Rabih az-Zubayr

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Template:Short description

Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Rabih az-Zubayr bin Fadlallah (Template:Langx; c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1840 – April 22, 1900) was a Sudanese warlord,Template:Sfn adventurer,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and slave traderTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn who through conquests established a large and powerful empire in Central and West Africa in the late 19th century. A formidable military tactician and leader, Rabih supplanted the al-Kanemi dynasty of the Kanem–Bornu Empire and frustrated European colonial interests in the region for several years.

Rabih began his career as a soldier in the Egyptian army under Isma'il Pasha, eventually joining the raider and trader Al-Zubayr Rahma Mansur in the Bahr el Ghazal. After Mansur's forces were suppressed by the Egyptians and British, Rabih took a small force westwards and gradually built up a larger army and considerable wealth through raiding. Over the course of about a decade, Rabih's army grew from 400 soldiers to 5,000 and he became strong enough to face and defeat well-established states in central Africa, such as the Sultanate of Bagirmi. In 1892–1894, Rabih conquered the Kanem–Bornu Empire and transformed it into a brutal military dictatorship under the leadership of himself and his close military commanders. Rabih instituted a highly efficient but brutal and extortionate tax system and his army was one of the best-equipped and best-organised forces in sub-Saharan Africa. Rabih's raiding-based rule and economy severely damaged the traditionally prosperous agriculture of Bornu, causing a food crisis in the empire.

Rabih's independent rule over Bornu ran counter to French interests in the region. In 1899–1900, France sent several expeditionary forces against Rabih. In 1900, a French army led by Amédée-François Lamy and Émile Gentil, supported by local allies, defeated and killed Rabih at the battle of Kousséri. Although the al-Kanemi dynasty was briefly restored under French colonial suzerainty, Rabih's death paved the way for the French colonisation of Chad. Rabih was one of the last major opponents of the French colonial empire and is a controversial figure in African history, remembered both for his brutal rule and for his resistance against European colonialism.

Early life and career

Life in Egyptian Sudan

Rabih az-Zubayr's year of birth is typically placed c.Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1840.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn Alternate dates sometimes given include c. 1835,Template:Sfn c. 1842,Template:Sfn and c. 1845.Template:Sfn He was born in Halfaya al-Muluk, later a suburb of Khartoum.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Rabih was of Nilotic,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn possibly Shanqella,Template:Sfn origin and was enslaved as a child.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

At the age of twenty, Rabih joined the Egyptian armyTemplate:Sfn and served for some years,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn mostly stationed in Cairo.Template:Sfn Rabih was eventually drawn to the Bahr el Ghazal region, where he sought his fortune in the lucrative trade of ivory and slave trade. In the Bahr el Ghazal, Rabih met Al-Zubayr Rahma Mansur,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn a raider and traderTemplate:Sfn from the Ja'alin tribe,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and was accepted into his service.Template:Sfn Mansur rose to become a highly important figure in Egyptian Sudan. By 1874, Mansur was (under Egyptian suzerainty) the effective ruler of the Bahr el Ghazal, as well as large parts of what is today northern Congo and the Central African Republic.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 1874, Mansur conquered the Sultanate of Darfur, bringing it under Egyptian rule.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Mansur quarreled with the ruler of Egypt, Isma'il Pasha, and was briefly detained in Egypt until his son Suleiman was recognised as his successor. Under Suleiman, wars of expansion to the west and south continued, in which Rabih participated as a leading commander. Rabih was particularly active in campaigns around the Ubangi River.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

In 1878, Suleiman was forced into rebellion by the new governor of Sudan, Charles George Gordon. The rebellion was defeated with great difficulty by Romolo Gessi. After the fighting, Suleiman and most of his officers surrendered, but the Anglo–Egyptian authorities had them executed. Rabih and other officers who had not trusted the authorities enough to surrender escaped westwards,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn followed by about 400 soldiers.Template:Sfn

Warlord

File:Canon Rabah 1b.jpg
One of Rabih's cannons

In 1879, the officers of Rabih's force, which composed a council known as the Zubat al-Kubar, elected Rabih as their emir.Template:Sfn In 1879–1891, Rabih and his forces operated in lands now part of the Central African Republic and southern Chad.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The first target raided by Rabih was the land of the Azande people.Template:Sfn Rabih's forces secured funds by raiding various villages and tribes, and he increased the size of his army by offering prisoners their freedom and their lives if they joined him.Template:Sfn By the early 1890s, Rabih had built up a considerable military force. His army numbered about 5,000 men and he fielded 44 pieces of light field artillery.Template:Sfn The army formed the base of Rabih's power, especially his highly mobile cavalry and the imported rifles used by his soldiers. His forces were typically able to raid lands surrounding their bases of operations with relative ease.Template:Sfn In 1882–1884, Rabih created many zeribas (fortified camps) throughout the lands under his control. New recruits and slave soldiers were taught to fight with firearms.Template:Sfn

