepage&q=sabr%20addin%20founded%20adal&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5qlXatHRJtMC&q=Ifat+sultanate+ruled+present+day+north+western+somalia&pg=PA358|title=Nation Shapes: The Story Behind the World's Borders: The Story behind the World's Borders|last=Shelley|first=Fred M.|date=2013-04-23|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=9781610691062|language=en|access-date=2020-10-15|archive-date=2024-05-22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522133149/https://books.google.com/books?id=5qlXatHRJtMC&q=Ifat+sultanate+ruled+present+day+north+western+somalia&pg=PA358|url-status=live}}</ref> as well as the land further east all the way to Cape Guardafui, according to Leo Africanus.<ref name="Leo">{{cite book | last1=Africanus| first1=Leo| title=The History and Description of Africa| date=1526| publisher=Hakluyt Society| pages=51–54| url=https://archive.org/stream/historyanddescr03porygoog#page/n180/mode/2up}}</ref>
] was introduced to the Horn region early on from the ], shortly after the ]. Zeila's two-] ] dates to about the 7th century, and is the oldest ] in ].<ref name="Btgpb">{{cite book | last=Briggs| first=Phillip| title=Somaliland| year=2012| publisher=Bradt Travel Guides| isbn=978-1841623719| page=7| url=https://www.google.com/books?id=M6NI2FejIuwC}}</ref> In the late 9th century, ] wrote that Muslims were living along the northern Somali seaboard.<ref name="Encyamer"/><ref name="Lewispohoa"/> The polity was governed by local ] dynasties established by the Adelites.<ref name="Leo">{{cite book | last1=Africanus| first1=Leo| title=The History and Description of Africa| date=1526| publisher=Hakluyt Society| pages=51–54| url=https://archive.org/stream/historyanddescr03porygoog#page/n180/mode/2up}}</ref> Adal's history from this founding period forth would be characterized by a succession of battles with neighbouring ].<ref name="Lewispohoa"/>


] and his men. From ''Le Livre des Merveilles'', 15th century.]]
] was born in Zeila during the Adal Kingdom period. Al-Kawneyn is a Somali Muslim saint.<ref name="Lewis">{{cite book |last1=Lewis |first1=I. M. |title=The Red Sea Press |date=1998 |publisher=Red Sea Press |isbn=978-1-56902-103-3 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/saintssomalispop00lewi/page/89 |access-date=25 April 2021 |chapter=Saints and Somalis: Popular Islam in a Clan-based Society}}</ref> He is believed to be the founder and ancestor of the royal family known as the ], which later governed both the ] and the Adal Sultanate during the Middle Ages.<ref name="Lewis"/><ref>{{cite book | author1=Nehemia Levtzion| author2=Randall Pouwels| title=The History of Islam in Africa |date=Mar 31, 2000| publisher=Ohio University Press| pages=242| language=en}}</ref>


Later on in the campaign, the Adalites were struck by a catastrophe when Sultan Mansur and his brother Muhammad were captured in battle by the Solomonids. Mansur was immediately succeeded by the youngest brother of the family ]. Sultan Jamal reorganized the army into a formidable force and defeated the Solomonic armies at ], Yedeya and Jazja. Emperor Yeshaq I responded by gathering a large army and invaded the cities of Yedeya and Jazja, but was repulsed by the soldiers of Jamal. Following this success, Jamal organized another successful attack against the Solomonic forces and inflicted heavy casualties in what was reportedly the largest Adalite army ever fielded. As a result, Yeshaq and his men fled to the ] region over the next five months, while Jamal ad Din's forces pursued them and looted much gold on the way, although no engagement ensued.{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=58}}
===Rise of the sultanate===
]'s 15th century navigational notes on ]]]
Adal is mentioned by name in the 14th century in the context of the battles between the Muslims of the Somali and Afar seaboard and the Abyssinian King ]'s ] troops.<ref name="Houtsma">{{cite book | last=Houtsma|first=M. Th| title=E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936| year=1987| publisher=BRILL| isbn=9004082654| pages=125–126| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zJU3AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA125 }}</ref> Adal originally had its capital in the port city of Zeila, situated in the northwestern Awdal region. The polity at the time was an ]ate in the larger ] ruled by the ].<ref name="Lewispd">{{cite book|last=Lewis|first=I. M.|title=A Pastoral Democracy: A Study of Pastoralism and Politics Among the Northern Somali of the Horn of Africa|year=1999|publisher=James Currey Publishers|isbn=0852552807|pages=17|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eK6SBJIckIsC&pg=PA17}}</ref>


After returning home, Jamal sent his brother Ahmad with the Christian battle-expert Harb Jaush to successfully attack the province of Dawaro. Despite his losses, Emperor Yeshaq was still able to continue field armies against Jamal. Sultan Jamal continued to advance further into the Abyssinian heartland. However, Jamal on hearing of Yeshaq's plan to send several large armies to attack three different areas of Adal (including the capital), returned to Adal, where he fought the Solomonic forces at Harjai and, according to al-Maqrizi, this is where the Emperor Yeshaq died in battle. The young Sultan Jamal ad-Din II at the end of his reign had outperformed his brothers and forefathers in the war arena and became the most successful ruler of Adal to date. Within a few years, however, Jamal was assassinated by either disloyal friends or cousins around 1432 or 1433, and was succeeded by his brother ]. Sultan Badlay continued the campaigns of his younger brother and began several successful expeditions against the Christian empire. He reconquered ] and began preparations of a major Adalite offensive into the ]. He successfully collected funding from surrounding Muslim kingdoms as far away as the ].<ref>Richard Gray, ''The Cambridge history of Africa'', Volume 4. p. 155.</ref> However, this ambitious campaign ended in disaster when Emperor ] defeated Sultan Badlay at the ] and pursued the retreating Adalites all the way to the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Cerulli |first1=Enrico |title=Islam: Yesterday and Today translated by Emran Waber |publisher=Istituto Per L'Oriente |page=140 |url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1g-LkxaXWZopjLCFEuWm8wnly2lh4WvFp/view |access-date=2021-09-07 |archive-date=2021-08-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210822194826/https://drive.google.com/file/d/1g-LkxaXWZopjLCFEuWm8wnly2lh4WvFp/view |url-status=live }}</ref>
{{History_of_Djibouti}}
]
] and his men. From ''Le Livre des Merveilles'', 15th century.]]


Following the defeat and death of ] at the ], the next Sultan of Adal, ], submitted to Emperor ] and started paying annual tribute to the ] with which he secure peace.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29226/1/10731321.pdf|title=The Oromo of Ethiopia 1500-1800|page=25|access-date=2021-09-07|archive-date=2020-02-13|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200213003344/https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29226/1/10731321.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> Adal's ]s, who administered the provinces, interpreted the agreement as a betrayal of their independence and a retreat from the polity's long-standing policy of resistance to Abyssinian incursions. Emir Laday Usman of ] subsequently marched to ] and seized power in 1471. However, Usman did not dismiss the Sultan from office, but instead gave him a ceremonial position while retaining the real power for himself. Adal now came under the leadership of a powerful Emir who governed from the palace of a nominal Sultan.<ref name ="Islam in Ethiopia">{{cite journal | last =Trimingham | first =John | title =Islam in Ethiopia | journal =Basic Reference | volume =28 | pages =167 | publisher =Oxford University Press | location =Oxford | year =2007 | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=B4NHAQAAIAAJ&q=adal+sultanate+dakar+in+1471 | access-date =2012-04-27 | archive-date =2024-05-22 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20240522134620/https://books.google.com/books?id=B4NHAQAAIAAJ&q=adal+sultanate+dakar+in+1471 | url-status =live }}</ref> Usman would route emperor Baeda Maryam's troops in battle.<ref>{{cite book |last1=S.C. |first1=Munro-Hay |title=Ethiopia, the unknown land : a cultural and historical guide |date=2002 |publisher=I.B. Tauris |page=25 |isbn=978-1-86064-744-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/ethiopiaunknownl0000munr/page/24/mode/2up?q=asman}}</ref> Historian ] states Adal Sultans had lost control of the state to Harar's aristocracy.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Hassan |first1=Mohammed |title=The Oromo of Ethiopia, 1500-1850 |publisher=University of London |pages=24–25 |url=https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29226/1/10731321.pdf |access-date=2021-09-07 |archive-date=2020-02-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200213003344/https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29226/1/10731321.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref><ref name ="Specific Ethiopia">{{cite journal | last =zum | title =Event Documentation | journal =Basic Reference | volume =28 | pages =217–229 | publisher =AGCEEP | location =USA | year =2007 | url =http://agceep.net/eventdoc/AGCEEP_Specific_Ethiopia.eue.htm | doi =10.1017/S0020743800063145 | s2cid =154765577 | access-date =2012-04-27 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20110913142126/http://www.agceep.net/eventdoc/AGCEEP_Specific_Ethiopia.eue.htm | archive-date =2011-09-13 | url-status =dead }}</ref>
In 1332, the King of Adal was slain in a military campaign aimed at halting Amda Seyon's march toward Zeila.<ref name="Houtsma"/> When the last Sultan of Ifat, ], was killed by ] at the port city of Zeila in 1410, his children escaped to ], before later returning in 1415.<ref name="Somaliland">{{cite journal | last =mbali | title =Somaliland | journal =Basic Reference | volume =28 | pages =217–229 | publisher =mbali | location =London, UK | year =2010 | url =http://www.mbali.info/doc328.htm | doi =10.1017/S0020743800063145 | access-date =2012-04-27 | url-status =dead | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20120423062326/http://www.mbali.info/doc328.htm | archive-date =2012-04-23 }}</ref> In the early 15th century, Adal's capital was moved further inland to the town of ],<ref name="Lewispd"/> where ], the eldest son of Sa'ad ad-Din II, established a new Adal administration after his return from Yemen.<ref name="Lewispd"/><ref name="Bradt">{{cite book|last=Briggs|first=Philip|title=Bradt Somaliland: With Addis Ababa & Eastern Ethiopia|year=2012|publisher=Bradt Travel Guides|isbn=978-1841623719|pages=10|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M6NI2FejIuwC&pg=PA10 }}</ref> During this period, Adal emerged as a centre of Muslim resistance against the expanding Christian Abyssinian kingdom.<ref name="Lewispd"/> Adal would thereafter govern all of the territory formerly ruled by the Ifat Sultanate,<ref>{{cite book|last1=Briggs|first1=Phillip|title=Somaliland|year=2012|publisher=Bradt Travel Guides|isbn=9781841623719|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=M6NI2FejIuwC&q=sabr+addin+founded+adal&pg=PA152|access-date=25 April 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5qlXatHRJtMC&q=Ifat+sultanate+ruled+present+day+north+western+somalia&pg=PA358|title=Nation Shapes: The Story Behind the World's Borders: The Story behind the World's Borders|last=Shelley|first=Fred M.|date=2013-04-23|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=9781610691062|language=en}}</ref> as well as the land further east all the way to Cape Guardafui, according to Leo Africanus.<ref name="Leo"/>
] armed with a musket and a cannon]]
Emperor ] and Sultan ] tried to remain at peace, but their efforts were nullified by the raids which Emir ] constantly made into Christian territory. ] who was determined to eliminate this threat, organized a large army and led it against the Emir, although the Emperor was victorious he was eventually killed in battle against the Adalites. Emperor ] (Lebna Dengel) would soon succeed the throne, ] having recovered from his defeat renewed raids against the frontier provinces. He was stimulated by emissaries from Arabia who proclaimed the jihad (holy war), presented him with a green standard and brought in arms and trained men from Yemen. In 1516, Emir Mahfuz would then launch an invasion of ], Lebna Dengel was prepared and organized a successful ambush, the Adalites were defeated and Mahfuz was killed in battle. Lebna Dengel then moved into Adal where he sacked the city of ]. Around the same time a Portuguese fleet surprised ] whilst its garrison was away with Mahfuz, the Portuguese then burnt down the port city.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Huntingford |first1=G.W.B |title=The historical geography of Ethiopia from the first century AD to 1704 |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=105}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Trimmingham |first1=John Spencer |title=Islam in Ethiopia |date=1952 |page=83 |publisher=Frank Cass & Company |isbn=9780714617312 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |access-date=2023-05-12 |archive-date=2023-04-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230405063221/https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |url-status=live }}</ref>


After the victory of Lebna Dengel, the internal weaknesses of the Adal Sultanate soon revealed themselves. The older generation of the Muslims headed by the ], indifferent to religion and ready to come to terms with ], were staunchly opposed by the ] and ] religious aristocracy led by fanatic warlike emirs.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Hassan |first1=Mohammed |title=Oromo of Ethiopia |publisher=University of London |pages=24–25 |url=https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29226/1/10731321.pdf |access-date=2021-09-07 |archive-date=2020-02-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200213003344/https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29226/1/10731321.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> The Sultan ] was assassinated in 1518 and Adal was torn apart by intestinal struggles in which five sultans succeeded each other in two years. But at last, a matured and powerful leader called ] ] assumed power and brought order out of chaos. However, Sultan ], who had transferred the capital from ] to ] in 1520, profiting off the prestige that the hereditary monarchy still held, recruited bands of Somali nomads, ambushed ] at Zeila and killed him in 1525.<ref name="Lewispd"/> Many people went to join the force of a young rebel named ], who claimed revenge for Garad Abogn. Ahmad did not immediately attempt conclusions with Sultan Abu Bakr, but retired to ] to build up his strength. ] would eventually kill Sultan Abu Bakr in battle, and replaced him with Abu Bakr's younger brother ] as his puppet. Once in complete control, he then could then turn to the task he felt himself was divinely appoint to undertake, the conquest of Abyssinia. Fervor for the jihad had not yet overcome the forces inherent in nomadic life, Ahmad had to undertake several campaigns to restore order in the Somali territory which would constitute his manpower reserve. He then organized a heterogenous mass of tribes into a powerful army, inflamed by the fanatical zeal of jihad.<ref>{{harvnb|Tamrat|1977|pp=168–170}}.</ref><ref>Jeremy Black, ''Cambridge Illustrated Atlas, Warfare: Renaissance to Revolution'', 1492–1792, (Cambridge University Press: 1996), p. 9.</ref><ref name="Islam in Ethiopia - John Spencer Trimingham - Google Books">{{cite book |last1=Trimmingham |first1=John Spencer |title=Islam in Ethiopia |date=1952 |page=84 |publisher=Frank Cass & Company |isbn=9780714617312 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |access-date=2023-05-12 |archive-date=2023-04-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230405063221/https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |url-status=live }}</ref>
After 1468, a new breed of rulers emerged on the Adal political scene. The dissidents opposed Walashma rule owing to a treaty that Sultan ] had signed with Emperor ], wherein Badlay agreed to submit yearly tribute. This was done to achieve peace in the region, though tribute was never sent. Adal's ]s, who administered the provinces, interpreted the agreement as a betrayal of their independence and a retreat from the polity's long-standing policy of resistance to Abyssinian incursions. The main leader of this opposition was the Emir of Zeila, the Sultanate's richest province. As such, he was expected to pay the highest share of the annual tribute to be given to the Abyssinian Emperor.<ref name ="Specific Ethiopia">{{cite journal | last =zum | title =Event Documentation | journal =Basic Reference | volume =28 | pages =217–229 | publisher =AGCEEP | location =USA | year =2007 | url =http://agceep.net/eventdoc/AGCEEP_Specific_Ethiopia.eue.htm | doi =10.1017/S0020743800063145 | access-date =2012-04-27 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20110913142126/http://www.agceep.net/eventdoc/AGCEEP_Specific_Ethiopia.eue.htm | archive-date =2011-09-13 | url-status =dead }}</ref> Emir Laday Usman subsequently marched to Dakkar and seized power in 1471. However, Usman did not dismiss the Sultan from office, but instead gave him a ceremonial position while retaining the real power for himself. Adal now came under the leadership of a powerful Emir who governed from the palace of a nominal Sultan.<ref name ="Islam in Ethiopia">{{cite journal | last =Trimingham | first =John | title =Islam in Ethiopia | journal =Basic Reference | volume =28 | pages =167 | publisher =Oxford University Press | location = Oxford | year =2007 | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=B4NHAQAAIAAJ&q=adal+sultanate+dakar+in+1471 |access-date =2012-04-27}}</ref>


