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Adamawa Wars

Coordinates: 5°09′N 12°27′E / 5.15°N 12.45°E / 5.15; 12.45
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Adamawa Wars

German Map of Guinean Gulf Area, 1890
(German Kamerun highlighted in thin black stripes, bordered by the Emirate of Adamawa to the North East)
DateJanuary 1899 – August 1907
Location
Adamawa, Northern Cameroon
Result

German victory

  • Annexation of Adamawa
  • Along with British actions in Nigeria, the dissolution of the Sokoto Caliphate
Belligerents

German Empire German Empire

Co-belligerent

 British Empire

Sokoto Caliphate

Mahdist Rebels
Commanders and leaders
German Empire Jesko von Puttkamer
German Empire Curt von Pavel [de]
German Empire Rudolf Cramer von Clausbruch [de]
German Empire Hans Dominik
British Empire Thomas Morland
Abdur Rahman Atiku
Muhammad Attahiru I
Zubeiru bi Adama
Mal Alhadji
Goni Waday

The Adamawa Wars (1899–1907) were initially a series of military expeditions and border conflicts between the German Schutztruppe in Kamerun and the Fula Sunni Muslim states and tribes that were a part of the Sokoto Empire (a Caliphate formed during the Fulani Jihad), particularly the Emirate of Adamawa in the northern half of the region.[1] After these territories were annexed major resistance continued for years and several uprisings occurred.

Background

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The territories to the north of the portion of Kamerun under direct German control were part of either the Sokoto or Bornu Empires, which along with the Ottoman Empire were the worlds last remaining Caliphates. While the power of Bornu to resist was weakened after its temporary conquest by the Sudanese warlord Rabih az-Zubayr, Sokoto remained intact. Sokoto was an Islamic empire that controlled semi-autonomous emirates, the largest being Adamawa. By 1890 Adamawa was weakened by internal struggle, as a Mahdist state had developed within the Emirate,[2] and its borders overlapped with German colonial claims in the region, though it remained defiant on ceding territory.

For economic and political reasons, the Germans were determined to expand the colony into Adamawa,[3] so exploration expeditions to survey the region began, with the intention of eventually taking it by force. However, until 1898, the Germans were still primarily focused on the Bafut Wars, attempting to conquer and pacify the chiefdoms of central and northwestern Kamerun, rather than spreading northeast.

Tibati Expedition

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The military expeditions to expand German Kamerun north toward the Sahel, under the pretext of ending the Islamic slave trade in the region, began in earnest in January 1899,[4][5] with the Schutztruppe under the command of Captain Oltwig von Kamptz leaving Douala for the north to subjugate the Tibati Sultanate in southern Adamawa.[6] Tibati resisted fiercely, and the Bulu tribe on the former southern border of Adamawa rose up in revolt, the Bulu warriors marching to Kribi on the coast and destroyed the Catholic mission there.[7] Only after an increase in troops in the colony and a severe campaign lasting until 1901 was the region pacified and the Tibati Sultan captured, his palace taken by storm.[8]

Conquest of the Adamawa Plateau

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Hans Dominik, Oscar Zimmerman, Curt von Pavel and other German officers rest for a photo after reaching Lake Chad. (May 2, 1902)

