The BornoEmirate,[1] also known as the Borno Sultanate[1] or Bornu Emirate,[2] is a traditional state located in Borno State, Nigeria. The emirate is a remnant of the regime of the old Kanem–Bornu Empire, ruled by dynasts of the final Bornoan ruling dynasty (the al-Kanemi dynasty). The rulers of the Borno Emirate serve as ceremonial leaders, preserving political and cultural continuity with the old empire.[3] They have continued to be styled as the shehus of Borno, continuing an imperial line established by Muhammad al-Amin al-Kanemi in the early 19th century.
In 1893–1894, the empire was conquered by the Sudanese warlord Rabih az-Zubayr, who destroyed the al-Kanemi capital of Kukawa[7] and instead selected Dikwa as his seat.[6] Rabih was defeated by joint Bornoan and French forces in 1900, whereafter the French installed the al-Kanemi dynasty Sanda Kura as shehu at Dikwa.[8] Sanda Kura proved dissatisfactory to the French colonial authorities and was soon replaced with his brother Abubakar Garbai.[8]
In 1902, Abubakar Garbai accepted becoming the figurehead ruler of British Borno and left Dikwa, whereafter the entire former empire fell under colonial control.[8] Garbai and his successors came to govern the traditional state that is today known as the Borno Emirate,[9] ruling from Maiduguri since 1907.[7][10] Garbai left Dikwa in the hands of his relative Sanda Mandarama,[8] whose successors governed the Dikwa Emirate.[9]
↑The numbering of the shehus of Borno continues the enumeration of the shehus who ruled the Kanem–Bornu Empire. See the List of shehus of Bornu for details.
↑Nigeria (2000). Nigeria: a people united, a future assured. Vol.2, State Surveys (Millenniumed.). Abuja, Nigeria: Federal Ministry of Information. p.106. ISBN9780104089.
↑Brenner, Louis (2012). "Kanemi, Muhammad al-". Dictionary of African Biography. Oxford University Press. p.289. ISBN978-0-19-538207-5.
12Hiribarren, Vincent (2017). A History of Borno: Trans-Saharan African Empire to Failing Nigerian State. C. Hurst & Co. pp.51, 105–106, 175. ISBN9781849044745.
1234Tukur, Mahmud Modibbo (2016). "An Exceptional Situation in Borno". British Colonisation of Northern Nigeria, 1897–1914. Amalion Publishing. ISBN978-2-35926-046-5.
12Gronenborn, Detlef (2001). "Kanem-Borno: A Brief Summary of the History and Archaeology of an Empire of the Central bilad al-sudan". West Africa During the Atlantic Slave Trade: Archaeological Perspectives. Bloomsbury. p.123. ISBN978-1-4742-9104-0.