===Conquest of Abyssinia===
Adalite armies under the leadership of rulers such as ], ], ], ] and Emir ] subsequently continued the struggle against Abyssinian expansionism.
{{main|Ethiopian–Adal war}}
] and ]'s deaths.]]
According to sixteenth century Adal writer ], in 1529 Imam ] finally decided to embark on a conquest of Abyssinia, he soon met the Abyssinians at the ] where he would win a decisive victory. But his nomads where unreliable and difficult to control, to Ahmad's frustration some of his ] warriors would disperse back to their homelands after acquiring much plunder. At the same time, he faced opposition from his ] troops who dreaded the potential consequences of the Muslim base relocating to Abyssinia. He then returned to ] to reconstruct his forces and eliminate the tribal allegiances in his army, two years later he was able to organize a definite and permeant occupation of Abyssinia. From then the story of the conquest is a succession of victories, burnings and massacres. In 1531 ] and ] were occupied, ] and ] in 1533. In 1535 Ahmad, in control of the east and center of Abyssinia invaded ] where he encountered fierce resistance and suffered some reserves, but his advance was not stopped, his armies reached the coasts of ] and ] where they made contact with the Muslim ] tribes of the north that had formerly paid tribute to the ]. Emperor ] (Lebna Dengel) became a hunted fugitive, and harried from ] to ] to ], constantly pursued by the Adalites.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Trimmingham |first1=John Spencer |title=Islam in Ethiopia |date=1952 |page=87 |publisher=Frank Cass & Company |isbn=9780714617312 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |access-date=2023-05-12 |archive-date=2023-04-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230405063221/https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Cerulli |first1=Enrico |title=Islam Yesterday and Today translated by Emran Waber |pages=376–381 |url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1g-LkxaXWZopjLCFEuWm8wnly2lh4WvFp/view |access-date=2021-09-07 |archive-date=2021-08-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210822194826/https://drive.google.com/file/d/1g-LkxaXWZopjLCFEuWm8wnly2lh4WvFp/view |url-status=live }}</ref> In this period Adal Sultanate occupied a territory stretching from ] to ] as well as the Abyssinian inlands.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Marcus |first1=Harold |title=A History of Ethiopia |date=22 February 2002 |publisher=University of California Press |page=32 |isbn=9780520925427 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hCpttQcKW7YC&dq=zeila+to+mitsiwa+on+the+coast&pg=PA32 |access-date=7 July 2023 |archive-date=22 May 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522134729/https://books.google.com/books?id=hCpttQcKW7YC&dq=zeila+to+mitsiwa+on+the+coast&pg=PA32#v=onepage&q=zeila%20to%20mitsiwa%20on%20the%20coast&f=false |url-status=live }}</ref>


The Adalites were passionately interested in converting newly occupied territories. The impression given in the Muslim chronicles is that almost all of the Christian ] had embraced Islam out of expediency. Among them was the governor of ] who wrote to the Imam:
Emir ], who would fight with successive emperors, caused the death of Emperor ] in 1508, but he was in turn killed by the forces of Emperor ] (Lebna Dengel) in 1517. After the death of Mahfuz, a civil war started for the office of Highest Emir of Adal. Five Emirs came to power in only two years. But at last, a matured and powerful leader called ] Abuun Addus (Garad Abogne) assumed power. When Garad Abogne was in power he was defeated and killed by Sultan ], and In 1554, under his initiative, ] became the capital of Adal.<ref name="Lewispd"/> This time not only the young Emirs revolted, but the whole country of Adal rose against Sultan Abu Bakr, because Garad Abogne was loved by the people of the sultanate. Many people went to join the force of a young imam called ], who claimed revenge for Garad Abogne. Al-Ghazi assumed power in Adal in 1527, however he did not remove the Sultan, but instead left him in his nominal office. Yet, when Abu Bakr waged war on him, Ahmad ibn Ibrahim killed Abu Bakr, and replaced him with his brother ].<ref name ="The Cambridge History of Africa: From c. 1050 to c. 1600">{{cite journal | last =Fage | first =J. D. | title =The Cambridge History of Africa: From c. 1050 to c. 1600 | journal =Basic Reference | volume =28 | pages =167 | publisher =Cambridge University Press | location = USA | year =2007 | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=Qwg8GV6aibkC&pg=PA167 | doi = 10.1017/S0020743800063145| access-date =2012-04-27}}</ref> They fought under a combination of three banners used by Ahmad al-Ghazi<ref>"the king of Zeila ascended a hill with several horse and some foot to examine us: he halted on the top with three hundred horse and three large banners, two white with red moons, and one red with a white moon, which always accompanied him, and which he was recognized." Richard Stephen Whiteway, ''The Portuguese expedition to Abyssinia in 1541–1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso'', Kraus Reprint, 1967, p. 41</ref>
{{blockquote|I was once a Muslim, the son of a Muslim, but the polytheists captured me and made me a Christian. Yet at heart I remain steadfast in the religion and now I seek the protection of Allah, His prophet, and yourself. If you accept my repentance and do not punish for what I have done I will return to Allah whilst these armies that are under my command I will deceive them so that they will come to you and embrace Islam.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Trimmingham |first1=John Spencer |title=Islam in Ethiopia |date=1952 |page=88 |publisher=Frank Cass & Company |isbn=9780714617312 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |access-date=2023-05-12 |archive-date=2023-04-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230405063221/https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |url-status=live }}</ref>}}


However, in the integral regions of the ], such as ], ] and ], the local population bitterly resisted the Adalite occupation. Some preferred death over denying their faith, among them were two ] chiefs who were brought before the Imam in ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pankhurst |first1=Richard |title=The Ethiopians: A History |date=October 23, 1998 |publisher=Wiley |page=88 |isbn=9780631224938 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8mNnXC_oVmQC |access-date=July 7, 2023 |archive-date=August 21, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230821200927/https://books.google.com/books?id=8mNnXC_oVmQC |url-status=live }}</ref> ] describes the encounter:
In the 16th century, Adal organised an effective army led by Imam ] that invaded the Abyssinian empire.<ref name="Lewispd"/> This campaign is historically known as the ] or ''Futuh al Habash''. During the war, Ahmed pioneered the use of ]s supplied by the ], which were deployed against Solomonic forces and their ] allies led by ]. Some scholars argue that this conflict proved, through their use on both sides, the value of ] such as the ] ], cannons and the ] over traditional weapons.<ref>Jeremy Black, ''Cambridge Illustrated Atlas, Warfare: Renaissance to Revolution'', 1492–1792, (Cambridge University Press: 1996), p. 9.</ref>
{{blockquote|They captured two Christian chiefs and sent them to the Imam's encampment and presented them before him. He said "What is the matter with you that you haven't become Muslims when the whole country was Islamized?" They replied "We don't want to become Muslims." The Imam said "Our judgment on you is that your heads be cut off." The two Christians replied "Very well!" The Imam was surprised at their reply and ordered them to be executed.<ref name="Islam in Ethiopia - John Spencer Trimingham - Google Books" />}}


In 1541 a small Portuguese contingent landed in ] and soon all of Tigray declared for the monarchy, the Imam was defeated in several major engagements by the Portuguese and was forced to flee to ] with his heavily demoralized followers. He sent a request to the ] for reinforcements of Turkish, Albanian and Arab musketeers to stabilize his troops. He then took the offensive attacking the Portuguese camp at Wolfa where he killed their commander, ], and 200 of their rank and file. The Imam then dismissed most of his foreign contingent and returned to his headquarters at ]. The surviving Portuguese were able to meet up with ] and his army at ]. The Emperor did not hesitate to take the offensive and won a major victory at the ] when the fate of Abyssinia was decided by the death of the Imam and the flight of his army. The invasion force collapsed like a house of cards and all the Abyssinians who had been cowed by the invaders returned to their former allegiance, the reconquest of Christian territories proceeded without encountering any effective opposition.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Trimmingham |first1=John Spencer |title=Islam in Ethiopia |date=1952 |page=89 |publisher=Frank Cass & Company |isbn=9780714617312 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |access-date=2023-05-12 |archive-date=2023-04-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230405063221/https://books.google.com/books?id=XbVmNAAACAAJ |url-status=live }}</ref>
==Ethnicity==
]]]
The Walashma dynasty of the Ifat and Adal sultanates possessed Somali genealogical traditions..<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mire |first1=Sada |title=Divine Fertility: The Continuity in Transformation of an Ideology of Sacred Kinship in Northeast Africa |date=5 February 2020 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-429-76924-5 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=J6nODwAAQBAJ&q=Walashma+somali+genealogies&pg=PA69 |access-date= |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Lewis|first1=I. M|title=Saints and Somalis: Popular Islam in a Clan-based Society|url=https://archive.org/details/saintssomalispop00lewi|url-access=registration|date=1998|publisher=The Red Sea Press|page=}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|author-link=Nehemia Levtzion|author1=Nehemia Levtzion|author2=Randall Pouwels|title=The History of Islam in Africa|date=Mar 31, 2000|publisher=Ohio University Press|pages=242|language=en|quote=Aw Barkhadle, is the founder and ancestor of the Walashma dynasty}}</ref>


===Collapse of the sultanate===
During Adal's early period, when it was centred on the city of Zeila in the present-day northwestern Awdal region, the kingdom was primarily composed of ] (Predominantly), ], ], and ].<ref>Political Conflict on the Horn of Africa - Page 24</ref><ref name="Shinn">{{cite book|author=David Hamilton Shinn & Thomas P. Ofcansky|title=Historical Dictionary of Ethiopia|year=2004|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=0810849100|pages=5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ep7__RWqq4IC&pg=PA5 }}</ref><ref name="Mekonnen">{{cite book|author=Y. Mekonnen|title=Ethiopia: The Land, Its People, History and Culture|date=April 2013|publisher=New Africa Pres|isbn=9789987160242|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Q0pZPp032c0C&q=Edwald+Wagner+connects+the+name&pg=PA40}}</ref><ref name="Reference">{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K-XkCwAAQBAJ&q=Adal+Sultanate+ethnicity&pg=PA9|title = Somalia Business Law Handbook Volume 1 Strategic Information and Basic Laws|date = June 2015|isbn = 9781514501917}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book|title=The Dynamics of a unfinished African dream |author= Mohammed Kheir Omar| pages= 18–19}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |author=Al Shami |title= Al Manhal fi Tarikh wa Akhbat Al Danakil | page= 216}}</ref>
{{main|Oromo migrations}}
] built by ]]]
After the death of Imam Ahmad, the Adal Sultanate lost most of its territory in Abyssinian lands. In 1550 ] became the Emir of Harar and the de facto ruler of Adal. He then departed on a '']'' (holy war) to the eastern Ethiopian lowlands of ] and ]. This venture was unsuccessful, Nur was defeated and the Abyssinians then advanced into Adalite territory where upon they ravaged the lands and enslaved many of its inhabitants. However, this defeat was not mortal and Adal soon recovered. At around this time, Nur began to strength the defenses' of ], building a wall that still encircles the city to this day.<ref>]. 1952. '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220108153655/https://zelalemkibret.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/islam-in-ethiopia-j-spencer-trimingham.pdf |date=2022-01-08 }}''. London: Oxford University Press. p.&nbsp;91.</ref> In 1559, urged on by his wife, Nur once again took the offensive and invaded the ], killing Ethiopian Emperor ] in the ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Button|first1=Richard|title=First Footsteps in East Africa|year=1894|publisher=Tyston and Edwards|page=12|isbn=9780705415002|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mu0MAAAAIAAJ&q=nur+harar+rule&pg=PA12|access-date=21 January 2016|archive-date=22 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522134647/https://books.google.com/books?id=Mu0MAAAAIAAJ&q=nur+harar+rule&pg=PA12#v=snippet&q=nur%20harar%20rule&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref> At the same time another Ethiopian army led by ] Hamalmal attacked the capital of Adal, ]. Sultan ] attempted to defend the city but was defeated and killed, thus ending the ]. Not long after this, Barentu Oromos who had been migrating north invaded the Adal Sultanate. This struggle, which was mentioned by ], led to the devastation of many regions and Nur's army was defeated at the ].{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=374}} The defensive walls managed to protect ] from the invaders, preserving it as a kind of Muslim island in an Oromo sea. However, the city then experienced a severe famine as grain and salt prices rose to unpreceded levels. According to a contemporary source, the hunger became so bad that people began to resort to eating their own children and spouses. Nur himself died in 1567 of the pestilence which spread during the famine.<ref>]. 1952. '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220108153655/https://zelalemkibret.files.wordpress.com/2012/05/islam-in-ethiopia-j-spencer-trimingham.pdf |date=2022-01-08 }}''. London: Oxford University Press. p.&nbsp;94.</ref>{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=247}}


Nur was succeeded by ], who relaxed his predecessor's pro-Islamic policy and signed an infamous and humiliating peace treaty with the Oromos. The treaty stated that the Oromos can freely enter to the Muslim markets and purchase goods at less than the current market price.<ref name="History of Harar & Harari">{{cite book |title=History of Harar |page=106 |url=https://www.everythingharar.com/files/History_of_Harar_and_Harari-HNL.pdf |access-date=2021-08-19 |archive-date=2020-10-03 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201003055338/https://www.everythingharar.com/files/History_of_Harar_and_Harari-HNL.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> This angered many Muslims and led to a rebellion, in which he was overthrown and replaced by ] in 1569. Tahla would rule for only three years before being overthrown by some of his very fanatic subjects who were intent on another jihad or holy war against the Christians. He was replaced by Uthman's grandson ] who soon carried out an expedition against the ], however this campaign would end in total disaster. As soon as the army left ] the Oromo ravaged the countryside, up to the walls of the city. ] was also defeated and killed at the ], thus permanently ending Adal aggression towards Ethiopia.<ref>J.S. Trimingham, ''Islam in Ethiopia'', pp.&nbsp;96</ref> Muhammad's successor, ], fought a fierce war against the Oromos, but was unable to defeat them. Mansur would also successfully reconquer ] and ]. The tension was all the greater after the death of Nur Ibn Mujahid, the disappearance of the last of the Walashma monarch also opened a tough competition for power between emirs and descendants of ]. Ultimately, they won in April 1576, ] took the title of ], thus combining the political power of the Sultan and the religious responsibility of guiding the community, he then relocated the capital to the oasis of ] in 1577, establishing the ].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Cuoq |first=Joseph |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hUsgUDdzYDkC&dq=umar+walasma&pg=PA125 |title=L'Islam en Éthiopie des origines au XVIe siècle |date=1981 |publisher=Nouvelles Editions Latines |isbn=978-2-7233-0111-4 |pages=266 |language=fr |access-date=2024-01-28 |archive-date=2024-05-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522134623/https://books.google.com/books?id=hUsgUDdzYDkC&dq=umar+walasma&pg=PA125#v=onepage&q&f=false |url-status=live }}</ref>
Here the Portuguese infantries had their first glimpse of Ahmad. Their views were recorded by Miguel de Castanhoso, a soldier on the expedition who wrote the official Portuguese account:


The ] declined gradually in the next century and was destroyed by the neighboring ] nomads who made ] their capital.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Abir|first1=Mordechai|title=Ethiopia and the Red Sea|date=17 June 2016|publisher=Routledge|page=139|isbn=9781317045465|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BQ5qDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA235|access-date=19 January 2016|archive-date=22 May 2024|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522134623/https://books.google.com/books?id=BQ5qDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA235#v=onepage&q&f=false|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Fani |first1=Sara |title=HornAfr 6thField Mission Report |date=2017 |publisher=University of Copenhagen |page=8 |url=http://www.islhornafr.eu/ReportAwsa2017.pdf |access-date=2021-09-07 |archive-date=2020-01-14 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200114065409/http://www.islhornafr.eu/ReportAwsa2017.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> In the seventeenth century the induction of ] and ] populations into Afar identity would lead to the emergence of ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bausi |first1=Alessandro |title=Ethiopia History, Culture and Challenges |date=2017 |publisher=Michigan State University Press |page=83 |isbn=978-3-643-90892-6 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h-g7DwAAQBAJ&dq=were+reclaimed+by+migrant+populations+from+the+highlands+(Haralla,+Dobaa)+who+were+integrated+into+Afar+ethnicity&pg=PA83 |access-date=2023-04-04 |archive-date=2023-04-09 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230409093701/https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Ethiopia/h-g7DwAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=were+reclaimed+by+migrant+populations+from+the+highlands+%28Haralla,+Dobaa%29+who+were+integrated+into+Afar+ethnicity&pg=PA83&printsec=frontcover |url-status=live }}</ref> ]'s verdict on this "sad condition" of Adal's decadence was that whereas the ] under ] was able to reorganize and withstand the ], the Sultanate of Adal was too newly established to transcend tribal differences. The result he claims was that the nomadic people instinctively return to their "eternal disintegrating struggles" of people against people and tribe against tribe.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Cerulli |first1=Enrico |title=Islam: Yesterday and Today translated by Emran Waber |publisher=Istituto Per L'Oriente |page=218 |url=https://drive.google.com/file/d/1g-LkxaXWZopjLCFEuWm8wnly2lh4WvFp/view |access-date=2021-09-07 |archive-date=2021-08-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210822194826/https://drive.google.com/file/d/1g-LkxaXWZopjLCFEuWm8wnly2lh4WvFp/view |url-status=live }}</ref>
{{quote|While his camp was being pitched, the king of Zeila ] ascended a hill with several horse and some foot to examine us: he halted on the top with three hundred horse and three large banners, two white with red moons, and one red with a white moon, which always accompanied him, and which he was recognized.<ref name="cytdt">{{cite book |title=The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541–1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso |year=1902 |author=Richard Stephen Whiteway |publisher=Hakluyt Society |page= |url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_P39JAAAAYAAJ}}</ref>}}