In 1887, Rabih accepted the authority of the new Mahdist State in Sudan.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn The Mahdists were building an Islamic reform movement in Sudan, and Rabih shared their anti-European sentiments.Template:Sfn Rabih corresponded with the self-appointed Mahdist caliph, Abdallahi ibn Muhammad, but his officers did not wish to make the journey to Omdurman, the Mahdist capital.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Rabih saw himself as a disciple of the Mahdi, Muhammad Ahmad, and began to build up his own military state in the Bahr el Ghazal after the establishment of the Mahdist State in Sudan.Template:Sfn Certain elements of the Mahdist army, including its devotional exercises and uniform, were adopted by Rabih's forces.Template:Sfn

When Belgian colonial forces arrived in the northern Congo, Rabih took his forces further north into the Chari River valley. Rabih intended to establish a base of operations in the Mandara Kingdom, from where he could trade both with North Africa and with settlements along the Benue River.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In 1888–1889, Rabih campaigned in the south, attacking the Sara people and capturing a large number of slaves.Template:Sfn In 1890, Rabih was in the Dar al Kuti region and approached the Sultanate of Bagirmi.Template:Sfn He stayed at Dar al Kuti and Dar Runga until he was defeated by an army sent by the Wadai Sultanate.Template:Sfn In 1891, Rabih's lieutenant Muhammad al-Sanussi massacred a French expedition led by Paul Crampel.Template:Sfn Out of a desire to avoid provoking the French and reach the rich agricultural region around Bornu,Template:Sfn Rabih's army traveled to Bagirmi, where they at first enjoyed friendly relations with its ruler, Gaourang II. Relations deteriorated and Rabih soon drove Gaourang from his capital at Massenya.Template:Sfn In 1892,Template:Sfn Rabih defeated a joint Bagirmi–Wadai army and then went on to conquer several Kotoko principalities without meeting any strong resistance.Template:Sfn Rabih then reached the Mandara Kingdom, but the Mandarans were able to repel his attacks.Template:Sfn

Conquest of Bornu

Preparations

File:Borno in 1810.svg
The Kanem–Bornu Empire, vassals, and neighboring states in 1810. The political situation was broadly similar when Rabih entered Bornu territory.

In 1892, Gaourang II had requested military aid against Rabih from shehu Ashimi of the Kanem–Bornu Empire. Ashimi refused to send troops but imposed restrictions on the export of weapons and ammunition to Rabih. These restrictions were poorly enforced and much of Rabih's supplies continued to come from Bornu.Template:Sfn After the defeat of Bagirmi, Rabih began to meddle in the affairs of the Kanem–Bornu Empire. He imposed demands on the sultan of Karnak Logone (also known simply as Logone), a vassal state of Bornu. Karnak Logone could scarcely refuse Rabih's demands. Ashimi responded by reprimanding the sultan, but took no further action to maintain authority over the territory.Template:Sfn In 1892 or 1893, Rabih occupied Logone as a result of a coup.Template:Sfn The populace were ejected and the strongly fortified town was turned into Rabih's base of operations.Template:Sfn

Ashimi and his advisors adopted a policy of "waiting and seeing" in regard to Rabih's actions. Rabih exploited this in order to achieve several victories with little resistance in territories bordering Bornu proper, while he prepared for a campaign against Kukawa, the Bornuan capital.Template:Sfn Ashimi may have hoped that Rabih would simply spare his empire. These hopes were partially sustained since Bornu harbored the exile Hayatu ibn Sa'id, a claimant to the Sokoto Caliphate and a son-in-law of Rabih. The nobility of Bornu were suspicious of Hayatu, but he was well-known to wish to take over the Sokoto Caliphate. The leading men of Bornu may thus have expected Rabih to held him in this, instead of attacking Bornu.Template:Sfn Ashimi was unprepared for anything other than peace and made no effort to discover Rabih's intentions.Template:Sfn Rabih meanwhile gathered intelligence on Kukawa through several sources, including local Kanuri who joined his army and Sudanese merchants in the city. Rabih became convinced that conquering Bornu would be relatively easy. Rabih achieved the support of Hayatu after they entered into an agreement that Hayatu would help conquering Bornu, and that Rabih would in turn help Hayatu take power in the Sokoto Caliphate.Template:Sfn Rabih also had the support of the Baggara Arabs and their Kukawa-based trading community.Template:Sfn

