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Isaaq migrations

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Isaaq migrations
Extent of the Isaaq clan-family at the end of the 19th century
Date12th-20th century
LocationHorn of Africa
ParticipantsVarious isaaq subclans
OutcomeIsaaq settlement of most of modern day Somaliland, Haud and parts of Yemen and kenya around Lake Naivasha

The Isaaq clans began migrating from their ancestral homeland in the city of Maydh, eventually settling and dispersing across various regions of the Horn of Africa. These migrations were part of the broader movements of the Somali people around the Horn, which contributed to the establishment of Somali settlements in their present-day territories.

History and migrations

Origins

The Isaaq people traditionally claim to have descended from Sheikh Ishaaq bin Ahmed, an Islamic scholar who purportedly traveled to Somaliland in the 12th or 13th century and married two women; one from the local Dir clan. and the other from the neighboring Harari people. He is said to have sired eight sons who are the common ancestors of the clans of the Isaaq clan-family. He remained in Maydh until his death.

Somali genealogical tradition places the origin of the Isaaq tribe in the 12th or 13th century with the arrival of the Sheikh Ishaaq Bin Ahmed (Sheikh Ishaaq) from Arabia. Sheikh Ishaaq settled in the coastal town of Maydh in modern-day northeastern Somaliland.Hence, Sheikh Ishaaq married two local women in Somaliland, which left him with eight.

There are also numerous existing hagiographies in Arabic which describe Sheikh Ishaaq's travels, works and overall life in modern Somaliland, as well as his movements in Arabia before his arrival. Besides historical sources, one of the more recent printed biographies of Sheikh Ishaaq is the Amjaad of Sheikh Husseen bin Ahmed Darwiish al-Isaaqi as-Soomaali, which was printed in Aden in 1955.

Early migrations west

As the Isaaq grew in size and numbers during the 12th century, the clan-family migrated and spread from their core area in Mait (Maydh) and the wider Sanaag region in a southwestward expansion over a wide portion of present-day Somaliland by the 15th and 16th centuries. By the 1300s the Isaaq clans united to defend their inhabited territories and resources during clan conflicts against migrating clans. The Isaaq also played a prominent role in the Ethiopian-Adal War (1529–1543, referred to as the "Conquest of Abyssinia") in the army of Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi, The Habr Magadle division (Ayoub, Garhajis, Habr Awal and Arap) of the Isaaq were mentioned in chronicles of that war written by Shihab Al-Din Ahmad Al-Gizany known as Futuh Al Habash.

According to I.M Lewis

The Marrehan and the Habr Magadle also play a very prominent role (...) The text refers to two Ahmads's with the nickname 'Left-handed'. One is regularly presented as 'Ahmad Guray, the Somali' (...) identified as Ahmad Guray Xuseyn, chief of the Habr Magadle. Another reference, however, appears to link the Habr Magadle with the Marrehan. The other Ahmad is simply referred to as 'Imam Ahmad' or simply the 'Imam'.This Ahmad is not qualified by the adjective Somali (...) The two Ahmad's have been conflated into one figure, the heroic Ahmed Guray (...)

After the war,The isaaq clans (along with other tribes like the Daarood) grew in numbers and territory in the northeast, causing them to began to vie with their Oromo neighbours, who were expanding northwards themselves after the Great Oromo Migrations, thus creating a general thrust toward the southwest. By the 16th to 17th century the movements that followed seem to have established the Isaaqs on coastal Somaliland.

Migrations southwards

According to oral tradition, the Isaaqs, who were established in the coastal areas with a kingdom led by the Tol jeclo branch of the wider Isaaq family, began regularly fighting with the Darood tribes who lived to the south. The war was long and destructive, with both the Isaaqs and Daroods suffering heavy losses of life.

The Isaaq kingdom and the King Harun dhuh barar was eventually overthrown by a coalition of Isaaq clans led by a military leader named Abdi Eisa. According to tradition, Abdi Eisa successfully led the Isaaq forces in the Battle of Lafaruug, where they defeated the Absame tribes at the town of Lafaruug near Berbera— a region where the Isaaq clan had expanded about a century earlier.

Following his victory, Abdi Eisa was offered the position of Sultan of the Isaaq, but he declined. Instead, he suggested that his underage son, Guled Abdi, be crowned while he ruled as regent until his son came of age.

The Isaaq gradually expanded their territory, reaching as far south as Toon and the edges of the Hawd by the beginning of the 19th century. The newly established Isaaq Sultanate subsequently made Toon its capital.

Migrations into the Hawd and western Sool

Throughout the 19th and early 20th centuries, the Isaaq clan expanded its presence in the Hawd region following a series of military victories against various neighboring clans. Among these conflicts were the Rayyad Wars, led by Hersi Amman and his successors, against the Dhulbahante, Ogaden, and Dolo tribes, as well as expansions by the Habar jeclo Soocane faction under Kite Fiqi into Sool.

After the Defeat the Dervish movement in 1920, the Isaaq, who had been armed by the British to assist in suppressing the uprising, launched a series of raids and military campaigns against the Dhulbahante and Ogaden clans, who were left vulnerable. The intensity of these raids significantly weakened the resistance of the Dhulbahante and Ogaden, leading many to abandon their traditional grazing lands in the Hawd regionHawd region. Others were forced to adopt a modus vivendi with the advancing Isaaq.

These conflicts inspired the creation of a series of poetic exchanges between the Isaaq and Darod clans, known collectively as the Guba Poems.