==Ethnicity==
Among the earliest mentions of the Somali by name has come through a victory poem written by Emperor ] of Abyssinia against the king of Adal, as the Simur are said to have submitted and paid tribute. "Dr Enrico Cerulli has shown that Simur was an old Harari name for the Somali, who are still known by them as Tumur. Hence, it is most probable that the mention of the Somali and the Simur in relation to Yishaq refers to the king's military campaigns against Adal, where the Somali seem to have constituted a major section of the population."<ref>''The Cambridge History of Africa'', Vol. 3, Cambridge University Press, 2008, p. 154</ref>
]]]


Ulrich Braukämper mentions that Adal was distinguished by its ethnic variety which included ], ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Braukämper |first1=Ulrich |title=Islamic history and culture in Southern Ethiopia: collected essays |date=2004 |publisher=Lit |location=Münster |isbn=9783825856717 |pages=37–38 |edition=2. Aufl}}</ref> Ethiopian historian ] states that Adal's central authority in the fourteenth century consisted of the Argobba, Harari and ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Tamrat |first1=Taddesse |title=Review: Place Names in Ethiopian History |date=November 1991 |publisher=Journal of Ethiopian Studies |page=120 |jstor=41965996 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41965996 |access-date=2021-08-19 |archive-date=2021-07-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210713135254/https://www.jstor.org/stable/41965996 |url-status=live }}</ref> Professor ], an important figure in ], described the Adal Sultanate as consisting of many ethnic groups, but primarily Somalis and Afars.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Levine |first1=Donald N. |title=A Revised Analytical Approach to the Evolution of Ethiopian Civilization |journal=International Journal of Ethiopian Studies |date=2012 |volume=6 |issue=1/2 |page=49 |jstor=41756934 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41756934 |issn=1543-4133 |access-date=2023-07-31 |archive-date=2024-05-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522134702/https://www.jstor.org/stable/41756934 |url-status=live }}</ref> Somali scholar ] notes that Somalis were integral to the founding of the sultanate, and played a significant role in the subsequent wars with Abyssinia.<ref>{{cite book |title=Making sense of Somali history |date=2018 |publisher=Adonis & Ashley Publishers Ltd |location=London, United Kingdom |isbn=978-1909112797 |pages=36, 64}}</ref> According to Patrick Gikes and Mohammed Hassen, Adal in the sixteenth century was primarily inhabited by the sedentary ] people and the pastoral Somali people.<ref name="University of Lisbon">{{Cite journal |last1=Gikes |first1=Patrick |date=2002 |title=Wars in the Horn of Africa and the dismantling of the Somali State |url=https://cea.revues.org/1280 |journal=African Studies |publisher=University Institute of Lisbon |volume=2 |pages=89–102 |access-date=2019-04-11 |archive-date=2017-11-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171113184419/http://cea.revues.org/1280 |url-status=live }}</ref> Marriage alliances between Argobba, Harari and Somali people were also common within the Adal Sultanate.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Ferry |first1=Robert |title=Quelques hypothèses sur les origines des conquêtes musulmanes en Abyssinie au XVIe siècle |year=1961 |journal=Cahiers d'Études africaines |volume=2 |issue=5 |pages=28–30 |doi=10.3406/cea.1961.2961 |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/cea_0008-0055_1961_num_2_5_2961 |access-date=2021-08-20 |archive-date=2021-08-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210820030140/https://www.persee.fr/doc/cea_0008-0055_1961_num_2_5_2961 |url-status=live }}</ref>
On his background:
According to Professor Lapiso Delebo, the contemporary ] are heirs to the ancient Semitic speaking peoples of the Adal region.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Dilebo |first1=Lapiso |title=An introduction to Ethiopian history from the Megalithism Age to the Republic, circa 13000 B.C. to 2000 A.D. |quote="Like their direct descendants, the Adares of today, the people of ancient Shewa, Yifat, Adal, Harar and Awssa were semitic in their ethnic and linguistic origins. They were neither Somalis nor Afar. But the Somali and Afar nomads were the local subjects of the Adal." |date=2003 |publisher=Commercial Printing Enterprise |page=41 |oclc=318904173 |url=https://emu.tind.io/record/42082?ln=en |access-date=2023-04-02 |archive-date=2022-07-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220728083236/https://emu.tind.io/record/42082?ln=en |url-status=live }}</ref> Historians state the language spoken by the people of Adal as well as its rulers the Imams and Sultans would closely resemble contemporary ].<ref name="persee.fr">{{cite journal |last1=Ferry |first1=Robert |title=Quelques hypothèses sur les origines des conquêtes musulmanes en Abyssinie au XVIe siècle |year=1961 |journal=Cahiers d'Études africaines |volume=2 |issue=5 |pages=28–29 |doi=10.3406/cea.1961.2961 |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/cea_0008-0055_1961_num_2_5_2961 |access-date=2021-08-20 |archive-date=2021-08-20 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210820030140/https://www.persee.fr/doc/cea_0008-0055_1961_num_2_5_2961 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Harbeson |first1=John |title=Territorial and Development Politics in the Horn of Africa: The Afar of the Awash Valley |journal=African Affairs |year=1978 |volume=77 |issue=309 |publisher=Oxford University Press |page=486 |doi=10.1093/oxfordjournals.afraf.a097023 |jstor=721961 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/721961 |access-date=2023-04-11 |archive-date=2021-09-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210910192343/https://www.jstor.org/stable/721961 |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Lindahl |first1=Bernhard |title=Local history of Ethiopia |publisher=Nordic Africa Institute |page=37 |url=https://nai.uu.se/download/18.39fca04516faedec8b248c17/1580827183104/ORTAST05.pdf |access-date=2023-04-11 |archive-date=2020-03-27 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200327081659/https://nai.uu.se/download/18.39fca04516faedec8b248c17/1580827183104/ORTAST05.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> Ethiopian historian ] and others state the Walasma led Sultanates of Ifat and Adal primarily included the Ethiopian Semitic speaking ] and ], it later expanded to comprise ] and ] peoples.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Zewde |first1=Bahru |title=A Short History of Ethiopia and the Horn |year=1998 |publisher=Addis Ababa University |page=64 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N8pRAQAAMAAJ&q=a+short+history+of+ethiopia+and+the+horn+new+Walasma+sultanate |access-date=2023-03-18 |archive-date=2023-04-05 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230405042055/https://books.google.com/books?id=N8pRAQAAMAAJ&q=a%20short%20history%20of%20ethiopia%20and%20the%20horn%20new%20Walasma%20sultanate |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Ylönen |first1=Aleksi |title=The Horn Engaging the Gulf Economic Diplomacy and Statecraft in Regional Relations |date=28 December 2023 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing |page=113 |isbn=978-0-7556-3519-1 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wyngEAAAQBAJ&dq=largely+argobba+harari+and+harla&pg=PA113 |access-date=7 May 2024 |archive-date=22 May 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522135551/https://books.google.com/books?id=wyngEAAAQBAJ&dq=largely+argobba+harari+and+harla&pg=PA113#v=onepage&q=largely%20argobba%20harari%20and%20harla&f=false |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Begashaw |first1=Kassaye |title=Proceedings of the 16th International Conference of Ethiopian Studies |publisher=Norwegian University of Science and Technology |page=14 |url=https://zethio.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/ethiopian-studies-volume-1.pdf |access-date=2024-04-09 |archive-date=2023-10-29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231029001853/https://zethio.files.wordpress.com/2014/04/ethiopian-studies-volume-1.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Niane |first1=Djibril |title=General History of Africa |date=January 1984 |publisher=Heinemann Educational Books |page=427 |isbn=9789231017100 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=iAcf63sQGhIC&dq=harari+and+argobba+speaking+walasma&pg=PA427}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=The Cambridge History of Africa |publisher=Cambridge University Press |pages=147–150 |url=https://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/archive-files3/roland_oliver_the_cambridge_history_of_africa_vbook4you.pdf |access-date=2023-04-02 |archive-date=2023-01-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230130073307/https://sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/archive-files3/roland_oliver_the_cambridge_history_of_africa_vbook4you.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> Between the late 1400s to mid 1500s there was a large scale migration of ] into Adal.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Martin |first1=B.G |title=Arab Migrations to East Africa in Medieval Times |journal=The International Journal of African Historical Studies |year=1974 |volume=7 |issue=3 |publisher=Boston University African Studies Center |page=376 |doi=10.2307/217250 |jstor=217250 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/217250 |access-date=2021-09-06 |archive-date=2021-09-06 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210906234259/https://www.jstor.org/stable/217250 |url-status=live }}</ref>
{{quote|Of the early history of the Imam Ahmad but little is known. He was the son of one Ibrahim el Ghazi, and both he and his father were common soldiers in the troop of Garad Aboun. Nothing even is said as to his nationality. He was certainly not an Arab : probably he was a ], for we find him closely connected with many who were Somalis.<ref name="tryd">{{cite book |title=The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541–1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso |year=1902 |author=Richard Stephen Whiteway |publisher=Hakluyt Society |page= |url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_P39JAAAAYAAJ}}</ref>}}


Among the earliest mentions of the Somali by name has come through a victory poem written by Emperor ] of Abyssinia against the king of Adal, as the Simur are said to have submitted and paid tribute. As ] writes: "Dr ] has shown that Simur was an old ] name for the Somali, who are still known by them as Tumur. Hence, it is most probable that the mention of the Somali and the Simur in relation to Yishaq refers to the king's military campaigns against Adal, where the Somali seem to have constituted a major section of the population."<ref>{{harvnb|Tamrat|1977|p=154}}.</ref>
According to Leo Africanus (1526) and ] (1760), the Adelites were of a tawny brown or olive complexion on the northern littoral, and grew swarthier towards the southern interior. They generally had long, lank hair. Most wore a cotton ] but no headpiece or sandals, with many glass and amber trinkets around their necks, wrists, arms and ankles. The king and other aristocrats often donned instead a body-length garment topped with a headdress. All were Muslims.<ref name="Leo"/><ref name="Sale">{{cite book|last1=Sale|first1=George|title=An Universal History, from the Earliest Account of Time, Volume 15|date=1760|publisher=T. Osborne, A. Millar, and J. Osborn|pages=361 & 367–368|url=https://www.google.com/books?id=nWVjAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA361#v=onepage&q&f=false|access-date=1 July 2017}}</ref> In the southern hinterland, the Adelites lived beside pagan "]es", with whom they bartered various commodities.<ref name="Leo5153">{{cite book|last1=Africanus|first1=Leo|title=The History and Description of Africa|date=1526|publisher=Hakluyt Society|pages=51 & 53|url=https://archive.org/stream/historyanddescr03porygoog#page/n180/mode/2up|access-date=1 July 2017|quote=The land of Aian is accounted by the Arabians to be that region which lyeth betweene the narrow entrance to the Red sea, and the river Quilimanci ; being upon the sea-coast for the most part inhabited by the said Arabians ; but the inland-partes thereof are peopled with a black nation which are Idolators. It comprehendeth two kingdomes ; Adel and Adea. Adel is a very large kingdome, and extendeth from the mouth of the Arabian gulfe to the cape of Guardafu called of olde by Ptolemey Aromata promontorium. Adea, the second kingdome of the land of Aian, situate upon the easterne Ocean, is confined northward by the kingdome of Adel, & westward by the Abassin empire. The inhabitants being Moores by religion, and paying tribute to the emperour of Abassin, are (as they of Adel before-named) originally descended of the Arabians}}</ref><ref name="Sale361">{{cite book|last1=Sale|first1=George|title=An Universal History, from the Earliest Account of Time, Volume 15|date=1760|publisher=T. Osborne, A. Millar, and J. Osborn|page=361|url=https://www.google.com/books?id=nWVjAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA361#v=onepage&q&f=false|access-date=1 July 2017|quote=The inhabitants along this last coast are mostly white, with long lank hair; but grow more tawny, or even quite black, as you proceed towards the south. Here are plenty of negroes who live and intermarry with the Bedowin Arabs, and carry on a great commerce with them, which consists in gold, slaves, horses, ivory, etc.}}</ref>

According to Leo Africanus (1526) and ] (1760), the Adelites were of a tawny brown or olive complexion on the northern littoral, and grew swarthier towards the southern interior. They generally had long, lank hair. Most wore a cotton ] but no headpiece or sandals, with many glass and amber trinkets around their necks, wrists, arms and ankles. The king and other aristocrats often donned instead a body-length garment topped with a headdress. All were Muslims.<ref name="Leo"/><ref name="Sale">{{cite book|last1=Sale|first1=George|title=An Universal History, from the Earliest Account of Time, Volume 15|date=1760|publisher=T. Osborne, A. Millar, and J. Osborn|pages=361 & 367–368|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nWVjAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA361|access-date=1 July 2017}}</ref> In the southern hinterland, the Adelites lived beside pagan "]es", with whom they bartered various commodities.<ref name="Leo5153">{{cite book|last1=Africanus|first1=Leo|title=The History and Description of Africa|date=1526|publisher=Hakluyt Society|pages=51 & 53|url=https://archive.org/stream/historyanddescr03porygoog#page/n180/mode/2up|access-date=1 July 2017|quote=The land of Aian is accounted by the Arabians to be that region which lyeth betweene the narrow entrance to the Red sea, and the river Quilimanci; being upon the sea-coast for the most part inhabited by the said Arabians; but the inland-partes thereof are peopled with a black nation which are Idolators. It comprehendeth two kingdomes; Adel and Adea. Adel is a very large kingdome, and extendeth from the mouth of the Arabian gulfe to the cape of Guardafu called of olde by Ptolemey Aromata promontorium. Adea, the second kingdome of the land of Aian, situate upon the easterne Ocean, is confined northward by the kingdome of Adel, & westward by the Abassin empire. The inhabitants being Moores by religion, and paying tribute to the emperour of Abassin, are (as they of Adel before-named) originally descended of the Arabians}}</ref><ref name="Sale361">{{cite book|last1=Sale|first1=George|title=An Universal History, from the Earliest Account of Time, Volume 15|date=1760|publisher=T. Osborne, A. Millar, and J. Osborn|page=361|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nWVjAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA361|access-date=1 July 2017|quote=The inhabitants along this last coast are mostly white, with long lank hair; but grow more tawny, or even quite black, as you proceed towards the south. Here are plenty of negroes who live and intermarry with the Bedowin Arabs, and carry on a great commerce with them, which consists in gold, slaves, horses, ivory, etc.|archive-date=3 January 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170103004310/https://books.google.com/books?id=nWVjAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA361|url-status=live}}</ref>


==Languages== ==Languages==
Various languages from the ] family were spoken in the vast Adal Sultanate. ] served as a lingua franca, and was used by the ruling Walashma dynasty.<ref>{{cite book|last=Giyorgis|first=Asma|title=Aṣma Giyorgis and his work: history of the Gāllā and the kingdom of Šawā|year=1999|publisher=Medical verlag|isbn=978-3-515-03716-7|url=https://www.google.com/books?id=mGcwAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Their+language+is+Arabic,+and+it+is+similar+to%22&dq=%22Their+language+is+Arabic,+and+it+is+similar+to%22&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi2_LHv-6jRAhWj5YMKHZabAFYQ6AEIHDAA|page=257}}</ref> According to the 19th-century Ethiopian historian Asma Giyorgis suggests that the Walashma Dynasty themselves spoke ].<ref name="history of sawa">{{cite book|last=Giyorgis|first=Asma|title=Aṣma Giyorgis and his work: history of the Gāllā and the kingdom of Šawā|year=1999|publisher=Medical verlag|isbn=9783515037167|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mGcwAQAAIAAJ&q=walasma+language|page=257}}</ref> Various languages from the ] family were spoken in the vast Adal Sultanate. ] served as a lingua franca, and was used by the ruling Walashma dynasty.<ref>{{cite book|last=Giyorgis|first=Asma|title=Aṣma Giyorgis and his work: history of the Gāllā and the kingdom of Šawā|year=1999|publisher=Medical verlag|isbn=978-3-515-03716-7|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mGcwAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Their+language+is+Arabic,+and+it+is+similar+to%22|page=257|access-date=2023-03-23|archive-date=2023-04-04|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230404115836/https://books.google.com/books?id=mGcwAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Their+language+is+Arabic,+and+it+is+similar+to%22|url-status=live}}</ref> According to the 19th-century Ethiopian historian Asma Giyorgis suggests that the Walashma dynasty themselves spoke ].<ref name="history of sawa">{{cite book|last=Giyorgis|first=Asma|title=Aṣma Giyorgis and his work: history of the Gāllā and the kingdom of Šawā|year=1999|publisher=Medical verlag|isbn=9783515037167|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mGcwAQAAIAAJ&q=walasma+language|page=257|access-date=2021-08-20|archive-date=2024-05-22|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240522140659/https://books.google.com/books?id=mGcwAQAAIAAJ&q=walasma+language|url-status=live}}</ref> According to Robert Ferry, Adal's aristocracy in the ] era which consisted of imams, emirs and sultans spoke a language resembling modern ].<ref name="persee.fr"/> British historian ] states Walasma leaders moving their capital from ] to Adal set in motion the evolution of Harari and ] within ] and its environs.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Fage |first1=John |title=Cambridge History of Africa |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=150 |url=https://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/archive-files3/roland_oliver_the_cambridge_history_of_africa_vbook4you.pdf |access-date=2023-04-02 |archive-date=2023-01-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230130073307/https://sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/archive-files3/roland_oliver_the_cambridge_history_of_africa_vbook4you.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref> According to Jeffrey M. Shaw, the main inhabitants of the Adal Sultanate spoke ] languages.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Shaw |first1=Jeffrey M. |title=The Ethiopian-Adal War, 1529-1543: the conquest of Abyssinia |date=2021 |publisher=Helion & Company |location=Warwick |isbn=9781914059681 |page=53}}</ref> In ], the port city of Adal Sultanate, the ] was mainly spoken.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Fage |first1=John |title=Cambridge History of Africa |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=139 |url=https://www.sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/archive-files3/roland_oliver_the_cambridge_history_of_africa_vbook4you.pdf |access-date=2023-04-02 |archive-date=2023-01-30 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230130073307/https://sahistory.org.za/sites/default/files/archive-files3/roland_oliver_the_cambridge_history_of_africa_vbook4you.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>