Invasion

File:Gentil, La chute de l’empire de Rabah, p219.jpg
Battle flags of Rabih

In the summer of 1893, Rabih and his army entered Bornu properTemplate:Sfn and camped at Amja, on the frontier.Template:Sfn From Amja, Rabih's forces could raid and harvest resources from the corn-rich surrounding Kala/Balge region.Template:Sfn Ashimi was at first uncertain how to deal with the invasion but eventually decided to send an army under Momman Tahr to face Rabih.Template:Sfn Tahr was an experienced generalTemplate:Sfn but it is unclear why Ashimi did not lead the army himself. Perhaps Ashimi did not realise the gravity of the situation or was hoping to eliminate Tahr as a potential rival.Template:Sfn Rabih's invasion force was about 3,000 men strong, about half of whom were armed with muskets or rifles.Template:Sfn Tahr's army was much larger, possibly numbering as many as 30,000 soldiers,Template:Sfn most of whom were familiar with the area.Template:Sfn

The two armies clashed at the battle of Amja, in May 1893,Template:Sfn where Rabih positioned his right flank behind a swamp.Template:Sfn The swamp may have been the result of recent heavy rains, and thus unknown to the Bornu army.Template:Sfn Tahr sent much of his cavalry through the swamp, hoping to surprise Rabih's forces, but the horses got stuck and Rabih's riflemen were able to pick them off. Most of Tahr's forces soon fled the battle, and Tahr himself was captured and executed.Template:Sfn Upon hearing of Tahr's defeat, Ashimi took to the field with his own army,Template:Sfn led by himself and his nephew, Kyari.Template:Sfn In about August, Ashimi and Kyari engaged Rabih's forces at Lekarawa, a short distance west of Ngala.Template:Sfn Rabih was outnumbered again but once more defeated the Bornuans.Template:Sfn Ashimi and Kyari fled back to Kukawa, where the populace expected the shehu to prepare the city's defenses and attempt to fend off Rabih's attack. Ashimi and his closest advisors instead gathered their family and belongings and fled in the night, leaving the capital undefended.Template:Sfn

Upon reaching Kukawa, Rabih showed little mercy, ruthlessly pillaging and laying waste to the city. About 3,000 people were killed and another 4,000 were taken captive while Rabih's forces secured large amounts of plunder, including weapons, cattle, sheep, horses, camels, ammunition, cloth, robes, ivory, and 70,000 Maria Theresa thalers. Those who had cooperated with Rabih, such as Kukawa's Sudanese traders, were left unharmed.Template:Sfn Rabih spent some time in Kukawa but decided to transfer his capital to Dikwa instead, probably on account of its better communications and water supply.Template:Sfn The beginning of Rabih's rule over Bornu would later be dated to 2 October,Template:Sfn perhaps corresponding to his occupation of Kukawa or Dikwa.Template:Sfn

Ashimi fled across the Yobe River,Template:Sfn establishing himself in the village of Maganwa, south of Geidam.Template:Sfn Ashimi and his family (the al-Kanemi dynasty) still commanded the loyalty of much of the Bornuan populace, as demonstrated by a peasant uprising led by a man identified as mallam Gantur, which managed to defeat one of Rabih's commanders before being put down.Template:Sfn Ashimi's actions during the invasion had raised questions of his leadership. Many of the leading courtiers traveled to Geidam, where they instead installed Kyari as the new shehu. Ashimi accepted the transfer of power, even attending Kyari's investment ceremony.Template:Sfn Kyari was feared that the presence of two living shehus would threaten his legitimacy and leadership in the war effort and thus had his uncle assassinated while Ashimi was saying his morning prayers.Template:Sfn It was later claimed that Ashimi had been corresponding with Rabih.Template:Sfn

Kyari regrouped the Bornuan armyTemplate:Sfn and prepared to lead his forces to retake KukawaTemplate:Sfn and then advance on Dikwa.Template:Sfn In February/March 1894,Template:Sfn Rabih intercepted Kyari's army near Gashegar, on the southern bank of the Yobe River.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn In the ensuing battle, the Bornuan army managed to overrun Rabih's forces and occupy and loot his war camp. Kyari blundered by not following up on his victory, planning to pursue Rabih in the following morning. Rabih regrouped his forces in the night and launched a counterattack, which caused the Bornuans to panic and flee. Kyari, wounded in the attack, was unable to rally his army and led a desperate last stand until the morning, after which he was captured.Template:Sfn Kyari was dragged before Rabih but refused to speak or answer any questions, eventually telling an interpreter to only "Tell this giant of a slave that if I had captured him I would not have asked him anything, I would have killed him on the spot. Let him not ask me any further questions. If he has anything to do, let him".Template:Sfn Rabih had Kyari's throat cut.Template:Sfn Kiyari's brother Sanda Wuduroma made his way to southern Bornu, where he was proclaimed shehu, but he was captured and executed after less than a month, leaving Rabih the undisputed ruler of Bornu.Template:Sfn

