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Adal
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:''This article is about the African sultanate. For the Norse mythological figure, see
Adal (mythology).''
'''Adal''' was a
sixteenth century sultanate located in
East Africa north of
Ethiopia, in modern
Eritrea and
Djibouti. At its height, the sultanate controlled large portions of
Ethiopia and
Somalia.
A previous
Islamic state in the region, the Sultanate of
Shewa, had been destroyed in the
fourteenth century by the Ethiopian ''
Emperor of Ethiopia {{IPA|negusä nägäst}}''
Amda Seyon I Amda Seyon. A smaller sultanate, the Sultanate of
Ifat, controlled a few trading ports on the coast including
Saylac and Adal in the following decades. In either
1403 or
1415, the Ethiopians invaded Ifat and defeated its armies under its sultan,
Sa'ad ad-Din II, though they failed to maintain control over Adal itself.
In the mid-
1520s, a fiery
imam named
Ahmad ibn Ibrihim al-Ghazi (known as Ahmad Gran, the Left-Handed, to the Ethiopians) conquered the region of Adal and launched a holy war against
Christian Ethiopia under the leadership of
Lebna Dengel. Supplied by the
Ottoman Empire firearms, Ahmad was able to defeat the Ethiopians at the
Battle of Shimbra Kure in
1529 and seize control of the wealthy
Ethiopian highlands, though the Ethiopians continued to resist from the Christian highlands. In
1541, the
Portugal Portuguese, who had vested interests in the
Indian Ocean, sent aid to the Ethiopians in the form of 400
musketeers; Adal, in response, received 900 from the Ottomans.
Ahmad was initially successful against the Ethiopians while campaigning in the fall of
1542, killing the Portuguese commander
Christovão da Gama in August that year. Portuguese musketry proved decisive in Adal's defeat at the
Battle of Wayna Daga, near Lake Tana, in February
1543, where Ahmad was killed in battle. The Ethiopians subsequently retook the Amhara plateau and recouped their losses against Adal; the Ottomans, who had their own troubles to deal with in the
Mediterranean, were unable to help Ahmad's successors. In
1577, the capital of the Adal Sultanate was moved to
Harar, and a sharp decline in Adal's power followed.
The migration of the pagan
Oromo (called the ''Galla'' by the
Amhara) into the
Horn of Africa affected both Adal and Ethiopia. The warlike Oromo tribes exhausted the Ethiopians in the latter part of the sixteenth century in war, and the weakened Adal sultanate was unable to cope; by
1660, the sultanate had disappeared.
Category:History of Africa
Category:History of Ethiopia
Category:History of Somalia
de:Sultanat Adal
fr:Adal
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