==Economy== ==Economy==
] was the main river of Adal/Ifat sultanates and provided abundant agricultural produce and fresh water]] ] was the main river of the Adal and Ifat sultanates and provided abundant agricultural produce and fresh water.]]
]'s notes on ] which was a large port of the sultanate]] ]'s notes on ] which was a large port of the sultanate]]


One of the empire's most wealthy provinces was Ifat it was well watered, by the large river ]. Additionally, besides the surviving ], at least five other rivers in the area between Harar and Shawa plateau existed.<ref>Understanding the Drivers of Drought in Somalia by MSH Said Page 27 </ref> The general area was well cultivated, densely populated with numerous villages adjoining each other. Agricultural produce included three main cereals, wheat, sorghum and teff, as well as beans, aubergines, melons, cucumbers, marrows, cauliflowers and mustard. Many different types of fruit were grown, among them bananas, lemons, limes, pomegranates, apricots, peaces, citrons mulberries and grapes. Other plants included sycamore tree, sugar cane, from which kandi, or sugar was extracted and inedible wild figs. One of the empire's most wealthy provinces was Ifat it was well watered, by the large river ]. Additionally, besides the surviving ], at least five other rivers in the area between Harar and Shawa plateau existed.<ref>Understanding the Drivers of Drought in Somalia by MSH Said Page 27</ref> The general area was well cultivated, densely populated with numerous villages adjoining each other. Agricultural produce included three main cereals, wheat, sorghum and teff, as well as beans, aubergines, melons, cucumbers, marrows, cauliflowers and mustard. Many different types of fruit were grown, among them bananas, lemons, limes, pomegranates, apricots, peaces, citrons mulberries and grapes. Other plants included sycamore tree, sugar cane, from which kandi, or sugar was extracted and inedible wild figs.


The province also grew the stimulant plant Khat. Which was exported to ]. Adal was abundant in large numbers of cattle, sheep, and some goats. There was also chickens. Both buffaloes and wild fowl were sometimes hunted. The province had a great reputation for producing butter and honey. .<ref>The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History by Richard Pankhurst page 46</ref> The province also grew the stimulant plant Khat. Which was exported to ]. Adal was abundant in large numbers of cattle, sheep, and some goats. There was also chickens. Both buffaloes and wild fowl were sometimes hunted. The province had a great reputation for producing butter and honey.{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=46}}


Whereas provinces such as ], surrounding regions of ] was known for it cotton cultivation and an age old weaving industry. While the ] region produced salt which was an important trading item <ref>Islamic History and Culture in Southern Ethiopia: Collected Essays by Ulrich Braukämper Page 79 </ref> Whereas provinces such as ], surrounding regions of ] was known for it cotton cultivation and an age old weaving industry, while the ] region produced salt which was an important trading item.<ref>Islamic History and Culture in Southern Ethiopia: Collected Essays by Ulrich Braukämper Page 79</ref>


] the headquarters of the Kingdom was a wealthy city and abundantly supplied with provisions. It possessed grain, meat, oil, honey and wax. Furthermore, the citizens had many horses and reared cattle of all kinds, as a result they had plenty of butter, milk and flesh, as well as a great store of millet, barley and fruits; all of which was exported to Aden. The port city was so well supplied with victuals that it exported it's surplus to ], ], ] and "All Arabia"" which then was dependent on the supplies/produce from the city which they favoured above all. ] was described as a "Port of much provisions for Aden, and all parts of Arabia and many countries and Kingdoms". ] was a wealthy city and abundantly supplied with provisions. It possessed grain, meat, oil, honey and wax. Furthermore, the citizens had many horses and reared cattle of all kinds, as a result they had plenty of butter, milk and flesh, as well as a great store of millet, barley and fruits; all of which was exported to Aden. The port city was so well supplied with victuals that it exported it's surplus to ], ], ] and "All Arabia" which then was dependent on the supplies/produce from the city which they favoured above all. ] was described as a "Port of much provisions for Aden, and all parts of Arabia and many countries and Kingdoms".


The Principal exports, according the Portuguese writer Corsali, were gold, ivory and slaves. A "great number" of the latter was captured from the ], then were exported through the port of ] to Persia, Arabia, Egypt and India. The Principal exports, according the Portuguese writer Corsali, were gold, ivory and slaves. A "great number" of the latter was captured from the ], then were exported through the port of ] to Persia, Arabia, Egypt and India.


As a result of this flourishing trade, the citizens of ] accordingly lived "extremely well" and the city was well built guarded by many soldiers on both foot and horses. <ref>The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History by Richard Pankhurst - Page 127</ref> As a result of this flourishing trade, the citizens of ] accordingly lived "extremely well" and the city was well built guarded by many soldiers on both foot and horses.{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=127}}


The kingdoms agricultural and other produce was not only abundant but also very cheap according to Maqrizi thirty pounds of meat sold for only half a dirhem, while for only four dirhems you could purchase a bunch of about 100 Damascus grapes.{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=49}}
Historian Al-Umari in his study in 1340's about the history of Adal, the medieval state in western and northern parts of historical Somalia and some related areas, Al-Umari of Cairo states that in the land of Zayla’ (Awdal):


Trade on the upland river valleys themselves connected with the coast to the interior markets. Created a lucrative caravan trade route between Ethiopian interior, the ] highlands, Eastern Lowlands and the coastal cities such as ] and ].<ref>Great Events from History: The Renaissance & early modern era, 1454-1600, Volum 1 By Christina J. Moose Page 94</ref> The trade from the interior was also important for the reason that included gold from the Ethiopian territories in the west, including Damot and an unidentified district called Siham. The rare metal sold for 80 to 120 dirhems per ounce.{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=47}} The whole empire and the wider region was interdependent on each other and formed a single economy and at the same time a cultural unit interconnected with several important trade routes upon which the economy and the welfare of the whole area depended.{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=11}}
<blockquote> “they cultivate two times annually by seasonal rains … The rainfall for the winter is called ‘Bil’ and rainfall for the ‘summer’ is called ‘Karam’ in the language of the people of Zayla.”</blockquote>


The nobility of Adal also apparently had a fair taste for luxury, the commercial relations that existed between the Adal Sultanate and the rulers of the ] allowed Muslims to obtain luxury items that Christian Ethiopians, whose relations with the outside world were still blocked, could not acquire, a Christian document describing ] relates:<blockquote>"And the robes and those of his leaders were adorned with silver and shone on all sides. And the dagger which he carried at his side was richly adorned with gold and precious stones; and his amulet was adorned with drops of gold; and the inscriptions on the amulet were of gold paint. And his parasol came from the land of Syria and it was such beautiful work that those who looked at it marveled, and winged serpents were painted on it."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Fasi |first=M. El |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sdjfwGxt0e0C&dq=sabr+ad-din+Adal&pg=PA622 |title=L'Afrique du VIIe au XIe siècle |date=1990 |publisher=UNESCO |isbn=978-92-3-201709-3 |pages=623 |language=fr |access-date=2024-01-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240331152557/https://books.google.com/books?id=sdjfwGxt0e0C&dq=sabr+ad-din+Adal&pg=PA622 |archive-date=2024-03-31 |url-status=live}}</ref></blockquote>During its existence, Adal had relations and engaged in trade with other polities in ], the ], Europe and ]. Many of the historic cities in the Horn of Africa such as ], ], ] and ] flourished under its reign with ], ]s, ]s, ] and ]s. Adal attained its peak in the 14th century, trading in slaves, ivory and other commodities with ] and kingdoms in Arabia through its chief port of Zeila.<ref name="Lewispd"/> The cities of the empire imported intricately coloured glass bracelets and Chinese ] for palace and home decoration.<ref>The Archaeology of Islam in Sub Saharan Africa, p. 72/73</ref> Adal also used imported currency such as Egyptian dinars and dirhems.{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=8}}
It appears that the historian was referring, in one-way or another, to these still used Somali terms, Karan and Bil. This indicates that the Somali solar calendar citizens of ] was using to farm with at that time was very similar to the one they use today and gives us further insight into the local farming practices during that period. <ref>Said M-Shidad Hussein, The Somali Calendar: An Ancient, Accurate Timekeeping System</ref>

The kingdoms agricultural and other produce was not only abundant but also very cheap according to Maqrizi thirty pounds of meat sold for only half a dirhem, while for only four dirhems you could purchase a bunch of about 100 Damascus grapes. <ref>The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History by Richard Pankhurst - Page 49</ref>

Trade on the upland river valleys themselves connected with the coast to the interior markets. Created a lucrative caravan trade route between Ethiopian interior, the ] highlands, Eastern Lowlands and the coastal cities such as ] and ]. <ref> Great Events from History: The Renaissance & early modern era, 1454-1600, Volum 1 By Christina J. Moose Page 94 </ref>The trade from the interior was also important for the reason that included gold from the Ethiopian territories in the west, including Damot and an unidentified district called Siham. The rare metal sold for 80 to 120 dirhems per ounce. <ref>The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History by Richard Pankhurst - Page 47</ref> The whole empire and the wider region was interdependent on each other and formed a single economy and at the same time a cultural unit interconnected with several important trade routes upon which the economy and the welfare of the whole area depended <ref>The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History by Richard Pankhurst - Page 11 </ref>

During its existence, Adal had relations and engaged in trade with other polities in ], the ], ] and ]. Many of the historic cities in the Horn of Africa such as ], ], ] and ] flourished under its reign with ], ]s, ]s, ] and ]s. Adal attained its peak in the 14th century, trading in slaves, ivory and other commodities with ] and kingdoms in Arabia through its chief port of Zeila.<ref name="Lewispd"/> The cities of the empire imported intricately coloured glass bracelets and Chinese ] for palace and home decoration.<ref>The Archaeology of Islam in Sub Saharan Africa, p. 72/73</ref> Adal also used imported currency such as Egyptian dinars and dirhems. <ref>The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History by Richard Pankhurst page 8 </ref>


==Military== ==Military==
The ] was divided into several sections such as the ] consisting of ], ] and ]s that were commanded by various ]s and ]s. These forces were complemented by a ] force and eventually, later in the empire's history, by ]-] and ]s during the Conquest of Abyssinia. The various divisions were symbolised with a distinct flag.
{{History of Somaliland}}
{{History_of_Ethiopia}}
The Adalite military was divided into several sections such as the ] consisting of ], ] and ]s that were commanded by various ]s and ]s. These forces were complemented by a ] force and eventually, later in the empire's history, by ]-] and ]s during the Conquest of Abyssinia. The various divisions were symbolised with a distinct flag.

Elite unit of military warriors in the Adal army was branded with the title ] or Malachai (Portuguese spelling). The term often became synonymous with Muslims in Ethiopia to outsiders, but contrary to popular beliefs it did not denote a tribe or clan. Reading the Futūḥ al-Ḥabaša, the Malasāy appear as the basic unit of the army of the imām. Unlike the other groups that make up this army, the Malasāy were a group social and not a tribe or a clan. Unlike the Balaw, Somali or Ḥarla, a man Malasāy is not born. He obtained this title after demonstrating his military capabilities. ‘Arab Faqīh gives a relatively precise definition of what he means by "malasāy: <ref>The "Futuh al-Habasa" : the writing of history, war and society in the "Bar Sa'ad ad-din" (Ethiopia, 16th century) by Amélie Chekroun page 183-188 </ref>


Under Imam Ahmed's leadership, the military was reorganized into three flexible units, giving Adal a strategic advantage. This superior organization contrasted sharply with the rigid and poorly commanded Abyssinian forces.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Reid |first1=Richard J. |title=Warfare in African history |date=2012 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge; New York |isbn=978-0521195102 |page=54}}</ref> The first group was the ], the elite unit of military warriors in the Adal army. The title Malassay or Malachai (Portuguese spelling) often became synonymous with Muslims in Ethiopia to outsiders, but contrary to popular beliefs it did not denote a tribe or clan. Reading the Futūḥ al-Ḥabaša, the Malasāy appear as the basic unit of the army of the imām. Unlike the other groups that make up this army, the Malasāy were a group social and not a tribe or a clan. Unlike the Balaw, Somali or Ḥarla, a man Malasāy is not born. He obtained this title after demonstrating his military capabilities. ‘Arab Faqīh gives a relatively precise definition of what he means by "malasāy:
<blockquote> وفرقة الملساي اھل الغزو والجھاد ا c صلي المعتمد عليھم في القتال والصناديد ا c بطال فيھم ا c مام
And the Malasāy troop, who are people of raids and ğihād, worthy men
of confidence, who could be trusted during the fighting, of the army chiefs who not only do not flee from the battlefield but who protect the retreat of his family.


{{blockquote|And the Malasāy troop, who are people of raids and ğihād, worthy men of confidence, who could be trusted during the fighting, of the army chiefs who not only do not flee from the battlefield but who protect the retreat of his family.
(بطال c ا والصناديد.)
The imām was with them.<ref>The "Futuh al-Habasa" : the writing of history, war and society in the "Bar Sa'ad ad-din" (Ethiopia, 16th century) by Amélie Chekroun page 183-188</ref>}}


The second wing consisted entirely of Somalis, commanded by the Imam's brother-in-law ]. The third wing comprised troops from the Afar, Harla, Harari, and Argobba people, with each led by their hereditary leader. During each battle, the wings were separated with one on the right and left, while the Malassay were positioned in the middle. At crucial moments, the Malassay supported both wings and prevented troops from abandoning the field.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Hassen |first1=Mohammed |title=The Oromo of Ethiopia, 1500-1850: with special emphasis on the Gibe region |date=1983 |page=34}}</ref>
The imām was with them. </blockquote>


The Adal soldiers donned elaborate ]s and ] ] made up of ] with overlapping tiers.<ref>Conquest of Abyssinia by Shibab ad-Din pg 43</ref> The ] of Adal wore protective helmets that covered the entire face except for the eyes, and ] on their body, while they harnessed their horses in a similar fashion. In ], ]s were employed to scale buildings and other high positions such as hills and mountains.<ref>Ethiopia: The Land, Its People, History and Culture - Page 42 </ref> The Adal soldiers donned elaborate ]s and ] ] made up of ] with overlapping tiers.<ref>Conquest of Abyssinia by Shibab ad-Din pg 43</ref> The ] of Adal wore protective helmets that covered the entire face except for the eyes, and ] on their body, while they harnessed their horses in a similar fashion. In ], ]s were employed to scale buildings and other high positions such as hills and mountains.<ref>Ethiopia: The Land, Its People, History and Culture - Page 42</ref>


M. Hassan states: M. Hassan states:


{{quote|Arab Faqih makes it very clear that the sedentary agriculturalists population of Harar provided both the leadership in the jihadic war and that they were the majority of the fighters at least during the early days of the jihad. All the four ] appointed by Imam Ahmad were members of the landed Adare (Harari) and Harla hereditary nobility. Of the fifty or so Amirs appointed by Imam Ahmad between 1527 and 1537, the overwhelming majority were members of the hereditary landed Adare or Harla aristocracy.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Hassen|first1=Mohammed|title=Review work Futuh al habasa|journal=International Journal of Ethiopian Studies|page=179|jstor=27828848}}</ref>}} {{blockquote|Arab Faqih makes it very clear that the sedentary agriculturalists population of Harar provided both the leadership in the jihadic war and that they were the majority of the fighters at least during the early days of the jihad. All the four ] appointed by Imam Ahmad were members of the landed Adare (Harari) and Harla hereditary nobility. Of the fifty or so Amirs appointed by Imam Ahmad between 1527 and 1537, the overwhelming majority were members of the hereditary landed Adare or Harla aristocracy.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Hassen|first1=Mohammed|title=Review work Futuh al habasa|journal=International Journal of Ethiopian Studies|page=179|jstor=27828848}}</ref>}}


