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Historical Account or Discourse on Identity? A Reexamination of Fulbe Hegemony and Autochthonous Submission in Banyo1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 13 May 2014
Extract
Traditional accounts of the nineteenth-century Fulbe conquest in northern Cameroon tell roughly the same story: following the example of Usman Dan Fodio in Nigeria, the Fulbe of Cameroon organized in the beginning of the nineteenth century a “jihad” or a “holy war” against the local pagan populations to convert them to Islam and create an Islamic state. The divisions among the local populations and the military superiority of the Fulbe allowed them to conquer almost all northern Cameroon. They forced those who submitted to give an annual tribute of goods and servants, and they raided the other groups. In these traditional accounts the Fulbe are presented as unchallenged masters, while the local populations are depicted as slaves who were powerless over their fate; their role in the conquest of the region and in the administration of the new political order is supposed to have been insignificant.
I will show that, on the contrary, in the area of Banyo the Wawa and Bute played a crucial role in the conquest of the sultanate and in its administration. I will then re-examine the cliche that all members of the local populations were the slaves of the Fulbe by distinguishing the fate of the Wawa and Bute on one side from that of the Kwanja and Mambila on the other, and by showing the importance of the Fulbe's identity in shaping the definition of slavery. Finally I will argue that, if the historical accounts found in the scientific literature invariably insist on Fulbe hegemony and minimize the role played by the local populations, it is because those accounts are often based on Fulbe traditions, and because these traditions are remodeled by the Fulbe in order to correspond to their discourse on identity.
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- Copyright © African Studies Association 1998
Footnotes
I collected data for this paper during 18 months' fieldwork among the Wawa and Kwanja of Cameroon between 1992 and 1996. I would like to thank the Fonds Cassel de l'Université Libre de Bruxelles and the Fonds National pour la Recherche Scientifique (FNRS) for their financial support.
References
2 For a general view of these accounts see Johnston, H.A.S., The Fulani Empire of Sokoto (London, 1967)Google Scholar; Lacroix, P.-F., “Matériaux pour servir à l'histoire des peuls de l'Adamawa, première partie,” Etudes Camerounaises, 37/38 (1952), 3–61Google Scholar; Mohammadou, E., “Introduction historique à l'étude des sociétés du Nord-Cameroun,” Abbia, 12/13 (1966), 233–71Google Scholar; Mohammadou, E., Fulbe Hooseere. Les royaumes foulbé du plateau de l'Adamawa au 19e siècle. Tibati, Tignere, Banyo, Ngaoundéré (Tokyo, 1978)Google Scholar; Mohammadou, E., “L'implantation des Peut dans l'Adamawa (approche chronologique),” in Tardifs, C. (ed.): Contribution de la recherche ethnologique à l'histoire des civilisations du Cameroun (2 vols.: Paris 1981), 1:229–47Google Scholar; Hurault, J., “Histoire du lamidat de Banyo,” Comptes rendus trimestriels de l'Académie des Sciences d'Outre–Mer, 25 (1975), 421–65Google Scholar; Smith, M.G., “The Jihad of Shehu Dan Fodio: Some Problems” in Lewis, I.M., ed., Islam in Tropical Africa (London, 1966), 408–24Google Scholar; Last, M. “Reform in West Africa: The Jihad movements of the nineteenth century” in Ajayi, J.F.A. and Crowder, M., eds., History of West Africa, II (London, 1974), 1–29Google Scholar; R.A. Adeleye, “The Sokoto Caliphate in the nineteenth century” in ibid., 57–92; Hiskett, M., The Sword of Truth. The Life and Times of Shehu Usuman Dan Fodio (New York, 1973).Google Scholar
3 Lamido (pl. Lamibe) is the Fulfulde term meaning “sultan,” Lamidate (sultanate) is the territory that he administers. Concerning the date of the foundation of the Lamidate see Kirk–Greene, A.H.M., Adamawa, Past and Present (London 1958), 133Google Scholar; Lacroix, , “Matériaux,” 28Google Scholar; Mohammadou, E., “L'histoire des lamidat Foulbé de Tchamba de Tibati,” Abbia, 6 (1964), 47.Google Scholar
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6 Ibid., 206–07, 229.
