"Bamanaya is so difficult to leave behind"

Archaeology, Oral History, and Islamization in the Segou Region of Mali

Authors

  • Kevin C. MacDonald UCL Institute of Archaeology

Keywords:

Segou, Empire of Mali, Bamana Segou, Syncretism, Mosques, Islamization

Abstract

Islamization in Mande West Africa gradually accompanied the expansion of mercantile groups and was surprisingly accommodating via syncretic processes with local spiritual traditions. Elites of the Empire of Mali were amongst the first to embrace Islam and mediate between it and indigenous earth religions. Yet this process was patchy across different cultural sectors and from the seventeenth century onwards there were upswellings of Bamanaya, earth religions, in open conflict with waves of Islamic jihadism (e.g. the Umarian movement). Thus, historic polities could retain both mosques and non-Islamic shrines, and maraboutic practices incorporated forms of local magic. This article considers results from “Project Segou”: historical and archaeological fieldwork undertaken between 2005 and 2013 in the Segou region of Mali, stretching approximately from Sinsanni in the east to Nyamina in the west. As a heartland of the Empire of Mali (c. AD 1235–1500) and the core of Bamana Segou (c. AD 1700–1861), its oral and archaeological sources inform our deep time appreciation of ideological and spiritual change at the margins of the Middle Niger from the thirteenth through nineteenth centuries AD.

References

al-Sa'di 1964. Tarikh es-Soudan. Translated by O. Houdas. Paris: Adrien-Maisonneuve.

Bazin, J. 1972 . “Commerce et Prédation. L’État Bambara de Segou et ses Communautés Marka.” Proceedings of the [First] Conference on Manding Studies, School of Oriental and African Studies, 2B:1-26. London: SOAS.

“Princes désarmés, corps dangereux. Les “rois-femmes” de la région de Segu.” Cahiers d’Études Africaines 28: 375–441. https://doi.org/10.3406/cea.1988.1658

Bird, Charles S. 1999. “The production and reproduction of Sunjata.” In In Search of Sunjata: the Mande oral epic as history, literature and performance, edited by RA Austen, 275–295, Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Boyer, G. 1953. Un people de l’Ouest soudanais: les Diawara. Dakar: IFAN.

Bravmann, René A. 1974. Islam and Tribal Art in West Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Bulman, Stephen P.D.and Valentin F. Vydrine, eds. 2017. The Epic of Sumanguru Kante, Narrated by Abdoulaye Sako. Leiden: Brill.

Calasso, Giovanna. 1992. “Les Remparts et la Loi, les Talismans et les Saints: la protection de la ville dans les sources musulman médiéval.” Bulletin d’études orientales 44: 83–104.

Canós-Donnay, S. 2016. “Territories, fortresses, and shifting towns: Archaeological landscapes of the Upper Casamance (Senegal), 7th–19th century.” Unpublished PhD thesis, University College London.

Cissé, M., S. K. McIntosh, L. Dussubieux, T. Fenn, D. Gallagher and A. Chipps Smith. 2013. “Excavations at Gao Saney: New evidence for settlement growth, trade and interaction on the Niger Bend in the first millennium CE.” Journal of African Archaeology 11: 9–37. https://doi.org/10.3213/2191-5784-10233

Collet, Hadrien. 2012. “L’introuvable capitale du Mali. La question de la capitale dans l’historiographie du royaume médiéval du Mali.” Afriques (online) http://afriques.revues.org/1098

Conrad, David C., ed. 1990. A State of Intrigue: The Epic of Bamana Segu according to Tayiru Banbera. London: The British Academy/Oxford University Press.

Coutros, P. R., A. Womack and M. Cissé. 2017. “Initial results from magnetometer survey at Dakajalan, Mali.” Nyame Akuma 88: 41–47.

Cuoq, J. M. 1984. Histoire de l’Islamization de l’Afrique de l’Ouest : des origines à la fin du XVIe Siècle. Paris: Librairie Orientaliste Paul Geuthner.