M. Lewis writes: M. Lewis writes:
{{quote|Somali forces contributed much to the Imām’s victories. Shihāb ad-Dīn, 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 ad-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 is not recorded. Finally, several Dir clans also took part.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Lewis|first1=I.M.|title=The Somali Conquest of Horn of Africa|journal=Journal of African History|date=1960|volume=1|issue=2|page=223|doi=10.1017/S0021853700001808|url=http://docdro.id/y5fTqEI|access-date=18 March 2018}}</ref>}} {{blockquote|Somali forces contributed much to the Imām’s victories. Shihāb ad-Dīn, 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 ad-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 is not recorded. Finally, several Dir clans also took part.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Lewis|first1=I.M.|title=The Somali Conquest of Horn of Africa|journal=Journal of African History|date=1960|volume=1|issue=2|page=223|doi=10.1017/S0021853700001808|s2cid=162301641}}</ref>}}


Ethnic Somalis are stated to be the majority of the army according to the ''Oxford History of Islam'':{{quote|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.<ref name="Esposito">John L. Esposito, editor, ''The Oxford History of Islam'', (Oxford University Press: 2000), p. 501</ref>}} Ethnic Somalis are stated to be the majority of the army according to the ''Oxford History of Islam'':{{blockquote|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.<ref name="Esposito">John L. Esposito, editor, ''The Oxford History of Islam'', (Oxford University Press: 2000), p. 501</ref>}}


According to ]: According to ]:


{{quote|At Shembra-Kuré the issue was determined most nearly by the superiority of Ahmad's cavalry. This consisted of personal followers, carefully chosen from amongst the young men of Harar, who were well trained and experienced. Ahmad had armed his horsemen with good sabres from the markets of Zayla and Arabia. The cavalry included a number of Arabs who had responded to Ahmäd's call for help in what he considered was a holy war against the unbelievers of Ethiopia. Many of these Arabs were especially skilled in the use of the sabre and they probably had shared this skill with the Harari horseman.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Aregay |first1=Merid |title=A Reappraisal of the Impact of Firearms in the History of Warfare in Ethiopia (C. 1500-1800) |year=1980 |journal=Journal of Ethiopian Studies |volume=14 |page=109 |jstor=41965889 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41965889}}</ref>}} {{blockquote|At Shembra-Kuré the issue was determined most nearly by the superiority of Ahmad's cavalry. This consisted of personal followers, carefully chosen from amongst the young men of Harar, who were well trained and experienced. Ahmad had armed his horsemen with good sabres from the markets of Zayla and Arabia. The cavalry included a number of Arabs who had responded to Ahmäd's call for help in what he considered was a holy war against the unbelievers of Ethiopia. Many of these Arabs were especially skilled in the use of the sabre and they probably had shared this skill with the Harari horseman.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Aregay |first1=Merid |title=A Reappraisal of the Impact of Firearms in the History of Warfare in Ethiopia (C. 1500-1800) |year=1980 |journal=Journal of Ethiopian Studies |volume=14 |page=109 |jstor=41965889 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/41965889 |access-date=2021-08-20 |archive-date=2021-05-08 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210508192209/https://www.jstor.org/stable/41965889 |url-status=live }}</ref>}}

==Abyssinian–Adal conflict==
{{main|Ethiopian–Adal war}}
{{More citations needed section|date=February 2014}}
]
The ] was a military conflict between the ] (Abyssinia) and the Adal Sultanate that took place from 1529 until 1543. Abyssinian troops consisted of ], ], ] and ] ethnic groups.<ref>The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History from Ancient Times to the End of the 18th Century pg 188</ref> Adal forces consisted mostly of ], ], ], ], and ] formations, supported by the ].<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Gikes|first1=Patrick|title=Wars in the Horn of Africa and the dismantling of the Somali State|journal=African Studies|date=2002|volume=2|pages=89–102|publisher=University of Lisbon|url=https://cea.revues.org/1280|access-date=7 November 2016}}</ref>

In the mid-1520s, ] ] assumed control of Adal and launched a war against Abyssinia, which was then under the leadership of ] (Lebna Dengel). Supplied by the ] with firearms, Ahmad was able to defeat the Abyssinians at the ] in 1529 and seize control of the wealthy ], though the Abyssinians continued to resist from the highlands. In 1541, the ], who had vested interests in the ], eventually sent aid to the Abyssinians in the form of 400 ]. 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 ] in August that year. However, Portuguese musketry proved decisive in Adal's defeat at the ], near Lake Tana, in February 1543, where Ahmad was killed in battle. The Abyssinians subsequently retook the Amhara plateau and recouped their losses against Adal. The Ottomans, who had their own troubles to deal with in the ], were unable to help Ahmad's successors. When Adal collapsed in 1577, the seat of the Sultanate shifted from Harar to ]<ref>{{cite book|last1=Abir|first1=Mordechai|title=Ethiopia and the Red Sea|date=17 June 2016|publisher=Routledge|page=139|isbn=9781317045465|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BQ5qDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA235|access-date=19 January 2016}}</ref> in the desert region of Afar and a new sultanate began.<ref name ="The shaping of Somali society: reconstructing the history of a pastoral people">{{cite journal | last =Cassanelli | first =Lee | title =The shaping of Somali society: reconstructing the history of a pastoral people | journal =Basic Reference | volume =28 | pages =311 | publisher =University of Pennsylvania | location = USA | year =2007 | url =https://books.google.com/books?id=mlhyAAAAMAAJ&q=adal+sultanate+aussa| doi = 10.1017/S0020743800063145| access-date =2012-04-27}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://journals.openedition.org/cea/1280 |title=Cadernos de Estudos Africanos, "Wars in the Horn of Africa and the dismantling of the Somali State"}}</ref>

==Collapse of the sultanate==
]
After the death of Imam Ahmad, the Adal Sultanate lost most of its territory in Abyssinian lands. In 1550 ] assumed power after he killed Abyssinian emperor ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Button|first1=Richard|title=First Footsteps in East Africa|year=1894|publisher=Tyston and Edwards|page=12|isbn=9780705415002|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Mu0MAAAAIAAJ&q=nur+harar+rule&pg=PA12|access-date=21 January 2016}}</ref> Due to constant Oromo raids both Adal and Abyssinian rulers struggled to consolidate power outside of their realms. The Adal Sultanate subsequently ended due to infighting with tribes.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Abir|first1=Mordechai|title=Ethiopia and the Red Sea|date=28 October 2013|publisher=Routledge|page=139|isbn=9781136280900|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7fArBgAAQBAJ&q=adal+aussa+sultanate&pg=PA139|access-date=21 January 2016}}</ref> The Adal Sultanate was weakened after the death of Emir Nur due to the Oromo raids in 1577 and its headquarter were relocated to the oasis of ] in the Danakil desert under the leadership of Mohammed Jasa. The ] declined gradually in the next century and was destroyed by the local ] nomads in 1672.

==Oromo expansion==
{{main|Oromo migrations}}
After the conflict between Adal and Abyssinia had subsided, the conquest of the highland regions of Abyssinia and Adal by the ] (namely, through military expansion and the installation of the ] socio-political system) ended in the contraction of both powers and changed regional dynamics for centuries to come. In essence, what had happened is that the populations of the highlands had not ceased to exist as a result of the Gadaa expansion, but were simply incorporated into a different socio-political system.


==Legacy== ==Legacy==
] at ] ]] ] at ] ]]


The Adal Sultanate left behind many structures and artefacts from its heyday. Numerous such historical edifices and items are found in the northwestern Awdal province of Somaliland, as well as other parts of the Horn region where the polity held sway.<ref name="Tias">{{cite book|last1=University of Ghana, Institute of African Studies|title=Research review, Volumes 3–4|date=1966|publisher=The Institute|page=67|url=https://www.google.com/books?id=nPUsAQAAIAAJ|access-date=6 October 2014}}</ref> The Adal Sultanate left behind many structures and artefacts from its heyday. Numerous such historical edifices and items are found in the northwestern Awdal province of Somaliland, as well as other parts of the Horn region where the polity held sway.<ref name="Tias">{{cite book|last1=University of Ghana, Institute of African Studies|title=Research review, Volumes 3–4|date=1966|publisher=The Institute|page=67|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nPUsAQAAIAAJ|access-date=6 October 2014|archive-date=26 July 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200726154318/https://books.google.com/books?id=nPUsAQAAIAAJ|url-status=live}}</ref> According to archaeologist Jorge Rodriguez, substances located in western northern ] indicate outposts were mainly established during the Adal Sultanate, and don't predate the ruins found in ancient Islamic regions of ] or ] plateau, this he states reaffirms the notion that modern eastern ] is where the principal ] kingdoms materialized.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rodriguez |first1=Jorge |title=Urban mosques in the Horn of Africa during the medieval period |journal=Revue des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée |year=2023 |issue=153 |pages=37–64 |quote="In general, the materials found in medieval sites throughout western Somaliland show a consistent chronology which would date their construction to the Sultanate of Barr Saʿd al-Dīn (c. 1415-1573). The settlements located in the Ifāt and Harar regions have older chronologies (Fauvelle-Aymar & Hirsch, 2011: 36; Insoll, 2021: 498; Pradines 2017: 16), something that fits well with their position in a region with a much older Muslim tradition from which there emerged the main Muslim polities in the Horn of Africa." |publisher=Aix-Marseille Université |doi=10.4000/remmm.19266 |url=https://journals.openedition.org/remmm/19266 |doi-access=free |hdl=10261/349840 |hdl-access=free |access-date=2023-08-25 |archive-date=2023-08-25 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230825041334/https://journals.openedition.org/remmm/19266 |url-status=live }}</ref>


Archaeological excavations in the late 19th century and early 20th century at over fourteen sites in the vicinity of ] in modern-day northwestern Somaliland unearthed, among other artefacts, silver coins identified as having been derived from ] (1468–89), the eighteenth ] ] ] of ].<ref name="Tias"/><ref name="Tgj">Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain), ''The Geographical Journal'', Volume 87, (Royal Geographical Society: 1936), p.301.</ref> Most of these finds are associated with the medieval Adal Sultanate.<ref name="Eoa">Bernard Samuel Myers, ed., ''Encyclopedia of World Art'', Volume 13, (McGraw-Hill: 1959), p.xcii.</ref> They were sent to the ] for preservation shortly after their discovery.<ref name="Tgj"/> Archaeological excavations in the late 19th century and early 20th century at over fourteen sites in the vicinity of ] in modern-day northwestern Somaliland unearthed, among other artefacts, silver coins identified as having been derived from ] (1468–89), the eighteenth ] ] ] of ].<ref name="Tias"/><ref name="Tgj">Royal Geographical Society (Great Britain), ''The Geographical Journal'', Volume 87, (Royal Geographical Society: 1936), p.301.</ref> Most of these finds are associated with the medieval Adal Sultanate.<ref name="Eoa">Bernard Samuel Myers, ed., ''Encyclopedia of World Art'', Volume 13, (McGraw-Hill: 1959), p.xcii.</ref> They were sent to the ] for preservation shortly after their discovery.<ref name="Tgj"/>


]]]
In 1950, the ] protectorate government commissioned an archaeological survey in twelve desert towns in present-day ], near the border with Ethiopia. According to the expedition team, the sites yielded the most salient evidence of late medieval period affluence. They contained ruins of what were evidently once large cities belonging to the Adal Sultanate. Towns such as ], ], ], ] and Gogesa, featured between 200 and 300 stone houses. The walls of certain sites still reportedly stood 18 meters high. Excavations in the area yielded 26 ]s, unlike the ] pieces that were more common in polities below the Horn region. The earliest of these recovered coins had been minted by Sultan ] (1382–99), also of the Egyptian Burji dynasty, and the latest were again Sultan Qaitbay issues. All of the pieces had been struck in either ] or ]. A few ]s were also discovered during the expedition, making the area the only place in the wider region to yield such pieces. Besides coinage, high quality ] was recovered from the Adal sites. The fine ] ware was found either lying on the surface, or buried at a depth of seven and a half inches, or ensconced within dense ]s four to five feet high. Among the artefacts were grey granular ]s with a cracked blue-green or sea-green glaze, and white crystalline fragments with an uncracked green-white glaze. Some ] ware was also discovered, including many early Ming blue-and-white bowl sherds. They were adorned with tendril scrolls on a bluish ground and ornamented with black spotting, while other bowls had floral patterns outlined by grey or black-blue designs. Additionally, a few Ming red-and-white sherds were found, as well as white porcelain fragments with bluish highlights. The Adal sites appeared to reach an ] terminus at the ], named for Sultan ] of the Ifat Sultanate.<ref name="Konczacki">{{cite book|last1=Zbigniew A. Konczacki, Janina M. Konczacki (ed.)|title=An Economic History of Tropical Africa: The Pre-colonial Period|date=1977|publisher=Psychology Press|isbn=0714629197|pages=|url=https://archive.org/details/economichistoryo0001unse/page/233|access-date=2 November 2014}}</ref>
In 1950, the ] protectorate government commissioned an archaeological survey in twelve desert towns in present-day ], near the border with Ethiopia. According to the expedition team, the sites yielded the most salient evidence of late medieval period affluence. They contained ruins of what were evidently once large cities belonging to the Adal Sultanate. Towns such as ], ], ], ] and Gogesa, featured between 200 and 300 stone houses. The walls of certain sites still reportedly stood 18 meters high. Excavations in the area yielded 26 ]s, unlike the ] pieces that were more common in polities below the Horn region. The earliest of these recovered coins had been minted by Sultan ] (1382–99), also of the Egyptian Burji dynasty, and the latest were again Sultan Qaitbay issues. All of the pieces had been struck in either ] or ]. A few ]s were also discovered during the expedition, making the area the only place in the wider region to yield such pieces. Besides coinage, high quality ] was recovered from the Adal sites. The fine ] ware was found either lying on the surface, or buried at a depth of seven and a half inches, or ensconced within dense ]s four to five feet high. Among the artefacts were grey granular ]s with a cracked blue-green or sea-green glaze, and white crystalline fragments with an uncracked green-white glaze. Some ] ware was also discovered, including many early Ming blue-and-white bowl sherds. They were adorned with tendril scrolls on a bluish ground and ornamented with black spotting, while other bowls had floral patterns outlined by grey or black-blue designs. Additionally, a few Ming red-and-white sherds were found, as well as white porcelain fragments with bluish highlights. The Adal sites appeared to reach an ] terminus at the ], named for Sultan ] of the Ifat Sultanate.<ref name="Konczacki">{{cite book|editor1=Zbigniew A. Konczacki|editor2=Janina M. Konczacki|title=An Economic History of Tropical Africa: The Pre-colonial Period|date=1977|publisher=Psychology Press|isbn=0714629197|pages=|url=https://archive.org/details/economichistoryo0001unse/page/233|access-date=2 November 2014}}</ref>


Additionally, local tradition identifies the archaeological site of ] in central Ethiopia as ''Yegragn Dingay'' ("Gran's stone") in reference to Imam Al-Ghazi. According to Joussaume (1995), who led archaeological work there, the site is relatively recent. It has been dated to between the 11th and 13th centuries CE. Tiya contains a number of ]ic pillars, including anthropomorphic and non-anthropomorphic/non-phallic ]. Flat in form, these structures are characterized by distinctive, elaborate decorations, among which are swords, a standing human figure with arms akimbo, and plant-like symbols.<ref name="Fukui">{{cite book|last1=Fukui|first1=Katsuyoshi|title=Ethiopia in broader perspective: papers of the XIIIth International Conference of Ethiopian Studies Kyoto 12–17 December 1997|date=1997|publisher=Shokado Book Sellers|isbn=4879749761|page=370|url=https://www.google.com/books?id=7KpyAAAAMAAJ|access-date=23 December 2014}}</ref> Additionally, local tradition identifies the archaeological site of ] in central Ethiopia as ''Yegragn Dingay'' ("Gran's stone") in reference to Imam Al-Ghazi. According to Joussaume (1995), who led archaeological work there, the site is relatively recent. It has been dated to between the 11th and 13th centuries CE. Tiya contains a number of ]ic pillars, including anthropomorphic and non-anthropomorphic/non-phallic ]. Flat in form, these structures are characterized by distinctive, elaborate decorations, among which are swords, a standing human figure with arms akimbo, and plant-like symbols.<ref name="Fukui">{{cite book|last1=Fukui|first1=Katsuyoshi|title=Ethiopia in broader perspective: papers of the XIIIth International Conference of Ethiopian Studies Kyoto 12–17 December 1997|date=1997|publisher=Shokado Book Sellers|isbn=4879749761|page=370|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7KpyAAAAMAAJ|access-date=23 December 2014|archive-date=12 December 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151212043439/https://books.google.com/books?id=7KpyAAAAMAAJ|url-status=live}}</ref>