The Germans had in the late 1890s taken a more military approach with Adamawa with the conquest of the Tibati Sultanate, which was favored by the governor of the Kamerun colony Jesko von Puttkamer, despite attempts to peacefully penetrate the region through Christian missionaries, the approach favored by Adolph Woermann, an influential merchant in the colony. However, in the summer of 1901, and despite previous conflict with the Emirate, Lieutenant Hans Dominik was ordered to meet with Emir Zubeiru bi Adama to reach an agreement on the contested territories and for the prospect of turning Adamawa into a protectorate of the German Empire, as Germany claimed all of the territory between the Sanaga River and Lake Chad, and conduct an expedition to the far north. However, ignoring orders from governor Puttkamer, Colonel Rudolf Cramer von Clausbruch [de] brought his Schutztruppe from the west and invaded Adamawa, storming the city of Ngaoundéré on August 20.[9] Seeing an opportunity to claim their portion of the Emirate, the British sent a force under Colonel Thomas Morland from Nigeria to attack and occupy Yola in September,[10] causing Emir Zubairu to flee from his own capital city. Dominik with his force fought their way northwest to Ngaoundéré where they linked up with Clausbruch's troops before attacking across the Benue River capturing the city of Garoua. One of Fula rulers opposing the German advance (like most of his contemporaries) was Mal Hammadou, whose forces were devastated by the Germans. Lieutenant Radke, leading a force of 47 men, marched on Hammadou's capital of Rei Buba by November, and attacked a strong Fulani force at a position just outside of the town, almost losing the battle, but being able to defeat and route the enemy in a final bayonet charge before marching on Rei Buba itself.[11] Hammadou's capital was bombarded by cannons before being captured, causing him to flee. The Germans replaced him as local leader (holding the title Ardo) with Bouba Djama.[12]

Zubairu went to gather support in Sokoto and returned with a large force of Fulani cavalry and infantry, and also appealed for support from the Mahdist movement in Adamawa, no longer an enemy to the Emir since the death of Hayutu ibn Said in the 1890s, and who sympathized with the Emir's call for jihad against the German invaders.[13] However, informats told the Germans of Zubairu's plans,[14] despite this the Germans wanted to hold peace talks in Garoua and use Zubairu as a puppet, allowing him to stay in power in return for his help winning over the other sultanates and emirates in Sokoto. Instead the Emir attacked Garoua with a much larger force in November 1901. However Zubairu was defeated and routed, his force suffered some 300 dead.[15] Fleeing toward Maroua, Zubairu tried to raise another force, but Lieutenant Dominik led a small force of Schutztruppe in pursuit. At the decisive Battle of Maroua [de] another Fulani force of cavalry led by Zubairu and Ahmadu Rufai, supported by Mahdist sympathizers, was again defeated by the Schutztruppe,[16] although Zubairu and Rufai again escaped.

After the Battle at Maroua, Zubairu and many of his supporters fled into the Mandara Mountains deeper into the Sokoto Empire. Hans Dominik had the local Fulani ruler Bakari Yadji executed for assisting Zubairu's escape in this region to Madagali, and his son Hamman was placed as local ruler instead.[17] With the military defeat and expulsion of Zubairu as a spiritual and political overlord of the Fulani in Adamawa, the German colonial administration annexed the region from Sokoto, broke the historic ties to the Fulani's center Yola and replaced them with the connection to the seat of the residency Garoua as a new political and economic center.

In April 1902, Sultan Umar of Mandara swore allegiance to German Emperor Kaiser Wilhelm II,[18] and by early May 1902, an expedition had reached the southern shores of Lake Chad. Despite being in exile Zubairu sent agents to get revenge on the Germans. In January 1903, one of his agents, Yerima Mustapha, arranged to meet and then assassinated the German resident of Maroua, Graf Fugger, with a poisoned dart, prompting Dominik to engage in a harsh occupation of the city.[19] Zubairu himself was killed later that year by his tribal rivals in British Nigeria. In 1903, Germany and Britain officially partitioned the region,[20] which was followed by the formal ending of the Sokoto Caliphate. This established complete German control of northern Kamerun up to the shores of Lake Chad in Bornu.

Mahdist Uprising

[edit]

Between 1903 and 1907, the situation had calmed in the parts of the former Sokoto Caliphate occupied by the Schutztruppe. However under German rule, Muslims saw themselves on the defensive over their religion, and a significant uprising occurred in the summer of 1907.