The historian Siegbert Uhlig, commenting on the significance of the Guba, highlights the historical narrative conveyed in the poetry of Ali Dhuh. Uhlig notes that Ali Dhuh’s poems describe the extensive territorial gains made by the Isaaq in traditionally Ogaden lands, the seizure of Ogaden wells, and the large-scale looting of their camels. The poems recount the dispersal of the Ogaden clan, their migration southward into fever-prone river valleys, and their adoption of farming and hunting—activities considered degrading and typically associated with slaves and lower-caste Somalis. According to the poems, many Ogaden sought refuge among their Isaaq conquerors, particularly with the Habr Yunis. Ali Dhuh’s verses depict the Ogaden as unable to retaliate, while the Isaaq are portrayed as flaunting their captured camels in front of their defeated adversaries. Uhlig remarks that even in translation, the poem remains highly evocative.

B. W. Andrzejewski author of A Somali Poetic Combat writes :

During the period of administrative chaos which followed the war the Isaaq used their superior strength against both the Ogaadeen and the Dhulbahante. They looted many Ogaadeen herds, captured some of their wells and water-ponds, and dislodged them from a large part of their grazing areas in the Hawd. The Isaaq onslaught was so powerful that the Ogaadeen could put up little or no resistance, and did not even try to avenge their wrongs. Some of the clans, however, after being looted and pushed southward, developed a modus vivendi with the Isaaq and intermarried with them.

In his book The Galla in Northern Somaliland Ioan Lewis states :

The southwards expansion of the Somali from the shores of the Gulf of Aden still continues despite the establishment of international frontiers and Administrative control. It is very evident in the Northern Province of Kenya, and in the British Protectorate the Isaaq now appear to be pushing outside the territory at the expense of the Darod into the Ogaden and Haud.

The Isaaq advance into Ogaden territory was eventually halted by the intervention of the British protectrate authorities with assistance from the Ethiopian Empire, who considered the Ogaden their subjects and whose safety was their priority. In one incident the Habar Yunis looted 1330 camels from the Ogaden, but were pressured by the British and the Ethiopians to return the camels to their previous owners. The Habr Yunis obliged and promised to desist in their raids, but despite their promise they continued to successfully raid the Ogadens unhindered up until the British ceded the Haud to Ethiopia.

Around the same time, the Isaaq clan expanded further into traditional Dhulbahante territory to the east. This expansion was led primarily by the Habar Je’lo subclan, with participation from the Garhajis clan. One of the most significant military and territorial gains was the capture of the strategic town of Caynabo.

The renowned Isaaq poet Salaan Carrabey commemorated these victories in his poem Haadaaqsi, part of the celebrated Guba poetic series. This boastful poem reflects the triumph of the Habar Je’lo over the Dhulbahante and describes the severe state of defeat inflicted upon their adversaries. Salaan’s vivid verses recount the displacement of Dhulbahante groups, their forced retreat to less hospitable areas, and the humiliation they endured as a result of their losses. The poem is characterized by its confident tone and sharp critique of the Dhulbahante’s diminished status.

Goortaan hadhkaba kaa eryaad hawd u cararteene
Waa kaa hubkii sida raggii wada hareednaaye
Habarwaana waa kaa hingilan labadii haamoode
Shirsooruhuba hoy maleh kuwaad hilib wadaagtaane
Waa kaa hayaankii ku dhacay Hoobayiyo xeebe
Ararsame ma haybsado Nugaal hogashadii ceele
Hanas iyo abaar kulu adoo habaqle soo guurey
Caynaba hadhuub kama dartaan hoga kaliileede
Ka hulleele Hagar aadankii hoobalayn jiraye
Aduunbaa hayaayda u guntane heeryo lagu saarye
Hooyaalayntaan kaga badshaa haybad iyo luuqe
Haasaasahaa laga gartaa hagar la'aaneede
Mar haddaan hullaabta iska rogo soo hankaabsadaye
An hawadiyo hoosada Burciyo Herer ka geeyeene
Kuma hiilo heeliga fulaa la handabeeyaaye
Anse wacan haagaag uga marshaa heel la ii wacaye

When I had chased you from the region where there is shade, you ran away to the Hawd
And (yet) here are (your) young bearded men carrying arms
The two sections of the Habarwaa are in clothes of mourning
The Shirshoore, who are of the same flesh as you, homeless
Indeed they had to trek towards Hobyo and the coast
The Ararsame do not (even dare to) inquire about Nugaal and watering at the wells
In the heat of the sun, suffering fierce thirst, you trudged along wearily
You do not even take one vessel of water from Aynaba in the heat of the kaliil
The Hagar Aadan who used to chant (to their camels, while watering them) have moved out from there
And you who tell people to rally, the mat pack saddle (of humiliation) has been put
In reciting poetry I excel others by (my) distinctive style and chant
One can recognize (good) diction by (its) effortless ease
Once I throw off the upper part of (my) clothes (preparing for a fight), I am firm and resolute
Let me pour out (poetry) and let people take it to the glades of Bur'o and to Herer
A coward who is criticised has no courage at an assembly
But I speak openly and straight to the point at a meeting especially convened for me

—Salaan Carrabey Haadaaqsi

Haadaaqsi captures both the military successes of the Isaaq and their cultural expression of victory, reflecting the historical and literary significance of the Guba poems as a medium of triumph and rivalry.

References

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