Dieterlen, G. 1951. Essai sur la religion Bambara. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.

Djata, Sundiata A. 1997. The Bamana Empire by the Niger: Kingdom, Jihad and Colonization 1712–1920. Princeton, NJ: Markus Wiener Publishers.

Fauvelle-Aymar, F.-X. 2012. “Niani Redux. A Final Rejection of the Identification of the Site of Niani (Republic of Guinea) with the Capital of the Kingdom of Mali.” Palethnology of Africa, (P@lethnology) 4: 235–252.

“African Archaeology and the ‘Chalk Line Effect’: a Consideration of Mali City and Sigilmasa.” In Landscapes, Sources and Intellectual Projects of the West African Past, edited by T. Green and B. Rossi, 46–62. Leiden: Brill.

Filipowiak, W. 1979. Etudes Archéologiques sur la Capitale Médievale du Mali. Szczecin: Museum Narodowe.

Fisher, H. J. 1973. “Conversion reconsidered: Some historical aspects of religious conversion in Black Africa.” Africa 43: 27–40. https://doi.org/10.2307/1158544

“The juggernaut’s apologia: Conversion to Islam in Black Africa.” Africa 55: 153–173. https://doi.org/10.2307/1160299

Gestrich, N. 2018. “Ta Masa und die Magier: Politische Geschicte in Mali jenseits der Schriftquellen.” In Schriftlose Vergangenheiten, edited by L. Regazonni, 247–266. Oldenbourg: De Gruyter.

Gestrich, N. and D. Keita. 2017. “Report on a season of prospection and excavation near Segú, Mali.” Nyame Akuma 88: 48–55.

Gokee, C., K. Doumbouya, K. Doukouré and M. Sidibé. 2013. “Archaeological recognition in the Upper Niger Basin (Upper Guinea).” Nyame Akuma 80: 91–105.

Hunwick, J. O. 1973. “The mid-fourteenth century capital of Mali.” Journal of African History 14: 195–206. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0021853700012512

Insoll, T. 2017. “The archaeology of Islamization in sub-Saharan Africa: A comparative study.” In Islamization: Comparative Perspectives from History, edited by A.C.S. Peacock, 244-73. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

Levtzion, N. 1968. Muslims and Chiefs in West Africa: A Study of Islam in the Middle Volta Basin in the Pre-Colonial Period. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Ancient Ghana and Mali. London: Methuen.

Levtzion, N. and J.F.P. Hopkins, eds. 2000. Corpus of Early Arabic Sources for West African History. (Second Edition). Princeton, NJ: Markus Wiener Publishers.

Lewicki, T. 1974. West African Food in the Middle Ages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Maas, P. 1992. Djenne: Chef-d’oeuvre Architectural. Amsterdam: KIT Publications.

MacDonald, K. C. 1999. “Analysis of the Mammalian, Avian, and Reptilian Remains.” In Excavations at Jenné-Jeno, Hambarketolo, and Kaniana (Inland Niger Delta Mali), the 1981 season, edited by S. K. McIntosh, 291–318. Berkeley: University of California Press.

“‘The Least of their inhabited villages are fortified’: The walled settlements of Segou.” Azania: Archaeological Research in Africa 47: 343–364. https://doi.org/10.1080/0067270X.2012.707478

“Complex societies, urbanism and trade in the western Sahel.” In The Oxford Handbook of African Archaeology, edited by P. Mitchell and P. Lane, 829-844. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

“‘A Chacun son Bambara’, encoure une fois: History, archaeology and Bambara origins.” In Ethnic Ambiguity and the African Past: Materiality, History, and the Shaping of Cultural Identities, edited by F. Richard and K. MacDonald, 119–144, Walnut Creek, CA/London: Left Coast Press/Taylor & Francis.

“Faunal Remains.” In Essouk-Tadmekka: An Early Islamic Trans-Saharan Market Town. Edited by S. Nixon, 234–240. Leiden: Brill.

