Arguing sovereignty in Songhay

Recent archaeological, historical, and anthropological literature on the development of social and political complexity in Africa challenges older models of state formation that used to shape the understanding of medieval Sahelian empires, such as Songhay. As we now know, there were multiple paths t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bruce S. Hall
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Institut des Mondes Africains 2013-05-01
Series:Afriques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/afriques/1121
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841552424285765632
author Bruce S. Hall
author_facet Bruce S. Hall
author_sort Bruce S. Hall
collection DOAJ
description Recent archaeological, historical, and anthropological literature on the development of social and political complexity in Africa challenges older models of state formation that used to shape the understanding of medieval Sahelian empires, such as Songhay. As we now know, there were multiple paths to complexity that did not necessarily lead to state formation; and there was a heterarchical distribution of power in many African political formations. Nonetheless, the historiography of pre-colonial states in Sahelian West Africa, and of Islam’s role in these political formations, retains an attachment to a particular model of statehood derived from Arabic geographies and chronicles. Emphasis continues to be placed on military power and a largely ambivalent relation between Islam and indigenous forms of authority. In this article, a reinterpretation of the exercise and rhetoric of sovereignty in imperial Songhay is proposed that focuses on ways in which Islamic authority was claimed and contested byrulers. Songhay rulers claimed a religious authority that far outstripped their coercive power. Instead of an ambivalent relation between the Muslim religious estate and secular power, Islamic religious authority was the principal basis of Songhay rulers’ claims to extensive power.
format Article
id doaj-art-6c7debf644f34afe85d08b1dc6cc592e
institution Kabale University
issn 2108-6796
language deu
publishDate 2013-05-01
publisher Institut des Mondes Africains
record_format Article
series Afriques
spelling doaj-art-6c7debf644f34afe85d08b1dc6cc592e2025-01-09T13:02:44ZdeuInstitut des Mondes AfricainsAfriques2108-67962013-05-01410.4000/afriques.1121Arguing sovereignty in SonghayBruce S. HallRecent archaeological, historical, and anthropological literature on the development of social and political complexity in Africa challenges older models of state formation that used to shape the understanding of medieval Sahelian empires, such as Songhay. As we now know, there were multiple paths to complexity that did not necessarily lead to state formation; and there was a heterarchical distribution of power in many African political formations. Nonetheless, the historiography of pre-colonial states in Sahelian West Africa, and of Islam’s role in these political formations, retains an attachment to a particular model of statehood derived from Arabic geographies and chronicles. Emphasis continues to be placed on military power and a largely ambivalent relation between Islam and indigenous forms of authority. In this article, a reinterpretation of the exercise and rhetoric of sovereignty in imperial Songhay is proposed that focuses on ways in which Islamic authority was claimed and contested byrulers. Songhay rulers claimed a religious authority that far outstripped their coercive power. Instead of an ambivalent relation between the Muslim religious estate and secular power, Islamic religious authority was the principal basis of Songhay rulers’ claims to extensive power.https://journals.openedition.org/afriques/1121IslamSonghay EmpireAskia MuhammadSunni Ali Beeral-Maghilistate formation
spellingShingle Bruce S. Hall
Arguing sovereignty in Songhay
Afriques
Islam
Songhay Empire
Askia Muhammad
Sunni Ali Beer
al-Maghili
state formation
title Arguing sovereignty in Songhay
title_full Arguing sovereignty in Songhay
title_fullStr Arguing sovereignty in Songhay
title_full_unstemmed Arguing sovereignty in Songhay
title_short Arguing sovereignty in Songhay
title_sort arguing sovereignty in songhay
topic Islam
Songhay Empire
Askia Muhammad
Sunni Ali Beer
al-Maghili
state formation
url https://journals.openedition.org/afriques/1121
work_keys_str_mv AT bruceshall arguingsovereigntyinsonghay