Rabih's empire

Administration

File:Rabih Azzubair Dominions.png
Map of Rabih's empire in 1899

Rabih's conquest of Bornu marked the first time the Kanem–Bornu Empire came under foreign rule in the over a thousand years of its history.Template:Sfn Rabih's regime took the shape of a totalitarianTemplate:Sfn and ruthlessTemplate:Sfn military dictatorship,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn with power concentrated in the hands of Rabih and the Zubat al-Kubar.Template:Sfn The military and civil administrations of the state were not clearly separated, since Rabih's army suddenly transformed from a highly effective war machine into the state's administrative apparatus. Neither Rabih nor any of his officers had any formal training for the task of administering a state such as Bornu, an old empire with a long-established administration and organisation. Rabih's military commanders transitioned into the empire's chief fief holders (chima kura), supported by local nobles who submitted to the new regime.Template:Sfn

As emir and commander of the army, Rabih was the undisputed head of state. His power was practically unlimited, though the Zubat al-Kubar remained and were consulted on military and political matters. After the conquest, the Zubat al-Kubar numbered twenty-nine, after the addition of Rabih's two sons Fadlallah and Muhammad Niebe. The al-Kanemi state was reorganised to suit Rabih's needs. The al-Kenemi shehus had allowed local rulers limited autonomy, a system partially kept under Rabih. All provincial rulers and courtiers who submitted to Rabih were allowed to keep and administer their lands, though now under the close supervision of Rabih's military commanders, who lived in Dikwa.Template:Sfn Retaining the local rulers gave Rabih's regime some legitimacy in the eyes of the people.Template:Sfn Local rulers who proved disloyal were executed and typically replaced with a family member.Template:Sfn There was thus some continuity in the administration, though the fiefs under Rabih were more compact and larger than those under the shehus.Template:Sfn

The Sharia-based justice system of the shehus ended with Rabih's conquestTemplate:Sfn and no new system was put in place until 1895.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Sharia law was reinstated in that year, possibly on the request of Hayatu or former courtiers of the shehus, or because Rabih desired to be seen as a good Muslim and needed social control in the administration of Dikwa. Rabih set up the empire's only court at Dikwa, headed by Alkali al-Madani, a Sudanese man who had lived in Kukawa before the conquest. The court was allowed leverage in its administration of justice,Template:Sfn with Rabih himself only intervening in exceptional cases.Template:Sfn When Rabih did intervene, his decisions were based largely on his own whims rather than Sharia. In one instance, Rabih judged a case where a young girl had refused to marry despite the insistence of her elders, and forced the girl to marry Razak-Allah, one of his own commanders, without her consent.Template:Sfn

Economy

File:Gentil, La chute de l’empire de Rabah, p227.jpg
Rabih's palace at Dikwa

By the time of Rabih's conquest, agriculture was the base of the Bornuan economy and most of the populace lived off the land. There was also a well-developed merchant class, who traded both inside and outside the empire. As ruler, most of Rabih's attention was focused on taxation and trade. The survival of his state depended on the ability to extract enough resources to sustain the army, acquire new weapons and ammunition, and to conduct trade.Template:Sfn Rabih instuted a heavy annual tax of one Maria Theresa thaler on every individual, collected through brutal and high-handed methods. Rabih's tax system was highly efficient but also extortionate on the people, with reports of properties of whole settlements being carried away and village elders being held for ransom.Template:Sfn It has been argued that the system was in some ways fairer than the aristocratic rule of the shehus that had preceded Rabih, in particular in that the tax rate was fixed and that taxes were only collected once a year.Template:Sfn Most of the income was also spent on the army and defense, with relatively little spent on personal luxuries of the ruler, in stark contrast to the spending of the shehus.Template:Sfn