==Sultans of Adal== ==Rulers==
{| class="wikitable" {| class="wikitable"
|- |-
Line 226: Line 189:
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ] | style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1424–1433 | style=white-space:nowrap| 1424–1433
| He increased the riches of Adal, brought numerous land under its rule and during his reign a multitude of Amhara Christians embraced Islam. He won important battles against the Abyssinians defeating them at Bale, Yedeya and Jazja before his forces being defeated after an exhausted puruit back to protect the capital. | He increased the riches of Adal, brought numerous land under its rule and during his reign a multitude of Amhara Christians embraced Islam. He won important battles against the Abyssinians and raided deep into their interior as far as the ] before his forces being defeated after an exhausted pursuit back to protect the capital. Emperor Yeshaq would also die in battle during his Adal campaign.
|- |-
| 4 | 4
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ] | style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1433–1445 | style=white-space:nowrap| 1433–1445
| Son of SaʿadadDīn Aḥmed, known to the Abyssinians as "Arwe Badlay" ("Badlay the Monster"). Badlay turned the tide of war against the Abyssinians and decisively defeated the forces of Emperor Yeshaq and expanded the power & reach of Adal. Manage to capture the province of Bale and brought numerous Christian land under his rult. Badlay founded a new capital at Dakkar in the Adal region, near Harar. He was killed in battle after he had launched a jihad to push the Abyssinians back out of Dawaro. | Son of SaʿadadDīn Aḥmed, known to the Abyssinians as "Arwe Badlay" ("Badlay the Monster"). Badlay turned the tide of war against the Abyssinians and decisively defeated the forces of Emperor Yeshaq and expanded the power & reach of Adal to the entire northern seaboard. Managed to capture Abyssinian frontier provinces and brought numerous Christian land under his rult. Badlay founded a new capital at Dakkar in the Adal region, near Harar. He was killed in battle after he had launched a jihad to invade and occupy Abyssinia after the ] an Adal tributary state was occupied by emperor ].
|- |-
| 5 | 5
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ] | style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1445–1472 | style=white-space:nowrap| 1445–1472
| Son of AḥmedudDīn "Badlay" SaʿadadDīn, Maḥamed asked for help from the Mameluk Sultanate of Egypt in 1452, though this assistance was not forthcoming. He ended up signing a very short-lived truce with Baeda Maryam. | Son of AḥmedudDīn "Badlay" SaʿadadDīn, Maḥamed asked for help from the Mameluk Sultanate of Egypt in 1452, though this assistance was not forthcoming. He ended up signing a very short-lived truce with Baeda Maryam which was nullified by his son Usman who subsequently defeated the emperors troops in battle.
|- |-
| 6 | 6
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ] | style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1472–1488 | style=white-space:nowrap| 1472–1488
| Son of Maḥamed AḥmedudDīn, he was attacked by Emperor Eskender of Abyssinia in 1479, who sacked Dakkar and destroyed much of the city, though the Abyssinians failed to occupy the city and were ambushed on the way home with heavy losses and no more incursions happened for the remainder of Eskender's reign. | Son of Maḥamed AḥmedudDīn, he was attacked by Emperor ] of Abyssinia in 1479, who sacked Dakkar and destroyed much of the city, though the Abyssinians failed to occupy the city and were ambushed on the way home with heavy losses and no more incursions happened for the remainder of Eskender's reign. Eskender and his succeeding brother ] would later be killed in battle against emir Mahfuz's raiding parties.
|- |-
| 7 | 7
Line 249: Line 212:
|- |-
| 8 | 8
| style=white-space:nowrap| ] | style=white-space:nowrap| Emir ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1518–1519 | style=white-space:nowrap| 1518–1525
| During his reign conflict ensued between the Amīrs and the Sultans for 7 years. Abun was de facto ruler of Adal due to his popularity in the state defending the frontier against Abyssinian raiding parties, this popularity would lead to resentment from the Adal sultan.
| Seized the throne, sparking a conflict between the Karanle and Walashma
|- |-
| 9 | 9
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ] | style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1518–1526 | style=white-space:nowrap| 1525–1526
| He killed Garād Abūn and restored the Walashma dynasty, but Garād Abūn's cousin Imām Aḥmed Gurēy avenged his cousin's death and killed him. While Garād Abūn ruled in Dakkar, Abūbakar Maḥamed established himself at Harar in 1520, and this is often cited as when the capital moved. Abūbakar Maḥamed was the last Walashma sultan to have any real power. | He killed Garād Abūn but Garād Abūn's cousin Imām Aḥmed avenged his cousin's death and killed him. While Garād Abūn ruled in Harar, Abūbakar Maḥamed was centered in Dakkar however after killing Garad Abun, Abubakar moved the Adal Sultanate capital to Harar in 1520.
|- |-
| 10 | 10
| style=white-space:nowrap| ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1519–1525
| Successor to Maḥamed Abūbakar Maḥfūẓ and the Karanle party of the struggle for the throne.
|-
| 11
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ] | style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1526–1553 | style=white-space:nowrap| 1526–1553
| Son of Maḥamed ʿAsharadDīn, Imām Aḥmed Gurēy put Maḥamed ʿAsharadDīn's young son ʿUmarDīn on the throne as puppet king in Imām Aḥmed Gurēy's capital at Harar. This essentially is the end of the Walashma dynasty as a ruling dynasty in all but name, though the dynasty hobbled on in a ] capacity. Many king lists don't even bother with Walashma rulers after this and just list Imām Aḥmed Gurēy and then Amīr Nūr Mujahid. | Son of Maḥamed ʿAsharadDīn, Imām Aḥmed put Maḥamed ʿAsharadDīn's young son ʿUmarDīn on the throne as puppet king in Imām Aḥmed's capital at Harar. This essentially is the end of the Walashma dynasty as a ruling dynasty in all but name, though the dynasty hobbled on in a ] capacity. Many king lists don't even bother with Walashma rulers after this and just list Imām Aḥmed and then Amīr Nūr Mujahid.
|- |-
| 12 | 11
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ] | style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1553–1555 | style=white-space:nowrap| 1553–1555
| Son of ʿUmarDīn Maḥamed | Son of ʿUmarDīn Maḥamed
|- |-
| 13 | 12
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ] | style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1555–1559 | style=white-space:nowrap| 1555–1559
| Son of ʿUmarDīn Maḥamed, last of the Walashma Sultans, assisted Amīr Nūr Mujahid in his attempt to retake Dawaro. He was killed defending Harar from Emperor Gelawdewos, ending the dynasty. | Son of ʿUmarDīn Maḥamed, last of the Walashma Sultans, assisted Amīr Nūr Mujahid in his attempt to retake Dawaro. He was killed defending Harar from Emperor Gelawdewos, ending the dynasty.
|-
| 13
| style=white-space:nowrap| Amīr ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1559–1567
| The Amir of Harar. The walls that surround Harar were built during his reign and he had convinced the people of Harar (the Harla) to abandon their clan and tribal identities and become one people, the Harari nation. Emperor ] was defeated in battle and killed by emir Nur at the ]
|-
| 14
| style=white-space:nowrap| Amīr ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1567–1569
| A former Abyssinian slave of Amīr Nūr, he was murdered shortly after becoming Sultan.
|-
| 15
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1569–1571
| Son of Wazir ʿAbbās Abūn and grandson of Garād Abūn ʿAdādshe
|-
| 16
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1571–1572
| Son of Amīr ʿIsmān AlḤabashi
|-
| 17
| style=white-space:nowrap| Sulṭān ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1572–1576
| Grandson of Amīr ʿIsmān AlḤabashi. He was executed by Emperor ] after the ]. The Harari military was decimated by Ethiopian forces ending Adal's aggression towards Ethiopia permanently. The Oromo simultaneously attacked several villages in Hararghe while the main Harar army was away leading to further weakening of the sultanate.{{sfn|Pankhurst|1997|p=375}}
|-
| 18
| style=white-space:nowrap| Amir ]
| style=white-space:nowrap| 1576–1577
| Son of Sulṭān Maḥamed Nāssir.<ref name="History of Harar & Harari" /> He successfully defeated several Oromo invasions and reclaimed territory including ] and ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29226/1/10731321.pdf |page=207 |title=The Oromo of Ethiopia 1500-1800 |access-date=2021-09-07 |archive-date=2020-02-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200213003344/https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/29226/1/10731321.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>
|-
| 19
| Imām ]
| 1577
| A relative of ], he moved the capital to Awsa and founded the Imāmātē of Awsa. He was killed in battle with the Oromo in 1583.
|} |}

=== Family tree ===

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{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | |001 |
001=''']'''<br><small>''Sultan of Ifat''<br>{{r.|1386/7|1402/3}}</small>}}

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{{Tree chart|border=1|001 | |002 | |003 | |004 | |005 |
001=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1415|1422/3}}</small>|
002=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1422/3|1424}}</small>|
003=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1424|1433}}</small>|
004=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1433|1445}}</small>|
005=Abu Bakr<br>Sa'ad al-Din}}

{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | | | | | | |!| | | |!| |}}

{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | | | | | |001 | |002 |
001=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1445|1472}}</small>|
002=Azhar<br>Abu Bakr}}

{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | | | | | | |!| | | |!| |}}

{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | | | | | |001 | |002 |
001=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1472|1488}}</small>|
002=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1488|1518}}</small>}}

{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | | | | | | |,|-|-|-|(| |}}

{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | | | | | |001 | |002 |
001=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1525|1526}}</small>|
002=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1526|1553}}</small>}}

{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | | | | | | |,|-|-|-|(| |}}

{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | | | | | |001 | |002 |
001=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1553|1555}}</small>|
002=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1555|1559}}</small>}}

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{{Chart top|width=100%|collapsed=no|Harari Emirs}}

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{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | | |F|~|~|~|~|~|~|7| |}}

{{Tree chart|border=1| | | | | | | |001 | | | | | |:| | |002 |
001=Ibrahim|
002=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1518|1525}}</small>}}

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{{Tree chart|border=1|001 |y|002 | | | | |!| | | |:| | |003 |
001=Mujahid<br>ibn Ali|
002=daughter|
003=Abbas Abun|}}

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002=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1569|1571}}</small>}}

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001=''']'''<br><small>{{r.|1550|1567}}</small>|
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==See also== ==See also==
*], administrative Adal title
*], administrative Adal title
*], religious Adal title
* ] * ]
*] *]


==Notes== ==Notes==
{{reflist|30em}} {{reflist}}

;Works cited
*{{cite book|last1=Elrich|first1=Haggai|date=2001|title=The Cross and the River: Ethiopia, Egypt, and the Nile|location=Boulder, CO|publisher =Lynne Rienner|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mhCN2qo43jkC&pg=PA36|isbn=978-1-55587-970-9}}
* {{Cite book |last=Pankhurst |first=Richard |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zpYBD3bzW1wC |title=The Ethiopian Borderlands: Essays in Regional History from Ancient Times to the End of the 18th Century |year=1997 |publisher=The Red Sea Press |isbn=9780932415196 |language=en}}
*{{cite book|last1=Tamrat|first1=Taddesse|author1-link=Taddesse Tamrat|date=1977|chapter= Ethiopia, the Red Sea and the Horn|editor1-last=Oliver|editor1-first=Roland|editor1-link=Roland Oliver|title=The Cambridge History of Africa. Volume 3: from c. 1050 to c. 1600|location=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press|pages=98–182|isbn=978-0-521-20981-6}}
*{{cite book|last1=Whiteway|first1=Richard Stephen|date=1902|title=The Portuguese Expedition to Abyssinia in 1541–1543 as Narrated by Castanhoso|location=London|publisher=Hakluyt Society|url=https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_P39JAAAAYAAJ}}


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Latest revision as of 12:06, 1 January 2025

1415–1577 Muslim sultanate in the Horn of Africa This article is about the sultanate in the Horn of Africa. For the historic region, see Adal (historical region).

This article contains too many quotations. Please help summarize the quotations. Consider transferring direct quotations to Wikiquote or excerpts to Wikisource. (April 2024)
Sultanate of Adalسلطنة عدل (Arabic)
1415–1577
Flag of Adal The combined three banners used by Ahmad al-Ghazi's forces
The Adal Sultanate in c. 1540The Adal Sultanate in c. 1540
Capital
Official languagesArabic
Common languages
Religion
GovernmentKingdom
Sultan 
• 1415–1423 (first) Sabr ad-Din III
• 1577 (last) Muhammad Gasa
Historical eraMiddle Ages
• Established 1415
• Sabr ad-Din III returns from exile in Yemen 1415
• War with Yeshaq I 1415–1429
• Succession Crisis 1518–1526
• Ethiopian–Adal war 1529–1543
• Disestablished 1577
CurrencyAshrafi
Preceded by Succeeded by
Sultanate of Ifat
Imamate of Aussa
Today part of

The Adal Sultanate, also known as the Adal Empire or Bar Saʿad dīn (alt. spelling Adel Sultanate, Adal Sultanate) (Arabic: سلطنة عدل), was a medieval Sunni Muslim Empire which was located in the Horn of Africa. It was founded by Sabr ad-Din III on the Harar plateau in Adal after the fall of the Sultanate of Ifat. The kingdom flourished c. 1415 to 1577. At its height, the polity under Sultan Badlay controlled the territory stretching from Cape Guardafui in Somalia to the port city of Suakin in Sudan. The Adal Empire maintained a robust commercial and political relationship with the Ottoman Empire. Sultanate of Adal was alternatively known as the federation of Zeila.

Etymology

Adal is believed to be an abbreviation of Havilah. Eidal or Aw Abdal, was the Emir of Harar in the eleventh century which the lowlands outside the city of Harar is named. In the thirteenth century, the Arab writer al-Dimashqi refers to the city of Zeila, by its Somali name "Awdal" (Somali: "Awdal"). The modern Awdal region of Somaliland, which was part of the Adal Sultanate, bears the kingdom's name.

Locally the empire was known to the Muslims as Bar Sa'ad ad-din meaning "The country of Sa'ad ad-din" in reference to the Sultan Sa'ad ad-Din II, who was killed in Zeila while fighting the Ethiopian Emperor Dawit I.

History

Early history

Main article: Adal (historical region)

Adal (also Awdal, Adl, or Adel) was situated east of the province of Ifat and was a general term for a region of lowlands inhabited by Muslims. It was used ambiguously in the medieval era to indicate the Muslim inhabited low land portion east of the Ethiopian Empire. Including north of the Awash River towards Lake Abbe as well as the territory between Shewa and Zeila on the coast of Somaliland. According to Ewald Wagner, Adal region was historically the area stretching from Zeila to Harar.

In 1288, the region of Adal was conquered by the Ifat Sultanate. Despite being incorporated into the Ifat Sultanate, Adal managed to maintain a source of independence under Walashma rule, alongside the provinces of Gidaya, Dawaro, Sawans, Bali, and Fatagar. In 1332, Adal was invaded by the Ethiopian Emperor Amda Seyon I. His soldiers were said to have ravaged the province.

In the fourteenth century Haqq ad-Din II transferred Ifat's capital to the Harar plateau thus he is regarded by some to be the true founder of the Adal Sultanate. In the late 14th century, the Ethiopian Emperor Dawit I collected a large army, branded the Muslims of the surrounding area "enemies of the Lord", and invaded Adal. After much war, Adal's troops were defeated in 1403 or 1410 (under Emperor Dawit I or Emperor Yeshaq I, respectively), during which the Walashma ruler, Sa'ad ad-Din II, was captured and executed in Zeila, which was sacked. His children and the remainder of the Walashma dynasty would flee to Yemen where they would live in exile until 1415. According to Harari tradition numerous Argobba had fled Ifat and settled around Harar in the Aw Abdal lowlands during their conflict with Abyssinia in the fifteenth century, a gate was thus named after them called the gate of Argobba.

Rise of the Sultanate

In 1415, Sabr ad-Din III, the eldest son of Sa'ad ad-Din II, would return to Adal from his exile in Arabia to restore his father's throne. He would proclaim himself "king of Adal" after his return from Yemen to the Harar plateau and established his new capital at Dakkar. Sabr ad-Din III and his brothers would defeat an army of 20,000 men led by an unnamed commander hoping to restore the "lost Amhara rule". The victorious king then returned to his capital, but gave the order to his many followers to continue and extend the war against the Christians. The Emperor of Ethiopia Tewodros I was soon killed by the Adal Sultanate upon the return of Sa'ad ad-Din's heirs to the Horn of Africa. Sabr ad-Din III died a natural death and was succeeded by his brother Mansur ad-Din who invaded the capital and royal seat of the Solomonic Empire and drove Emperor Dawit I to Yedaya where according to al-Maqrizi, Sultan Mansur destroyed a Solomonic army and killed the Emperor. He then advanced to the mountains of Mokha, where he encountered a 30,000 strong Solomonic army. The Adalite soldiers surrounded their enemies and for two months besieged the trapped Solomonic soldiers until a truce was declared in Mansur's favour. During this period, Adal emerged as a centre of Muslim resistance against the expanding Christian Abyssinian kingdom. Adal would thereafter govern all of the territory formerly ruled by the Ifat Sultanate, as well as the land further east all the way to Cape Guardafui, according to Leo Africanus.

The Sultan of Adal (right) and his troops battling King Yagbea-Sion and his men. From Le Livre des Merveilles, 15th century.

