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Academic literature on the topic 'Empire Peul du Macina'
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Journal articles on the topic "Empire Peul du Macina"
Diallo, Abdourahmane. "Position et location en peul, l’usage de ka au Fouta Djallon." Journal of African Languages and Linguistics 41, no. 1 (August 4, 2020): 3–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/jall-2020-2002.
Full textTourneux, Henry. "Muḥammad b. ‘Alī Pereejo, 2011, L’Inspiration de l’Éternel, Éloge de Shékou Amadou, fondateur de l’empire peul du Macina." Journal des Africanistes, no. 83-2 (July 30, 2013): 211–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/africanistes.3475.
Full textMOUMOUNI, SEYNI. "A HAGIOGRAPHY OF SHEKU AMADU - L'inspiration de l’éternel: Éloge de Shékou Amadou, fondateur de l'empire peul du Macina, par Muhammad b. ‘Alî Pereejo. Edited by Georges Bohas, Abderrahim Saguer, and Bernard Salvaing. Brinon-sur-Sauldre France: Grandvaux Vecmas, 2011. Pp. 192. €19, paperback (ISBN 978-2-909550-69-5)." Journal of African History 53, no. 3 (November 2012): 434–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021853712000667.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Empire Peul du Macina"
Traore, Ismail. "Les relations épistolaires entre la famille Kunta de Tombouctou et la Dina du Macina (1818-1864)." Thesis, Lyon, École normale supérieure, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012ENSL0748.
Full textThis thesis deals with two interdisciplinary aspects of science, namely critical studies and history (particularly the history of Mali). The section devoted to critical studies is written in Arabic and examines the most substantial and most interesting piece of correspondence exchanged between Shaykh Sīdī Ahmad al-Bakkay Kunta and the last Emir of Macina (Amadou Amadou). This manuscript deals with most of the differences which opposed the two protagonists, in particular, as well as dealing, more generally, with the burning issues concerning the two families. It was the reply to a first piece of correspondence sent by Amadou Amadou, which we have been unable to find although Sīdī al-Bakkay outlined its content in this reply.The historical aspect focuses on the study of a limited local zone. The sources are naturally the unpublished manuscripts of the Ahmad Baba Institute in Timbuktu (IHERIAB). In essence, this section of the thesis discusses the nature and importance of the Kunta - Peuls relationships and their evolution during the period 1818-1864 – a summary of the theocratic empire of Hamdallaye. From its birth, under the authority of three emirs, this young state unhesitatingly took control of religious leadership and commerce before invading Timbuktu and the surrounding area. The period was turbulent and the creation of this complicity was heavily influenced by the Tuareg presence. A proper apprehension of the subject requires one to bear in mind the political climate of the central Niger delta from the end of the 18th century to 1818 and how this context enabled the emergence of the Kunta and their supremacy in Timbuktu.The Kunta were both bearers of a traditional religious message and political figures in this sub-region. This double responsibility meant that they were not mere spectators of the events of the period, events tainted with interminable conflicts and a multitude of unexpected disputes. The content of this correspondence sent to various figures in different communities recounts the actions undertaken to settle these conflicts and shows the role played by the Kunta in the quest for dialogue and a peaceful climate in this area along the Niger.The letters comprising this correspondence written by Shaykh-s Kunta or the Peul Emirs of Macina as well as the letters received from their auxiliaries dealt with various subjects of daily life: appeals for justice, calls for better administration and good governance, advice, sermons and pleas, administrative, political and jurisconsult texts, tales of physical and verbal violence, mediations, reconciliations and the presenting of condolences etc
Diakité, Hiénin Ali. "Al-Mukhtār b. Yerkoy Talfi et le califat de Hamdallahi au XIXe siècle : Édition critique et traduction de Tabkīt al-Bakkay. Á propos d’une controverse inter-confrérique entre al-Mukhtār b. Yerkoy Talfi (1800-1864) et Aḥmad al-Bakkay (1800-1866)." Thesis, Lyon, École normale supérieure, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015ENSL1056.