After a pilgrimage to Mecca, Mal Alhadji returned to northern Kamerun and, under the influence of the Mallam (Koranic theologian) Liman Arabu, began preaching the Mahdiyya throughout Adamawa.[21] In June he started a Mahdist revolt against German rule near Maroua, claiming he had been appointed to deliver them to the Mahdi out of colonial rule and from the Muslim rulers loyal to the German Empire,[22][23] installing himself at Goudoum-Goudoum, gathering forces both from the Fulani and the Shuwa Arabs in the far north. Simultaneously, Goni Waday, another Mahdist who recently travelled to Mecca, launched a revolt in Ngaoundéré having gathered support with his passionate sermons calling for a jihad from the Mosques of the city to expel the German Christians and restore the old caliphate.[24]

Mal Alhadji moved north to defeat the Schutztruppe, burning down villages considered complicit with the Europeans along the way. In early July, the Mahdist force attacked the German camp at Malam-Petel (commanded by Capt. Zimmermann), but they were immediately met with gunfire, and after heavy losses had to retreat. Zimmermann's force pursued Alhadji, capturing him at Doumru. The Germans turned Alhadji over to the local ruler of Maroua, Lamido Soudi, and he was publicly beheaded in the Maroua market-place along with several of his accomplices.[25] The Germans killed Mallam Arabu for playing a prominent role in Alhadji's revolt.[26] Meanwhile, the ruler of Ngaoundéré, worried of German retaliation, expelled Waday and his rebels from his domain. Waday and his followers decided tried to head north toward Garoua with the intention of capturing it. Crossing the Benue River to the southeast of Garoua, the Fulani force closed in. The Schutztruppe sent a force under Lt. Nitschmann to Guébaké, where on July 18, 1907, they ambushed the Fulanis marching on Garoua. Waday was raked with machinegun fire and killed, and only the rearmost Mahdists escaped the ambush. By August 1907, the rebels across north Adamawa had been suppressed, ending the uprising. To prevent similar uprisings, the Germans rounded up all of the Fulani leaders who had supported Waday and hanged them in Garoua. Because both Alhadji and Waday had recently returned from the Hajj, restrictions were put in place and pilgrimages to Mecca had to receive prior authorization.[27]

Despite the suppression of the Madhist Uprising, German control of Kamerun would be brought to a decisive end seven years later by the French Troupes coloniales British West African Frontier Force in the Kamerun campaign of World War I.

Sources

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  • Martin Njeuma: The Usmanuya System, Radicalism and the Establishment of German Colonial Rule in Northern Cameroon, 1890-1907, Frobenius 1994
  • Florian Hoffmann: Okkupation und Militärverwaltung in Kamerun. Etablierung und Institutionalisierung des kolonialen Gewaltmonopols 1891–1914, Göttingen 2007
  • Hans Dominik: Vom Atlantik zum Tschadsee: Kriegs- und Forschungsfahrten in Kamerun, Harvard 1908
  • Holger Weiss: The Illegal Trade in Slaves from German Northern Cameroon to British Northern Nigeria, Wisconsin 2000
  • A. H. M. Kirk-Greene: Adamawa Past and Present: An Historical Approach to the Development of a Northern Cameroons Province, Taylor & Francis 2018