7 Alhadji Ndotoua Mboutsam Boutong, one of the minor dignitaries of the palace (of Wawa origin, Banyo). All my Wawa informants confirmed this story, as did the Lamido himself.
8 The narratives usually present the men who usurp power as generous hunters who share the products of their hunts to the entire population and who, through these acts of generosity, gain the followers of the mean chiefs (see, e.g., Gausset, , “Avatars,” 86Google Scholar). It is possible that the story telling “the peaceful arrival of the Fulbe sharing meat” has been transformed a posteriori to fit this local narrative of usurpation, but it is also possible that the Fulbe benefited unconsciously from these traditional representations of power which in turn facilitated their local integration.
9 The Fulbe girls did not marry local men. The primary rationale for this was that local people were not Muslims.
10 Siran, J.–L., “Eléments d'ethnographie Vouté pour servir l'histoire du Cameroun Central” in Tardits, , Contribution, 265–72Google Scholar; Fardon, R., “Alliance et ethnicité. Un système régional de l'Adamawa” in Héritier, F. and Copet–Rougier, E., eds., Les compexités de l'alliance, 3: économie, politique et fondements symboliques (Afrique) (Paris, 1993), 205.Google Scholar
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12 On Fulbe feeling of superiority see, for example, Schilder, K., Quest for Self–Esteem: State, Islam and Mundang Identity in Northern Cameroon (Aldershot, 1994)Google Scholar, and Schultz, E., “From Pagan to Pullo: Ethnic Identity Change in Northern Cameroon,” Africa 54 (1984), 46–63.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
13 As in Nigeria, the Cameroonian Fulbe manipulated history and their traditions in order to present themselves to the colonial administration as “natural rulers” of the area; see Salamone, F.A., “Colonialism and the Emergence of Fulani Identity,” Journal of Asian and African Studies, 20 (1985), 193–202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
14 “Histoire des Boutes de Banyo” (typed document, no date).
15 They are today fully integrated, and if a person is known to have a slave extraction, this is not publicly stated because it would be taken as a insult.
16 Hurault, , “Histoire,” 434–35Google Scholar, my translation.
17 Haman Tamba (Wawa, Oumiari village).
18 This assumption is widespread in Cameroon, both among the Fulbe and their neighbours. For statistics see Hurault, Jean, “Fécondité et mortalité dans l'agglomération urbaine de Banyo (Cameroun): l'incidence des maladies vénériennes,” Cahiers ORSTOM, série sciences humaines, 19 (1983), 247–67.Google Scholar
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20 Lacroix, P.–F., “Matériaux pour servir à l'histoire des peuls de l'Adamawa, deuxième partie,” Etudes Camerounaises, 39/40 (1953), 37–38Google Scholar, my translation.
21 Cited in Hurault, J., Le lamidat de Banyo sous l'administration française, 1916–1959, (Booklet privately circulated, 1994), 62Google Scholar, my translation.
22 Ibid., 61–62.
23 Adamou Nyagnoum (Kwanja, Nyamboya village).
24 Sambi Pascal (Kwanja, Nyagbe village).
25 Barth, Heinrich, Voyages el découvertes dans l'Afrique Septentrionale et Centrale pendant les années 1849 à 1855 (Paris, 1860), 2:248Google Scholar; Lacroix, , “Matériaux/1,” 34.Google Scholar
26 Although this tax is supposed to be redistributed to the poor, the Lamibe often keep the largest share of it; see Dognin, R., “L'installation des Djafoun dans l'Adamaoua Camerounais. La Djakka chez les Peul de l'Adamaoua” in Tardits, , Conrtibution, 139–57.Google Scholar
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30 Lacroix, P.–F., “L'Islam peul de l'Adamawa,” in Lewis, , Islam, 401–07.Google Scholar
31 Tchoukou Dame (Wawa, Oumiari village).
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33 Willis, J.R., “The Ideology of Enslavement in Islam,” in Willis, , Slaves, 16–26.Google Scholar
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35 Sharpe, B., “Ethnography and a Regional System: Mental Maps and the Myth of States and Tribes in North-Central Nigeria,” Critique of Anthropology, 6 (1986), 33–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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