Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T14:40:02.920Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Sultan Selim I and the Sudan

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Extract

The article considers the origin and validity of statements made by Budge, MacMichael, Crawford and Arkell associating the establishment of Ottoman control over Lower Nubia and the Suakin-Massawa region with Sultan Selim I. These statements are derived from Na‘ūm Shuqayr's Ta'rīkh al-Sūdān, which has two principal relevant passages. In the first, Shuqayr combines, and dates with misleading precision, two traditional anecdotes concerning Nubia, one derived from Burckhardt's Travels in Nubia (1819), the other an aetiological legend of a frontier-fight. The second passage mentions a legendary invasion of Abyssinia by Selim, and relates to a Fūnj (or ‘Abdallābī) claim to Arab ancestry. The personal connexion of Selim I with these exploits is wholly mythical: it is excluded by the detailed account of his acts during 1517 given by the contemporary chronicler, Ibn Iyās. The establishment of Ottoman rule in these two regions was the achievement of Özdemir Pasha in the reign of Süleyman the Magnificent, about the middle of the sixteenth century. The legend of the frontier-fight may refer to an even later episode, in the last quarter of that century.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1967

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Budge, E. A. Wallis, The Egyptian Sudan (London, 1907), 11, 200–1, 207–8.Google ScholarMacMichael, H. A., A history of the Arabs in the Sudan (Cambridge, 1922), I, 189; 11, 6.Google ScholarCrawford, O. G. S., The Fung Kingdom of Sennar (Gloucester, 1951), 123, 170.Google ScholarArkell, A. J., A History of the Sudan to A.D. 1821 (1st ed., London 1955), 204.Google Scholar

2 Holt, P. M., ‘The Beylicate in Ottoman Egypt during the seventeenth century’, BSOAS, XXIV, part 2 (1961), at p. 217, n. 2.Google Scholar

3 Shuqayr, Na'ūm, Ta'rīkh al-Sūdān al-qadīm wa'l-hadīth wa-jughrafiyyatuhu (Cairo [1903], 3 vols. in 1).Google Scholar

4 See his biography in Hill, Richard, A Biographical Dictionary of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan (Oxford, 1951), 293.Google Scholar

5 Ta'rīkh, 1, 66; 11, p. 55.Google Scholar

6 Ta'rīkh, 11, 508–9.Google Scholar

7 Burckhardt, J. L., Travels in Nubia (London, 1819), 133–5.Google Scholar

8 Travels, 138. Burkhardt, discussing the blood-wite payable in Nubia, speaks of ‘one of the governor's tribe, or an El Ghoz( a name given in Egypt and Nubia to the Mamelouks) or any of the people of Ibrim’ as if these were three distinct categories. Nevertheless, kāshifs in Ottoman Egypt were almost invariably Mamluks, and the probability that ‘Coosy’ = Ghuzzī supports the belief that Shuqayr is right in speaking of ‘the Ghuzz kāshifs’.Google Scholar

9 Ta'rikh, 11, 73–4.Google Scholar

10 Penn, E. A. D., ‘Traditional stories of the Abdullab tribe’, Sudan Notes and Records, XVII, part 1 (Khartoum, 1934), 5982. The anecdote referred to is at 66–7.Google Scholar

11 %Mostafa, Mohamad (ed), Die Chronik des Ibn Ijās, v (2nd ed,, Cairo, 1961), 148 ff.Google Scholar

12 Qutb al-Dīn Muhammad b. Ahmad al-Makkī, al-Barq al- Yamānī, BM. MS. Or. 1183, ff. 43a·b,Google ScholarÇelebi, Evliya, Seyahatname, X (Istanbul, 1938), 840 ff, 939 ff., 950 ff.Google Scholar Evliya's account of the Sudan has been studied, and partially translated into Italian, by Suma, M. T. Petti, ‘Il viaggio in Sudan di Evliyā Čelebīi’, Annali dell' Istituto Orientale di Napoli, N.S. XIV (1964), 433–52.Google ScholarOrhonlu, Cengiz, ‘XVI asrin ilk yarisinda Kizildeniz sahillerin'de Osmanlilar’, Tarih Dergisi, XII, no. 16 (Istanbul, 1962), at 1617.Google Scholar

13 See further, Holt, P. M., ‘Al-Jabarti's introduction to the history of Ottoman Egypt’, BSOAS, XXV, no. 1 (1962), at 4850.Google Scholar

14 Vansleb, P., Nouvelle relation en forme de journal d'un voyage fait en Egypte (Paris, 1677, p. 22). He gives the name as Soliman-Gianballāt.Google Scholar

15 'Mubārak, Alī, al-Khit;at al-jadīda, X (Cairo, 1305/18871888), 54–5.Google Scholar

16 MacMichael, History, 11, 127. For other references, see under these names in the index. MacMichael's own discussion of the problem of al-Samarquandī is in 11, 6–8. His reference to al-Samarquandī ‘the Great’ (p. 7) should be ‘the Elder’, a common usage of al-kabīr.Google Scholar