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Sultanate of Darfur

The Sultanate of Darfur (Arabic: سلطنة دارفور, romanizedSalṭanat al-Dārfūr) was a pre-colonial state in present-day Sudan. It existed from 1603 to 24 October 1874, when it fell to the Sudanese warlord Rabih az-Zubayr, and again from 1898 to 1916, when it was occupied by the British and the Egyptians and was integrated into Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. At its peak in the late 18th and early 19th century it stretched all the way from Darfur in the west to Kordofan and the western banks of the White Nile in the east, giving it the size of present-day Nigeria.[1]

Sultanate of Darfur
سلطنة دارفور (Arabic)
Salṭanat al-Dārfūr

al-Fashir (after 1790)

Dafurian

 

1603

24 October 1874

1898

1916

Warfare[edit]

The armies of Darfur underwent a three-staged evolution. Before the 18th century they consisted entirely of levy warbands, youths armed with spears, hide shields and occasionally throwing knives. They were commanded by an older man titled ornang or 'aqid. By the 18th century, a new type of warrior developed, the heavily armoured fursan.[4] They would form the small core of the armies of Darfur.[5] These fursan were armed with long swords imported from Solingen in Germany, lances, maces and sometimes firearms. Body armour consisted of locally made gambesons, German-made mail armour, silk coats, greaves and helmets. The horses were a Nubian breed imported from the Dongola Reach and were purchased with slaves. Like the riders they were armoured with gambesons and mail armour as well as additional armour for the head. All this equipment had to be organized and maintained by the chiefs responsible for the fursan.[6] By the 1850s and 1860s, Darfur entered the third stage, when it attempted to build an army based on muskets. While firearms were already used in Darfur before it was only then when they were used tactically and in large numbers. These experiments were, however, ended with the invasion of al-Zubayr in 1874. Sultan Ibrahim died in a cavalry charge.[7] The regular army of the revived state of Ali Dinar reportedly numbered 7,700 men in 1903 and 5,000 in 1916 and wielded a wide array of weapons, ranging from spears and shields to muzzle loaders, shotguns and Remington rifles.[8]


Sultans and nobles were guarded by the korkwa, armed pages wielding spears and hide shields.[5]

O'Fahey, R. S.; Tubiana, Jérôme (2007). (PDF). Retrieved 2018-08-23.

"Darfur. Historical and Contemporary Aspects"

O'Fahey, Rex S. (1980). State and Society in Darfur. Hurst.  0312756062.

ISBN

Takana, Youssef Suliman Saeed (2016). (PDF). Retrieved 2020-10-03.

"DARFUR – STRUGGLE OF POWER AND RESOURCES, 1650–2002: AN INSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVE"

Kapteijns, Lidwien; Spaulding, Jay (1988). After the millennium: diplomatic correspondence from Wadai and Dar Fur on the eve of colonial conquest, 1885–1916. African Studies Center, Michigan State University.  18240510.

OCLC

O'Fahey, R.S.; Spaulding, Jay L. (1974). Kingdoms of the Sudan. Methuen Young Books.  0416774504.

ISBN

Spaulding, Jay; Kapteijns, Lidwien (1994). An Islamic Alliance: Ali Dinar and the Sanusiyya, 1906–1916. Northwestern University.  0810111942.

ISBN

Thebald, Alan Buchan (1965). Ali Dinar: Last Sultan of Darfur, 1898–1916. Longmans.