MacDonald, K. C. and S. Camara. 2011. “Segou: Warfare and the origins of a state of slavery.” In Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory, edited by P. J. Lane and K. C. MacDonald, 25–46. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

“Segou, slavery and Sifinso.” In Power and landscape in Atlantic West Africa, edited by J. C. Monroe and A. Ogundiran, 169–190. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

MacDonald, K. C., S. Camara, S. Canos Donnay, N. Gestrich and D. Keita. 2011. “Sorotomo: A forgotten Malian capital?” Archaeology International 13/14: 52-64.

MacDonald, K. C. and S. Canos Donnay. 2019. “West Africa, 400–1400.” In Sir Bannister Fletcher’s A History of Architecture (21st Edition), edited by M. Fraser, 820–832. London: Bloomsbury Publishing.

MacDonald, K. C., N. Gestrich, S. Camara and D. Keita. 2018. “The ‘Pays Dô’ and the origins of the empire of Mali.” In Landscapes, Sources and Intellectual Projects of the West African Past, edited by T. Green and B. Rossi, 63–87. Leiden: Brill.

Manning, K. and K. MacDonald. 2005. “Analyse des restes d’animaux collectés à Dia.” In Recherches archéologiques à Dia dans le Delta Intérieur du Niger (Mali): Bilan des saisons de fouilles 1998–2003. Edited by R. Bedaux et al., 363-385, Leiden: CNWS Publications

McIntosh, R. J. 2005. Ancient Middle Niger: Urbanism and the Self-Organising Landscape, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

McIntosh, S. K. 2020. “Long-distance exchange and urban trajectories in the first millennium AD: Case studies from the Middle Niger and Middle Senegal River Valleys.” In Urbanisation and StateFormation in the Ancient Sahara and Beyond, edited by M. Sterry and D. Mattingly, 521–563. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

McIntosh, S. K., D. Gallagher and R. J. McIntosh. 2003. “Tobacco pipes from excavations at the Museum Site, Jenne, Mali.” Journal of African Archaeology 1: 171–199. https://doi.org/10.3213/1612-1651-10008

Monteil, C. 1977 [1924]. Les Bambara du Segou et du Kaarta. Paris: G-P. Maisonneuve et Larose.

[1929]. Les Empires du Mali : Etude d’Histoire et se Sociologie Soudanaises. Paris: G-P. Maisonneuve et Larose.

Niane, D. T. 1960. Soundjata ou l’épopée mandingue, Paris: Présence Africaine.

Pageard, R. 1959. “Note sur les Kagoro et la Chefferie de Soro.” Journal des Africanistes 29: 261–272. https://doi.org/10.3406/jafr.1959.1908

Philippe, S. 2013. Ségou: une région d’histoire Bamako: Memoria.

Pradines, S. 2022. Historic Mosques in Sub-Saharan Africa: From Timbuktu to Zanzibar. Leiden: Brill.

Prussin, L. 1986. Hatumere: Islamic Design in West Africa. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Roberts, R. L. 1987. Warriors, Merchants, and Slaves: the State and the Economy in the Middle Niger Valley, 1700–1914. Stanford: Stanford University Press.

SEGOU. 2005. Projet Segou Archives, 2005 field season, transcripts of taped interviews in Bambara, translated to French, held at the Institute of Archaeology, London and the Institut des Sciences Humaines, Bamako.

Projet Segou Archives, 2010 field season, transcripts of taped interviews in Bambara, translated to French, held at the Institute of Archaeology, London and the Institut des Sciences Humaines, Bamako.

Projet Segou Archives, 2013 field season, transcripts of taped interviews in Bambara, translated to French, held at the Institute of Archaeology, London and the Institut des Sciences Humaines, Bamako.

Trimingham, J. S. 1959. Islam in West Africa. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

A History of Islam in West Africa. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Downloads

Published

2023-03-31

Issue

Section

Journal of Islamic Archaeology

Categories