Sultan, caliph and the renewer of the faith: Aḥmad Lobbo, the Tārīkh al-fattāsh and the making of an Islamic state in West Africa

Author
Nobili, Mauro
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Year
2020
Language
English
Call Number
DT551.65 .N63 2020
ISBN
9781108479509
Reference Only
Off
Number of Pages
262
Library of Congress Subject Heading
Fula (African people) -- Kings and rulers -- Historiography
Library of Congress Subject Heading 2
Sudan (Region) -- History -- 19th century
Abstract

The Tarikh al-fattash is one of the most important and celebrated sources for the history of pre-colonial West Africa, yet it has confounded scholars for decades with its inconsistences and questions surrounding its authorship. In this study, Mauro Nobili examines and challenges existing theories on the chronicle, arguing that much of what we have presumed about the work is deeply flawed. Making extensive use of previously unpublished Arabic sources, Nobili demonstrates that the Tarikh al-fattash was in fact written in the nineteenth century by a Fulani scholar, Nuh b. al-Tahir, who modified pre-existing historiographical material as a political project in legitimation of the West African Islamic state known as the Caliphate of Hamdallahi and its founding leader Ahmad Lobbo. Contextualizing its production within the broader development of the religious and political landscape of West Africa, this study represents a significant moment in the study of West African history and of the evolution of Arabic historical literature in Timbuktu and its surrounding regions.
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