Deria Sugulleh Ainashe

Sultan Deria Sugulleh Ainashe (Somali: Diiriye Sugulle Caynaashe) was a Sultan of the Habr Yunis, reigning from the late-eighteenth to the mid-nineteenth century.

Sultan Deria Sugulleh Ainashe
سلطان ديريا سو غوله عيناشا
2nd Sultan of the Habr Yunis
PredecessorSugulleh Ainasha
SuccessorHersi Aman
ReligionSunni Islam

Biography

Map of key settlements with Deria's capital Waram visible

Diiriye was the second Sultan of the Habr Yunis who came from a lineage of tribal chiefs. His father, Sugulleh, was first Sultan of the Habr Yunis and his Grandfather, Ainashe, was the tribe's Chieftain. The earliest recorded mention of Diiriye is from 1840 by French Explorer Antoine Thomson d'Abbadie.[1] The Sultan had his capital at Waram or 'Wadhan' in Togdheer just northwest of Burao and its important wells. Caravans would pass Waram en route to Berbera through the Sheikh pass and Deria would collect tax and administer affairs of the Habr Yunis from the town.[2]


Lieutenant C.P Rigby in the year 1848 writes:

The Hubr Gajis tribe and its different branches are governed by two Sultans, named Sultan Deriah [Habr Yunis Sultan] and Sultan Farah [Eidagale Sultan]: the residence of the latter is at Toro.[3]

Enrico Baudi i Vesme who visited Burao in 1898 writes:

The chief of the Habr Junis lineage, named Hainasce [Ainashe], had seventeen children, one of whom his name was Soghulli [Sugulleh]. First they stayed together, then they separated, forming one Rer Soghulli, who are the most numerous, the other sixteen children together, the Baha Hainasce.[4]


Drake Brockman in his book British Somaliland published in 1912 writes:

Deriyeh, the head of the Rer Segulleh, was universally proclaimed Sultan by the rest of the Habr Yunis tribe...Sultan Deriyeh lived to a great age, and had no less than eighteen sons, of whom the first two were borne to him by a woman of the Makahil section of the Habr Awal tribe, and the elder of these, Aman by name, joining with his brother, formed the Ba Maka-hil, while his remaining sixteen stepbrothers formed the Baha Deriyeh. Aman had ten sons, the eldest of whom was Ahmed, who died before his father, who himself died before his old father, the aged Sultan Deriyeh. Now, as soon as Sultan Deriyeh died there was trouble as to his successor.[5]

Sultan Diiriye's Geneaology

Reer Diiriye Sugulle sub-clans

Deria's wives were Awraleh, Madedo, Ebleh, Mardal and a fifth woman of the Habr Awal Makahil, these five wives would bore him a total of eighteen sons who would later on form the Baha Deria and Ba Makahil sub clans.[6]

  • Jama Diiriye
  • Hirsi Diiriye (Father of Sultan Madar)
  • Aadan Diiriye
  • Ali Diiriye
  • Abdullah Diiriye
  • Yusuf Diiriye
  • Samatar Diiriye
  • Ahmed Diiriye
  • Mahmud Diiriye
  • Ismail Diiriye
  • Egal Diiriye
  • Hussein Diiriye
  • Nur Diiriye
  • Awad Diiriye (Sultan Awad)
  • Abokor Diirye
  • Cismaan Diiriye
  • Guuleed Diiriye.
  • Ammaan Diiriye (Reer Ammaan)
    • Axmed Amaan (father of Sultan Nur)
    • Ismaaciil Amaan
    • Hersi Aman (Sultan Hersi Aman)
    • Hayd Amaan
    • Yey Amaan
    • Magan Amaan
    • Ali Amaan
    • Fidhin Amaan
    • Muhumed Amaan
    • Guled Amaan
Preceded by
Sugulleh Ainasha
Habr Yunis Sultanate Succeeded by
Hersi Aman

See also

References

  1. d'Abbadie, Antoine (1890). Géographie de l'Ethiopie: ce que j'ai entendu, faisant suite à ce que j'ai vu. Mesnil. p. 334. ISBN 9781173215750.
  2. d'Abbadie, Antoine (1890). Géographie de l'Ethiopie: ce que j'ai entendu, faisant suite à ce que j'ai vu. Mesnil. p. 334. ISBN 9781173215750.
  3. The Transactions of the Bombay Geographical Society 1850, Volume 9, p.133
  4. Cosmos: communicazioni sui progressi recenti e notevoli della geografia e delle scienze affini di Guido Cora, p.201
  5. British Somaliland by Drake Borckmen, pp. 79–82, 1912
  6. A General Survey of the Somaliland Protectorate 1944-1950, p.147
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