Later on in the campaign, the Adalites were struck by a catastrophe when Sultan Mansur and his brother Muhammad were captured in battle by the Solomonids. Mansur was immediately succeeded by the youngest brother of the family Jamal ad-Din II. Sultan Jamal reorganized the army into a formidable force and defeated the Solomonic armies at Bale, Yedeya and Jazja. Emperor Yeshaq I responded by gathering a large army and invaded the cities of Yedeya and Jazja, but was repulsed by the soldiers of Jamal. Following this success, Jamal organized another successful attack against the Solomonic forces and inflicted heavy casualties in what was reportedly the largest Adalite army ever fielded. As a result, Yeshaq and his men fled to the Blue Nile region over the next five months, while Jamal ad Din's forces pursued them and looted much gold on the way, although no engagement ensued.

After returning home, Jamal sent his brother Ahmad with the Christian battle-expert Harb Jaush to successfully attack the province of Dawaro. Despite his losses, Emperor Yeshaq was still able to continue field armies against Jamal. Sultan Jamal continued to advance further into the Abyssinian heartland. However, Jamal on hearing of Yeshaq's plan to send several large armies to attack three different areas of Adal (including the capital), returned to Adal, where he fought the Solomonic forces at Harjai and, according to al-Maqrizi, this is where the Emperor Yeshaq died in battle. The young Sultan Jamal ad-Din II at the end of his reign had outperformed his brothers and forefathers in the war arena and became the most successful ruler of Adal to date. Within a few years, however, Jamal was assassinated by either disloyal friends or cousins around 1432 or 1433, and was succeeded by his brother Badlay ibn Sa'ad ad-Din. Sultan Badlay continued the campaigns of his younger brother and began several successful expeditions against the Christian empire. He reconquered Bali and began preparations of a major Adalite offensive into the Ethiopian Highlands. He successfully collected funding from surrounding Muslim kingdoms as far away as the Sultanate of Mogadishu. However, this ambitious campaign ended in disaster when Emperor Zara Yaqob defeated Sultan Badlay at the Battle of Gomit and pursued the retreating Adalites all the way to the Awash River.

Following the defeat and death of Badlay ibn Sa'ad ad-Din at the Battle of Gomit, the next Sultan of Adal, Muhammad ibn Badlay, submitted to Emperor Baeda Maryam I and started paying annual tribute to the Ethiopian Empire with which he secure peace. Adal's Emirs, who administered the provinces, interpreted the agreement as a betrayal of their independence and a retreat from the polity's long-standing policy of resistance to Abyssinian incursions. Emir Laday Usman of Harar subsequently marched to Dakkar and seized power in 1471. However, Usman did not dismiss the Sultan from office, but instead gave him a ceremonial position while retaining the real power for himself. Adal now came under the leadership of a powerful Emir who governed from the palace of a nominal Sultan. Usman would route emperor Baeda Maryam's troops in battle. Historian Mohammed Hassen states Adal Sultans had lost control of the state to Harar's aristocracy.

A soldier of Imam Ahmad armed with a musket and a cannon

Emperor Na'od and Sultan Muhammad ibn Azhar ad-Din tried to remain at peace, but their efforts were nullified by the raids which Emir Mahfuz constantly made into Christian territory. Na'od who was determined to eliminate this threat, organized a large army and led it against the Emir, although the Emperor was victorious he was eventually killed in battle against the Adalites. Emperor Dawit II (Lebna Dengel) would soon succeed the throne, Mahfuz having recovered from his defeat renewed raids against the frontier provinces. He was stimulated by emissaries from Arabia who proclaimed the jihad (holy war), presented him with a green standard and brought in arms and trained men from Yemen. In 1516, Emir Mahfuz would then launch an invasion of Fatagar, Lebna Dengel was prepared and organized a successful ambush, the Adalites were defeated and Mahfuz was killed in battle. Lebna Dengel then moved into Adal where he sacked the city of Dakkar. Around the same time a Portuguese fleet surprised Zeila whilst its garrison was away with Mahfuz, the Portuguese then burnt down the port city.

After the victory of Lebna Dengel, the internal weaknesses of the Adal Sultanate soon revealed themselves. The older generation of the Muslims headed by the Walashma, indifferent to religion and ready to come to terms with Abyssinia, were staunchly opposed by the Harari and Harla religious aristocracy led by fanatic warlike emirs. The Sultan Muhammad was assassinated in 1518 and Adal was torn apart by intestinal struggles in which five sultans succeeded each other in two years. But at last, a matured and powerful leader called Garad Abun Adashe assumed power and brought order out of chaos. However, Sultan Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad, who had transferred the capital from Dakkar to Harar in 1520, profiting off the prestige that the hereditary monarchy still held, recruited bands of Somali nomads, ambushed Abun Adashe at Zeila and killed him in 1525. Many people went to join the force of a young rebel named Ahmad ibn Ibrahim, who claimed revenge for Garad Abogn. Ahmad did not immediately attempt conclusions with Sultan Abu Bakr, but retired to Hubat to build up his strength. Ahmad ibn Ibrahim would eventually kill Sultan Abu Bakr in battle, and replaced him with Abu Bakr's younger brother Umar Din as his puppet. Once in complete control, he then could then turn to the task he felt himself was divinely appoint to undertake, the conquest of Abyssinia. Fervor for the jihad had not yet overcome the forces inherent in nomadic life, Ahmad had to undertake several campaigns to restore order in the Somali territory which would constitute his manpower reserve. He then organized a heterogenous mass of tribes into a powerful army, inflamed by the fanatical zeal of jihad.

Conquest of Abyssinia

Main article: Ethiopian–Adal war
Early 20th century folk drawing of Cristóvão da Gama and Ahmad Gragn's deaths.

According to sixteenth century Adal writer Arab Faqīh, in 1529 Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi finally decided to embark on a conquest of Abyssinia, he soon met the Abyssinians at the Battle of Shimbra Kure where he would win a decisive victory. But his nomads where unreliable and difficult to control, to Ahmad's frustration some of his Somali warriors would disperse back to their homelands after acquiring much plunder. At the same time, he faced opposition from his Harari troops who dreaded the potential consequences of the Muslim base relocating to Abyssinia. He then returned to Harar to reconstruct his forces and eliminate the tribal allegiances in his army, two years later he was able to organize a definite and permeant occupation of Abyssinia. From then the story of the conquest is a succession of victories, burnings and massacres. In 1531 Dawaro and Shewa were occupied, Bete Amhara and Lasta in 1533. In 1535 Ahmad, in control of the east and center of Abyssinia invaded Tigray where he encountered fierce resistance and suffered some reserves, but his advance was not stopped, his armies reached the coasts of Medri Bahri and Kassala where they made contact with the Muslim Beja tribes of the north that had formerly paid tribute to the Ethiopian Empire. Emperor Dawit II (Lebna Dengel) became a hunted fugitive, and harried from Tigray to Begemder to Gojjam, constantly pursued by the Adalites. In this period Adal Sultanate occupied a territory stretching from Zeila to Massawa as well as the Abyssinian inlands.

The Adalites were passionately interested in converting newly occupied territories. The impression given in the Muslim chronicles is that almost all of the Christian Abyssinians had embraced Islam out of expediency. Among them was the governor of Ifat who wrote to the Imam:

I was once a Muslim, the son of a Muslim, but the polytheists captured me and made me a Christian. Yet at heart I remain steadfast in the religion and now I seek the protection of Allah, His prophet, and yourself. If you accept my repentance and do not punish for what I have done I will return to Allah whilst these armies that are under my command I will deceive them so that they will come to you and embrace Islam.

However, in the integral regions of the Ethiopian Empire, such as Bete Amhara, Tigray and Shewa, the local population bitterly resisted the Adalite occupation. Some preferred death over denying their faith, among them were two Amhara chiefs who were brought before the Imam in Debre Berhan. Arab Faqīh describes the encounter:

They captured two Christian chiefs and sent them to the Imam's encampment and presented them before him. He said "What is the matter with you that you haven't become Muslims when the whole country was Islamized?" They replied "We don't want to become Muslims." The Imam said "Our judgment on you is that your heads be cut off." The two Christians replied "Very well!" The Imam was surprised at their reply and ordered them to be executed.

In 1541 a small Portuguese contingent landed in Massawa and soon all of Tigray declared for the monarchy, the Imam was defeated in several major engagements by the Portuguese and was forced to flee to Raya Kobo with his heavily demoralized followers. He sent a request to the Ottoman Empire for reinforcements of Turkish, Albanian and Arab musketeers to stabilize his troops. He then took the offensive attacking the Portuguese camp at Wolfa where he killed their commander, Cristóvão da Gama, and 200 of their rank and file. The Imam then dismissed most of his foreign contingent and returned to his headquarters at Lake Tana. The surviving Portuguese were able to meet up with Gelawdewos and his army at Siemen. The Emperor did not hesitate to take the offensive and won a major victory at the Battle of Wayna Daga when the fate of Abyssinia was decided by the death of the Imam and the flight of his army. The invasion force collapsed like a house of cards and all the Abyssinians who had been cowed by the invaders returned to their former allegiance, the reconquest of Christian territories proceeded without encountering any effective opposition.

Collapse of the sultanate

Main article: Oromo migrations
The surrounding walls of the fortified city of Harar built by Nur ibn Mujahid

After the death of Imam Ahmad, the Adal Sultanate lost most of its territory in Abyssinian lands. In 1550 Nur ibn Mujahid became the Emir of Harar and the de facto ruler of Adal. He then departed on a jihad (holy war) to the eastern Ethiopian lowlands of Bale and Dawaro. This venture was unsuccessful, Nur was defeated and the Abyssinians then advanced into Adalite territory where upon they ravaged the lands and enslaved many of its inhabitants. However, this defeat was not mortal and Adal soon recovered. At around this time, Nur began to strength the defenses' of Harar, building a wall that still encircles the city to this day. In 1559, urged on by his wife, Nur once again took the offensive and invaded the Ethiopian Empire, killing Ethiopian Emperor Gelawdewos in the Battle of Fatagar. At the same time another Ethiopian army led by Dejazmatch Hamalmal attacked the capital of Adal, Harar. Sultan Barakat ibn Umar Din attempted to defend the city but was defeated and killed, thus ending the Walashma dynasty. Not long after this, Barentu Oromos who had been migrating north invaded the Adal Sultanate. This struggle, which was mentioned by Bahrey, led to the devastation of many regions and Nur's army was defeated at the Battle of Hazalo. The defensive walls managed to protect Harar from the invaders, preserving it as a kind of Muslim island in an Oromo sea. However, the city then experienced a severe famine as grain and salt prices rose to unpreceded levels. According to a contemporary source, the hunger became so bad that people began to resort to eating their own children and spouses. Nur himself died in 1567 of the pestilence which spread during the famine.

Nur was succeeded by Uthman the Abyssinian, who relaxed his predecessor's pro-Islamic policy and signed an infamous and humiliating peace treaty with the Oromos. The treaty stated that the Oromos can freely enter to the Muslim markets and purchase goods at less than the current market price. This angered many Muslims and led to a rebellion, in which he was overthrown and replaced by Tahla Abbas in 1569. Tahla would rule for only three years before being overthrown by some of his very fanatic subjects who were intent on another jihad or holy war against the Christians. He was replaced by Uthman's grandson Muhammad ibn Nasir who soon carried out an expedition against the Ethiopian Empire, however this campaign would end in total disaster. As soon as the army left Harar the Oromo ravaged the countryside, up to the walls of the city. Muhammad ibn Nasir was also defeated and killed at the Battle of Webi River, thus permanently ending Adal aggression towards Ethiopia. Muhammad's successor, Mansur ibn Muhammad, fought a fierce war against the Oromos, but was unable to defeat them. Mansur would also successfully reconquer Aussa and Zeila. The tension was all the greater after the death of Nur Ibn Mujahid, the disappearance of the last of the Walashma monarch also opened a tough competition for power between emirs and descendants of Ahmed Ibn Ibrahim. Ultimately, they won in April 1576, Muhammad b. Ibrâhîm Gasa took the title of Imam, thus combining the political power of the Sultan and the religious responsibility of guiding the community, he then relocated the capital to the oasis of Aussa in 1577, establishing the Imamate of Aussa.

The Imamate of Aussa declined gradually in the next century and was destroyed by the neighboring Afar nomads who made Aussa their capital. In the seventeenth century the induction of Harla people and Doba populations into Afar identity would lead to the emergence of Aussa Sultanate. Enrico Cerulli's verdict on this "sad condition" of Adal's decadence was that whereas the Ethiopian Empire under Sarsa Dengel was able to reorganize and withstand the Oromo migrations, the Sultanate of Adal was too newly established to transcend tribal differences. The result he claims was that the nomadic people instinctively return to their "eternal disintegrating struggles" of people against people and tribe against tribe.

Ethnicity

Medieval map of peoples, kingdoms and regions alongside major trade routes in the Horn

Ulrich Braukämper mentions that Adal was distinguished by its ethnic variety which included Somalis, Afars, Argobba, and Hararis. Ethiopian historian Taddesse Tamrat states that Adal's central authority in the fourteenth century consisted of the Argobba, Harari and Silt'e people. Professor Donald N. Levine, an important figure in Ethiopian Studies, described the Adal Sultanate as consisting of many ethnic groups, but primarily Somalis and Afars. Somali scholar Abdurahman Abdullahi Baadiyow notes that Somalis were integral to the founding of the sultanate, and played a significant role in the subsequent wars with Abyssinia. According to Patrick Gikes and Mohammed Hassen, Adal in the sixteenth century was primarily inhabited by the sedentary Harla people and the pastoral Somali people. Marriage alliances between Argobba, Harari and Somali people were also common within the Adal Sultanate. According to Professor Lapiso Delebo, the contemporary Harari people are heirs to the ancient Semitic speaking peoples of the Adal region. Historians state the language spoken by the people of Adal as well as its rulers the Imams and Sultans would closely resemble contemporary Harari language. Ethiopian historian Bahru Zewde and others state the Walasma led Sultanates of Ifat and Adal primarily included the Ethiopian Semitic speaking Argobba and Harari people, it later expanded to comprise Afar and Somali peoples. Between the late 1400s to mid 1500s there was a large scale migration of Hadhrami people into Adal.

Among the earliest mentions of the Somali by name has come through a victory poem written by Emperor Yeshaq I of Abyssinia against the king of Adal, as the Simur are said to have submitted and paid tribute. As Taddesse Tamrat writes: "Dr Enrico Cerulli has shown that Simur was an old Harari name for the Somali, who are still known by them as Tumur. Hence, it is most probable that the mention of the Somali and the Simur in relation to Yishaq refers to the king's military campaigns against Adal, where the Somali seem to have constituted a major section of the population."

According to Leo Africanus (1526) and George Sale (1760), the Adelites were of a tawny brown or olive complexion on the northern littoral, and grew swarthier towards the southern interior. They generally had long, lank hair. Most wore a cotton sarong but no headpiece or sandals, with many glass and amber trinkets around their necks, wrists, arms and ankles. The king and other aristocrats often donned instead a body-length garment topped with a headdress. All were Muslims. In the southern hinterland, the Adelites lived beside pagan "Negroes", with whom they bartered various commodities.

Languages

Various languages from the Afro-Asiatic family were spoken in the vast Adal Sultanate. Arabic served as a lingua franca, and was used by the ruling Walashma dynasty. According to the 19th-century Ethiopian historian Asma Giyorgis suggests that the Walashma dynasty themselves spoke Arabic. According to Robert Ferry, Adal's aristocracy in the Walasma era which consisted of imams, emirs and sultans spoke a language resembling modern Harari language. British historian John Fage states Walasma leaders moving their capital from Ifat region to Adal set in motion the evolution of Harari and Argobba language within Harar and its environs. According to Jeffrey M. Shaw, the main inhabitants of the Adal Sultanate spoke East Cushitic languages. In Zeila, the port city of Adal Sultanate, the Somali language was mainly spoken.

Economy

Awash River was the main river of the Adal and Ifat sultanates and provided abundant agricultural produce and fresh water.
Ibn Majid's notes on Berbera which was a large port of the sultanate

One of the empire's most wealthy provinces was Ifat it was well watered, by the large river Awash. Additionally, besides the surviving Awash River, at least five other rivers in the area between Harar and Shawa plateau existed. The general area was well cultivated, densely populated with numerous villages adjoining each other. Agricultural produce included three main cereals, wheat, sorghum and teff, as well as beans, aubergines, melons, cucumbers, marrows, cauliflowers and mustard. Many different types of fruit were grown, among them bananas, lemons, limes, pomegranates, apricots, peaces, citrons mulberries and grapes. Other plants included sycamore tree, sugar cane, from which kandi, or sugar was extracted and inedible wild figs.

The province also grew the stimulant plant Khat. Which was exported to Yemen. Adal was abundant in large numbers of cattle, sheep, and some goats. There was also chickens. Both buffaloes and wild fowl were sometimes hunted. The province had a great reputation for producing butter and honey.

Whereas provinces such as Bale, surrounding regions of Webi Shabelle was known for it cotton cultivation and an age old weaving industry, while the El Kere region produced salt which was an important trading item.

