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The Chronology of Sudanese Arabic Genealogical Tradition
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2014
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Modern nationalisms first arose during the later eighteenth century around the wide periphery of the ancient heartland of western culture and gnawed their way inward during the course of the nineteenth century to the core, culminating in World War I, Each new nationalism generated an original “imagined community” of human beings, part of whose ideological cohesion derived from a sense of shared historical experience. Since the actual historical record would not necessarily satisfy this hunger, it was often found expedient to amend the past through acts of imagination aptly termed the “invention of tradition.”
One of the many new “imagined communities” of the long nineteenth century took shape in the northern Nile-valley Sudan between the final disintegration of the old kingdom of Sinnar (irredeemable after the death of the strongman Muhammad Abu Likaylik in 1775) and the publication of Harold MacMichael's A History of the Arabs in the Sudan in 1922. The new national community born of the collapse of Sinnar, strongly committed to Arabic speech and Islamic faith, was tested by fire through foreign conquest and revolution, by profound socio-economic transformation, and by the challenges attendant on participation in an extended sub-imperialism that earned it hegemony—first cultural, and ultimately political—over all the diverse peoples of the modern Sudan.
One important response of the nascent community to the trials of this difficult age was the invention of a new national historical tradition, according to which its members were descended via comparatively recent immigrants to the Sudan from eminent Arabs of Islamic antiquity.
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References
1 Anderson, Benedict, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism (New York, 1991).Google Scholar The present study was prepared in conformity to the orthographical limitations of History in Africa and therefore does not obey the conventions observed elsewhere in the scholarly literature. The author will be happy to supply orthographically correct information to any reader who might desire it.
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13 MHAS 1:196.
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15 By a liberal interpretation of the colophon of the document MacMichael published as D1 (MHAS 2:201), a copy of the manuscript may have existed as early as 1151/1738-39; however, see note 19 below.
16 MacMichael himself realized this (MHAS 2:3), hut incorrectly assumed it would lead to empirical rigor rather than imaginative license in the formulation of ancestries. For representative examples from the literature see MHAS 2:16-17, 62, 101, 103, 111, 115, 118, 119, 121, 124, 127, 139, 154, 157, 159, 163, 166, 168, 176, and 182.
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18 For contemporary documentary references to Muhammad walad Dolib, see Spaulding, Jay and Salim, Muhammad Ibrahim Abu, Public Documents from Sinnar (East Lansing, 1989)Google Scholar, documents 29, 50, 51, and 58.
19 MHAS 2:200-01.
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