Full textFor half a century from 1818-1862, the Hamdallahi Caliphate was ruled by three successive leaders who each carried the name “Amadou.” The capital of the Caliphate was located in the Macina region which is in the center of modern-day Mali in West Africa. This region witnessed numerous changes over the course of the nineteenth century, especially in its intellectual, political and Sufi configurations. This study is focused exclusively on the period from 1800 to 1866 in the Macina region. The work is based on a polemical text about the differences between West African members of the Qādiriyya and Tījāniyya brotherhoods during the nineteenth century. This choice was made with the goal of expanding the documentary basis for the history of the Macina, and more than this, to make the West African literature of the nineteenth century better known. The historiography of the region has until now been based on quick analyses which are not based on deep study of texts and as such, the choice made here in this thesis is to concentrate on the contents of texts related to these problems. This study illustrates the intellectual and political history of West Africa in the nineteenth century. The text was written after the military victory of al-Ḥājj Umar in the Macina region in 1862. That conquest put a definitive end to the theocratic state known by the name of the Hamdallahi Caliphate, one of the best organized states in West Africa in the nineteenth century. The political conflict was transformed into a conflict between brotherhoods. Ibn Yerkoy Talfi was a disciple of al-Ḥājj Umar and a Tījāni ideologue who was part of the winning side, and it was directed against Aḥmad al-Bakkay, leader of the Qādiriyya brotherhood in sub-Saharan Africa. Aḥmad al-Bakkay was among those defeated in this conflict, and had been a longtime critic of al-Ḥājj Umar and his brotherhood.A much broader investigation and critical analysis of the texts allows us to return to certain topics which have already been studies such as the wider context of these events, the stakes in the relations between the Kunta and Fulɓe in the period studies, and the manipulation of religious texts for political, historical and social reasons
Sissoko, Boubacar. "Le cheikh al-Mukhtâr al-Saghîr al-Kuntî (1790-1847) : médiation entre l'Etat peul du Macina et les Touaregs de Tombouctou de 1826 à 1847 : édition, traduction et commentaire de manuscrits." Thesis, Lyon, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019LYSE2028.
Full textThe Fulani state of Macina was founded in 1818 the shepherd Sékou Amadou (1845), who had epistolary relations with the Kunta family of Timbuktu. The reported information from the oral tradition considers the relationship between these two parties as conflictual. According to the latter, the Kunta were agitators attempting to rise up the Tuaregs against the Fulani rulers of Macina. Now, according to their different epistolary exchanges, it seemed to us that this relation had known two distinct periods the nature of which varies, according to that which extends from the rise to power of Sekou Amadou until 1847, or that which opens with Aḥmad al-Bakkāy al-Kuntī, especially from 1851/2 until the victory of al-Ḥāğğ cUmar Tall on the last emir, Amadou Amadou, in 1862.One of the Kunta chiefs of the first period was Sheikh al-Muḫtār al-ṣaġīr (1847). He accompanied the Fulani dynasty of Macina, maintained the good relationship that his predecessors had forged with the Fulani and undertook good offices between them and the Touaregs of Timbuktu. However, during the mediation of Sheikh Kunta between the Fulani and the Tuaregs, some difficulties arose, differences of opinion and interpretation without having noticeable consequences on their mutual relations. His correspondences with the Fulani rulers of Macina made it possible to treat the burning topics of his time, some of whichare still relevant in Mali.Our work proposes to publish, to comment, to treat the few handwritten epistles that these men, religious and political, have exchanged, to demonstrate to what extent the two traditions, oral and written, converge or diverge, and to make a historical study of the Tuareg question in Mali, which has become a recurrent conflict
Books on the topic "Empire Peul du Macina"
Georges, Bohas, Saguer Abderrahim, Salvaing Bernard, and Kouloughli, D. E. (Djamel Eddine), 1947-, eds. L'inspiration de l'éternel: Éloge de Shékou Amadou, fondateur de l'empire peul du Macina. Brinon-sur-Sauldre: Grandvaux, 2011.
Find full textSanankoua, Bintou. Un empire peul au XIXe siècle: La Diina du Maasina. Paris: Karthala, 1990.
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