Zeila was a wealthy city and abundantly supplied with provisions. It possessed grain, meat, oil, honey and wax. Furthermore, the citizens had many horses and reared cattle of all kinds, as a result they had plenty of butter, milk and flesh, as well as a great store of millet, barley and fruits; all of which was exported to Aden. The port city was so well supplied with victuals that it exported it's surplus to Aden, Jeddah, Mecca and "All Arabia" which then was dependent on the supplies/produce from the city which they favoured above all. Zeila was described as a "Port of much provisions for Aden, and all parts of Arabia and many countries and Kingdoms".

The Principal exports, according the Portuguese writer Corsali, were gold, ivory and slaves. A "great number" of the latter was captured from the Ethiopian Empire, then were exported through the port of Zeila to Persia, Arabia, Egypt and India.

As a result of this flourishing trade, the citizens of Zeila accordingly lived "extremely well" and the city was well built guarded by many soldiers on both foot and horses.

The kingdoms agricultural and other produce was not only abundant but also very cheap according to Maqrizi thirty pounds of meat sold for only half a dirhem, while for only four dirhems you could purchase a bunch of about 100 Damascus grapes.

Trade on the upland river valleys themselves connected with the coast to the interior markets. Created a lucrative caravan trade route between Ethiopian interior, the Hararghe highlands, Eastern Lowlands and the coastal cities such as Zeila and Berbera. The trade from the interior was also important for the reason that included gold from the Ethiopian territories in the west, including Damot and an unidentified district called Siham. The rare metal sold for 80 to 120 dirhems per ounce. The whole empire and the wider region was interdependent on each other and formed a single economy and at the same time a cultural unit interconnected with several important trade routes upon which the economy and the welfare of the whole area depended.

The nobility of Adal also apparently had a fair taste for luxury, the commercial relations that existed between the Adal Sultanate and the rulers of the Arab peninsula allowed Muslims to obtain luxury items that Christian Ethiopians, whose relations with the outside world were still blocked, could not acquire, a Christian document describing Sultan Badlay relates:

"And the robes and those of his leaders were adorned with silver and shone on all sides. And the dagger which he carried at his side was richly adorned with gold and precious stones; and his amulet was adorned with drops of gold; and the inscriptions on the amulet were of gold paint. And his parasol came from the land of Syria and it was such beautiful work that those who looked at it marveled, and winged serpents were painted on it."

During its existence, Adal had relations and engaged in trade with other polities in Northeast Africa, the Near East, Europe and South Asia. Many of the historic cities in the Horn of Africa such as Abasa, Amud, Awbare and Berbera flourished under its reign with courtyard houses, mosques, shrines, walled enclosures and cisterns. Adal attained its peak in the 14th century, trading in slaves, ivory and other commodities with Abyssinia and kingdoms in Arabia through its chief port of Zeila. The cities of the empire imported intricately coloured glass bracelets and Chinese celadon for palace and home decoration. Adal also used imported currency such as Egyptian dinars and dirhems.

Military

The Military of Adal was divided into several sections such as the infantry consisting of swordsmen, archers and lancers that were commanded by various generals and lieutenants. These forces were complemented by a cavalry force and eventually, later in the empire's history, by matchlock-technology and cannons during the Conquest of Abyssinia. The various divisions were symbolised with a distinct flag.

Under Imam Ahmed's leadership, the military was reorganized into three flexible units, giving Adal a strategic advantage. This superior organization contrasted sharply with the rigid and poorly commanded Abyssinian forces. The first group was the Malassay, the elite unit of military warriors in the Adal army. The title Malassay or Malachai (Portuguese spelling) often became synonymous with Muslims in Ethiopia to outsiders, but contrary to popular beliefs it did not denote a tribe or clan. Reading the Futūḥ al-Ḥabaša, the Malasāy appear as the basic unit of the army of the imām. Unlike the other groups that make up this army, the Malasāy were a group social and not a tribe or a clan. Unlike the Balaw, Somali or Ḥarla, a man Malasāy is not born. He obtained this title after demonstrating his military capabilities. ‘Arab Faqīh gives a relatively precise definition of what he means by "malasāy:

And the Malasāy troop, who are people of raids and ğihād, worthy men of confidence, who could be trusted during the fighting, of the army chiefs who not only do not flee from the battlefield but who protect the retreat of his family. The imām was with them.

The second wing consisted entirely of Somalis, commanded by the Imam's brother-in-law Matan. The third wing comprised troops from the Afar, Harla, Harari, and Argobba people, with each led by their hereditary leader. During each battle, the wings were separated with one on the right and left, while the Malassay were positioned in the middle. At crucial moments, the Malassay supported both wings and prevented troops from abandoning the field.

The Adal soldiers donned elaborate helmets and steel armour made up of chain-mail with overlapping tiers. The horsemen of Adal wore protective helmets that covered the entire face except for the eyes, and breastplates on their body, while they harnessed their horses in a similar fashion. In siege warfare, ladders were employed to scale buildings and other high positions such as hills and mountains.

M. Hassan states:

Arab Faqih makes it very clear that the sedentary agriculturalists population of Harar provided both the leadership in the jihadic war and that they were the majority of the fighters at least during the early days of the jihad. All the four Wazirs appointed by Imam Ahmad were members of the landed Adare (Harari) and Harla hereditary nobility. Of the fifty or so Amirs appointed by Imam Ahmad between 1527 and 1537, the overwhelming majority were members of the hereditary landed Adare or Harla aristocracy.

M. Lewis writes:

Somali forces contributed much to the Imām’s victories. Shihāb ad-Dīn, 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 ad-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 is not recorded. Finally, several Dir clans also took part.

Ethnic Somalis are stated to be the majority of the army according to the 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.

According to Merid Wolde Aregay:

At Shembra-Kuré the issue was determined most nearly by the superiority of Ahmad's cavalry. This consisted of personal followers, carefully chosen from amongst the young men of Harar, who were well trained and experienced. Ahmad had armed his horsemen with good sabres from the markets of Zayla and Arabia. The cavalry included a number of Arabs who had responded to Ahmäd's call for help in what he considered was a holy war against the unbelievers of Ethiopia. Many of these Arabs were especially skilled in the use of the sabre and they probably had shared this skill with the Harari horseman.

Legacy

A sword symbol on a stele at Tiya

The Adal Sultanate left behind many structures and artefacts from its heyday. Numerous such historical edifices and items are found in the northwestern Awdal province of Somaliland, as well as other parts of the Horn region where the polity held sway. According to archaeologist Jorge Rodriguez, substances located in western northern Somalia indicate outposts were mainly established during the Adal Sultanate, and don't predate the ruins found in ancient Islamic regions of Ifat or Harar plateau, this he states reaffirms the notion that modern eastern Ethiopia is where the principal Muslim kingdoms materialized.

Archaeological excavations in the late 19th century and early 20th century at over fourteen sites in the vicinity of Borama in modern-day northwestern Somaliland unearthed, among other artefacts, silver coins identified as having been derived from Qaitbay (1468–89), the eighteenth Burji Mamluk Sultan of Egypt. Most of these finds are associated with the medieval Adal Sultanate. They were sent to the British Museum for preservation shortly after their discovery.

Ruins of the Sultanate of Adal in Zeila

In 1950, the British Somaliland protectorate government commissioned an archaeological survey in twelve desert towns in present-day Republic of Somaliland, near the border with Ethiopia. According to the expedition team, the sites yielded the most salient evidence of late medieval period affluence. They contained ruins of what were evidently once large cities belonging to the Adal Sultanate. Towns such as Awbare, Awbube, Amud, Abasa and Gogesa, featured between 200 and 300 stone houses. The walls of certain sites still reportedly stood 18 meters high. Excavations in the area yielded 26 silver coins, unlike the copper pieces that were more common in polities below the Horn region. The earliest of these recovered coins had been minted by Sultan Barquq (1382–99), also of the Egyptian Burji dynasty, and the latest were again Sultan Qaitbay issues. All of the pieces had been struck in either Cairo or Damascus. A few gold coins were also discovered during the expedition, making the area the only place in the wider region to yield such pieces. Besides coinage, high quality porcelain was recovered from the Adal sites. The fine celadon ware was found either lying on the surface, or buried at a depth of seven and a half inches, or ensconced within dense middens four to five feet high. Among the artefacts were grey granular sherds with a cracked blue-green or sea-green glaze, and white crystalline fragments with an uncracked green-white glaze. Some Ming dynasty ware was also discovered, including many early Ming blue-and-white bowl sherds. They were adorned with tendril scrolls on a bluish ground and ornamented with black spotting, while other bowls had floral patterns outlined by grey or black-blue designs. Additionally, a few Ming red-and-white sherds were found, as well as white porcelain fragments with bluish highlights. The Adal sites appeared to reach an Indian Ocean terminus at the Sa'ad ad-Din Islands, named for Sultan Sa'ad ad-Din II of the Ifat Sultanate.

Additionally, local tradition identifies the archaeological site of Tiya in central Ethiopia as Yegragn Dingay ("Gran's stone") in reference to Imam Al-Ghazi. According to Joussaume (1995), who led archaeological work there, the site is relatively recent. It has been dated to between the 11th and 13th centuries CE. Tiya contains a number of megalithic pillars, including anthropomorphic and non-anthropomorphic/non-phallic stelae. Flat in form, these structures are characterized by distinctive, elaborate decorations, among which are swords, a standing human figure with arms akimbo, and plant-like symbols.

Rulers

Name Reign Note
1 Sulṭān SabiradDīn SaʿadadDīn 1415–1422 Son of SaʿadadDīn Aḥmed, He returned to the Horn of Africa from Yemen to reclaim his father's realm. He defeated the Ethiopians and proclaimed himself "King of Adal". He subsequently became the first ruler and founder of the new Adal dynasty.
2 Sulṭān Mansur SaʿadadDīn 1422–1424 Son of SaʿadadDīn Aḥmed. Defeated the Abyssinians at their royal seat of Yadeya, captured and killed the Solomonic Emperor Dawit. The tides of war changed him and his brother Muhammad was eventually captured by Yeshaq
3 Sulṭān JamaladDīn SaʿadadDīn 1424–1433 He increased the riches of Adal, brought numerous land under its rule and during his reign a multitude of Amhara Christians embraced Islam. He won important battles against the Abyssinians and raided deep into their interior as far as the Blue Nile before his forces being defeated after an exhausted pursuit back to protect the capital. Emperor Yeshaq would also die in battle during his Adal campaign.
4 Sulṭān Sihab ad-Din Ahmad Badlay "Arwe Badlay" 1433–1445 Son of SaʿadadDīn Aḥmed, known to the Abyssinians as "Arwe Badlay" ("Badlay the Monster"). Badlay turned the tide of war against the Abyssinians and decisively defeated the forces of Emperor Yeshaq and expanded the power & reach of Adal to the entire northern seaboard. Managed to capture Abyssinian frontier provinces and brought numerous Christian land under his rult. Badlay founded a new capital at Dakkar in the Adal region, near Harar. He was killed in battle after he had launched a jihad to invade and occupy Abyssinia after the Hadiya Sultanate an Adal tributary state was occupied by emperor Zara Yaqob.
5 Sulṭān Maḥamed AḥmedudDīn 1445–1472 Son of AḥmedudDīn "Badlay" SaʿadadDīn, Maḥamed asked for help from the Mameluk Sultanate of Egypt in 1452, though this assistance was not forthcoming. He ended up signing a very short-lived truce with Baeda Maryam which was nullified by his son Usman who subsequently defeated the emperors troops in battle.
6 Sulṭān ShamsadDin Maḥamed 1472–1488 Son of Maḥamed AḥmedudDīn, he was attacked by Emperor Eskender of Abyssinia in 1479, who sacked Dakkar and destroyed much of the city, though the Abyssinians failed to occupy the city and were ambushed on the way home with heavy losses and no more incursions happened for the remainder of Eskender's reign. Eskender and his succeeding brother Na'od would later be killed in battle against emir Mahfuz's raiding parties.
7 Sulṭān Maḥamed ʿAsharadDīn 1488–1518 Great-grandson of SaʿadadDīn Aḥmed of Ifat, he continued to fight to liberate Dawaro along with Garad Maḥfūẓ of Zeila. He was assassinated after a disastrous campaign in 1518 and the death of Garad Maḥfūẓ.
8 Emir Abūn ʿAdādshe 1518–1525 During his reign conflict ensued between the Amīrs and the Sultans for 7 years. Abun was de facto ruler of Adal due to his popularity in the state defending the frontier against Abyssinian raiding parties, this popularity would lead to resentment from the Adal sultan.
9 Sulṭān Abūbakar Maḥamed 1525–1526 He killed Garād Abūn but Garād Abūn's cousin Imām Aḥmed avenged his cousin's death and killed him. While Garād Abūn ruled in Harar, Abūbakar Maḥamed was centered in Dakkar however after killing Garad Abun, Abubakar moved the Adal Sultanate capital to Harar in 1520.
10 Sulṭān ʿUmarDīn Maḥamed 1526–1553 Son of Maḥamed ʿAsharadDīn, Imām Aḥmed put Maḥamed ʿAsharadDīn's young son ʿUmarDīn on the throne as puppet king in Imām Aḥmed's capital at Harar. This essentially is the end of the Walashma dynasty as a ruling dynasty in all but name, though the dynasty hobbled on in a de jure capacity. Many king lists don't even bother with Walashma rulers after this and just list Imām Aḥmed and then Amīr Nūr Mujahid.
11 Sulṭān ʿAli ʿUmarDīn 1553–1555 Son of ʿUmarDīn Maḥamed
12 Sulṭān Barakat ʿUmarDīn 1555–1559 Son of ʿUmarDīn Maḥamed, last of the Walashma Sultans, assisted Amīr Nūr Mujahid in his attempt to retake Dawaro. He was killed defending Harar from Emperor Gelawdewos, ending the dynasty.
13 Amīr Nūr "Dhuhi-Suha" ʿAli 1559–1567 The Amir of Harar. The walls that surround Harar were built during his reign and he had convinced the people of Harar (the Harla) to abandon their clan and tribal identities and become one people, the Harari nation. Emperor Gelawdewos was defeated in battle and killed by emir Nur at the Battle of Fatagar
14 Amīr ʿIsmān "AlḤabashi" 1567–1569 A former Abyssinian slave of Amīr Nūr, he was murdered shortly after becoming Sultan.
15 Sulṭān Ṭalḥa ʿAbbās 1569–1571 Son of Wazir ʿAbbās Abūn and grandson of Garād Abūn ʿAdādshe
16 Sulṭān Nāssir ʿIsmān 1571–1572 Son of Amīr ʿIsmān AlḤabashi
17 Sulṭān Maḥamed Nāssir 1572–1576 Grandson of Amīr ʿIsmān AlḤabashi. He was executed by Emperor Sarsa Dengel after the Battle of Hadiya. The Harari military was decimated by Ethiopian forces ending Adal's aggression towards Ethiopia permanently. The Oromo simultaneously attacked several villages in Hararghe while the main Harar army was away leading to further weakening of the sultanate.
18 Amir Mansūr Maḥamed 1576–1577 Son of Sulṭān Maḥamed Nāssir. He successfully defeated several Oromo invasions and reclaimed territory including Zeila and Aussa.
19 Imām Maḥamed "Jāsa" Ibrahim 1577 A relative of Imām Aḥmed, he moved the capital to Awsa and founded the Imāmātē of Awsa. He was killed in battle with the Oromo in 1583.

Family tree

Walashma dynasty
Sa'ad al-Din II
Ahmad

Sultan of Ifat
r. 1386/7–1402/3
Sabr al-Din III
Sa'ad al-Din

r. 1415–1422/3
Mansur
Sa'ad al-Din

r. 1422/3–1424
Jamal al-Din II
Sa'ad al-Din

r. 1424–1433
Badlay
Sa'ad ad-Din

r. 1433–1445
Abu Bakr
Sa'ad al-Din
Muhammad
Badlay

r. 1445–1472
Azhar
Abu Bakr
Shams al-Din
Muhammad

r. 1472–1488
Muhammad
Azhar

r. 1488–1518
Abu Bakr
Muhammad

r. 1525–1526
Umar al-Din
Muhammad

r. 1526–1553
Ali
Umar al-Din

r. 1553–1555
Barakat
Umar al-Din

r. 1555–1559
Harari Emirs
IbrahimAbun Adashe
r. 1518–1525
Mujahid
ibn Ali
daughterAbbas Abun
MahfuzTalha Abbas
r. 1569–1571
Nur ibn
Mujahid

r. 1550–1567
Bati del
Wambara
Ahmad ibn
Ibrahim
al-Ghazi
(Former Slave)
Uthman
al-Habshi

r. 1567–1569
Nasir ibn
Uthman

r. 1571–1573
Muhammad
ibn Nasir

r. 1573–1575
Ibrahim
Mansur ibn
Muhammad

r. 1575–1577
Muhammad
Gasa

r. 1577–1577
Imamate
of Aussa

See also

Notes

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