
Sultan, Caliph, and the Renewer of the Faith: A?mad Lobbo, the T?r?kh al-fatt?sh and the Making of an Islamic State in West Africa: 148 (African Studies, Series Number 148)
Cambridge University Press, 3/19/2020
EAN 9781108479509, ISBN10: 1108479502
Hardcover, 288 pages, 22.9 x 15.9 x 2.5 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English
The TÄÂrÄ«kh al-fattÄÂsh 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 Making extensive use of previously unpublished Arabic sources, Nobili demonstrates that the TÄÂrÄ«kh al-fattÄÂsh was in fact written in the nineteenth century by a Fulani scholar, Nūḥ b. al-ṬÄÂhir, who modified pre-existing historiographical material as a political project in legitimation of the West African Islamic state known as the Caliphate of ḤamdallÄÂhi and its founding leader Aḥmad 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.
Introduction
Part I. A Nineteenth Century Chronicle in Support of the Caliphate of HamdallÄÂhi
Nūḥ B. Al-ṬÄÂhir's TÄÂrÄ«kh al-fattÄÂsh
1. A century of scholarship
2. The TÄÂrÄ«kh al-fattÄÂsh
a nineteenth-century chronicle
Part II. A Contested Space of Compating Claims
the Middle Niger, 1810s–1840s
3. The emergence of clerical rule in the Middle Niger
4. Aḥmad Lobbo, Timbuktu, and the Kunta
5. Fluctuating diplomacy
ḤamdallÄÂhi and Sokoto
Part III. The Circulation and Reception of the TÄÂrÄ«kh al-fattÄÂsh, 1840s–2010s
6. The TÄÂrÄ«kh al-fattÄÂsh at work
Conclusion.