Citations

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  1. ^ Smith, Woodruff D. (1978). German Colonial Empire. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. p. 81. ISBN 9781469610252. Retrieved 26 May 2021.
  2. ^ "They Leave Their Jars Behind: The Conversion of Mafa Women to Islam" p.82
  3. ^ "History of Cameroon Since 1800" p.78
  4. ^ Lowry, John S. (2015-11-16). Big Swords, Jesuits, and Bondelswarts: Wilhelmine Imperialism, Overseas Resistance, and German Political Catholicism, 1897–1906. BRILL. p. 76. ISBN 978-90-04-30687-5. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  5. ^ "Deutsche Kolonial-Zeitung: Volume 18" p.181
  6. ^ "History of Cameroon Since 1800" p. 78
  7. ^ "The Historians' History of the World: A Comprehensive Narrative of the Rise and Development of Nations as Recorded by Over Two Thousand of the Great Writers of All Ages" Volume 15, p.561
  8. ^ "Journal of the African Society" p. 85
  9. ^ Muñoz, José-María (2018-09-27). Doing Business in Cameroon: An Anatomy of Economic Governance. Cambridge University Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-1-108-42899-6. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  10. ^ Abba, Alkasum (2003). History of Yola, 1809-1914: The Establishment and Evolution of a Metropolis. Ahmadu Bello University Press. p. 121. ISBN 978-978-125-196-2. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  11. ^ "Studia Orientalia: Edited by the Finnish Oriental Society" Volume 103, p. 30
  12. ^ DeLancey, Mark Dike; Mbuh, Rebecca Neh; Delancey, Mark W. (2010-05-03). Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Cameroon. Scarecrow Press. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-8108-7399-5. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
  13. ^ Goodwin, Stefan (2006-03-03). Africas Legacies Of Urbanization: Unfoldi: Unfolding Saga of a Continent. Lexington Books. p. 199. ISBN 978-0-7391-5176-1. Retrieved 31 May 2021.
  14. ^ Njeuma, M. Z. (2012). Fulani Hegemony in Yola (Old Adamawa) 1809-1902. African Books Collective. p. 207. ISBN 978-9956-726-95-0. Retrieved 1 June 2021.
  15. ^ Barkindo, Bawuro M. (1989). The Sultanate of Mandara to 1902: History of the Evolution, Development and Collapse of a Central Sudanese Kingdom. F. Steiner. p. 219. ISBN 978-3-515-04416-5. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  16. ^ DeLancey, Mark Dike; Delancey, Mark W.; Mbuh, Rebecca Neh (2019-06-15). Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Cameroon. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 322. ISBN 978-1-5381-1968-6. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  17. ^ "They Leave Their Jars Behind: The Conversion of Mafa Women to Islam" p. 84
  18. ^ Asiwaju, A. I. (1985). Partitioned Africans: Ethnic Relations Across Africa's International Boundaries, 1884-1984. C. Hurst. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-905838-91-5. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  19. ^ Njeuma, M. Z. (2012). Fulani Hegemony in Yola (Old Adamawa) 1809-1902. African Books Collective. p. 212. ISBN 978-9956-726-95-0. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
  20. ^ DeLancey, Mark Dike (2016). Conquest and construction : palace architecture in northern Cameroon. Leiden: Brill. p. 15. ISBN 9789004316126. Retrieved 26 May 2021.
  21. ^ DeLancey, Mark Dike; Delancey, Mark W.; Mbuh, Rebecca Neh (2019). Historical dictionary of the Republic of Cameroon (Fifth ed.). Lanham, Maryland. p. 317. ISBN 978-1-5381-1968-6. Retrieved 4 June 2021.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  22. ^ "Paideuma Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde" · Volumes 1-40, p.124
  23. ^ Temimi, Abdeljelil (1997). أعمال الندوة العالمية المنعقدة بتمبكتو حول : الثقافة العربية الإسلامية بإفريقيا جنوب الصحراء ، غرب افريقيا نموذجا: cas de l'Afrique de l'Ouest (in French). Fondation Temimi pour la recherche scientifique et l'information. p. 49. ISBN 978-9973-719-59-1. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  24. ^ Gomez-Perez, Muriel (2005-06-01). Islam politique au sud du Sahara - Identités, discours et enjeux (in French). KARTHALA Editions. p. 387. ISBN 978-2-8111-3927-8. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  25. ^ DeLancey, Mark Dike; Mbuh, Rebecca Neh; Delancey, Mark W. (2010-05-03). Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Cameroon. Scarecrow Press. p. 236. ISBN 978-0-8108-7399-5. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  26. ^ "Mitteilungen zur Kulturkunde" · Volumes 1-40, p.125
  27. ^ Gomez-Perez, Muriel (2005-06-01). Islam politique au sud du Sahara - Identités, discours et enjeux (in French). KARTHALA Editions. pp. 386, 387, 388, 389. ISBN 978-2-8111-3927-8. Retrieved 4 June 2021.

5°09′N 12°27′E / 5.15°N 12.45°E / 5.15; 12.45