The agricultural sector of the Bornu economy was badly hit by Rabih's conquest, both due to direct destruction of crops and raids on the people, and due to mass displacement of people who fled Rabih's army and the overall uncertainty and fear.Template:Sfn In his previous wars, Rabih had used a scorched earth policy, razing settlements and destroying standing crops. The same tactics had been used during the conquest of Bornu, despite Rabih's intention to settle down. The Rabih state did not have any agricultural policy and agriculture was largely neglected. Food was collected largely through raids on the people by the army. After a few years in power, food production was running dangerously low, so much so that contemporary reports suggested that Rabih might have to "quit Bornu soon in search of food".Template:Sfn By 1898 there was "extreme drought" at Dikwa, a man-made disaster due to the farming population having either fled, been enslaved, or been forced into Rabih's army.Template:Sfn Rabih never took measures to revive productive agricultural base in Bornu, despite the situation threatening his continued rule in the region.Template:Sfn

The conquest of Bornu and destruction of Kukawa ground the centuries-old trade between Bornu and North Africa to a halt.Template:Sfn Rabih attempted various measures and concessions to open up trade with his neighbors, and even with the British Royal Niger Company, but these were largely unsuccessful. The inability to open up trade relations with his neighbors cut off potential supply lines and left Rabih's position in Bornu, surrounded by hostile powers, untenable in the long run.Template:Sfn Although isolated and running low on food stores, Rabih and his army maintained a large treasury, built up through taxation and raiding.Template:Sfn

Geopolitics and army

Geopolitically, Rabih largely behaved as the shehus that had preceded him.Template:Sfn He worked to maintain the borders of his empire and dominate the various traditional Bornu vassal states that surrounded the imperial core.Template:Sfn Rabih planned to embark on further conquests, in particular of the Sokoto Caliphate and the Sultanate of Kano, though these plans would be disrupted by his conflicts with France.Template:Sfn

At its height, Rabih's army was one of the best-equipped and best-organised forces in sub-Saharan Africa. In total, there were perhaps 35,000 soldiers stationed throughout the empire, most of them in strategic areas and main cities. The core of Rabih's forces were 3,000 fusiliers, kept at Dikwa under Rabih's personal command.Template:Sfn

War with France

File:Attaque de la reconnaissance de Prins par les cavaliers de Rabah à Fadjié (page 114).jpg
Rabih's forces attack a French party

The fall of the al-Kanemi dynasty and rise of Rabih did not go unnoticed by regional powers, such as the Sokoto Caliphate, or foreign colonial powers, such as France and Britain.Template:Sfn Britain chose to recognise Rabih as a legitimate ruler of the Kanem–Bornu Empire, referring to him as the "sultan of Borno", whereas the French opted to deem Rabih illegitimate so that conquests of parts of his empire could be justified.Template:Sfn Rabih had not come to the attention of the French until 1893,Template:Sfn but his strong empire was seen as an impediment to trade in the areaTemplate:Sfn and unsecured territory in terms of French claims during the Scramble for Africa.Template:Sfn In French propaganda, Rabih's state was also highlighted as a brutal slave economyTemplate:Sfn and opposition against the African slave trade was appropriated by the French as a justification for war against Rabih.Template:Sfn

France sent several expeditions into Central Africa to realise their claims on the region. In 1896, an expedition led by Émile Gentil was sent from Brazzaville to secure Lake Chad.Template:Sfn In July 1899, the advance guard of Gentil's expedition, under Henri Bretonnet, reached Rabih's territory,Template:Sfn supposedly to aid Bagirmi against Rabih.Template:Sfn The French force was massacred at the battle of TogbaoTemplate:Sfn and Bretonnet was killed.Template:Sfn Rabih's victory led the French to increase their forces.Template:Sfn In October 1899, Rabih captured and executed the French explorer Ferdinand de Béhagle, in retaliation for French actions against his him.Template:Sfn

Further expeditions were sent to consolidate French claims in Sudan and the Sahara and then rendezvous with Gentil. Another Central African expedition, the Voulet–Chanoine Mission, marched by the Niger River in January 1899 and descended into unprecedented brutality and slaughters on their journey through Hausaland, so much so that Captain Jean-François Klobb was sent to stop the expedition. Klobb was killed by Captain Paul Voulet and the expedition was only stopped when local African recruits mutinied and killed both French commanders.Template:Sfn Another expedition, led by Amédée-François Lamy, defeated the Tuareg but failed to subdue them and then joined with the remains of the Voulet–Chanoine Mission.Template:Sfn On the way to join Gentil, the Lamy expedition encountered Sanda Kura of the al-Kanemi dynasty, along with a few hundred followers.Template:Sfn Sanda Kura formally asked the French to recognise him as the legitimate ruler of Bornu, and the French expedition agreed after witnessing the support he had from the Bornuan people.Template:Sfn Sanda Kura was invested as shehu of Bornu in front of a jubilant crowed on 14 January 1900.Template:Sfn On 24 February, The Lamy expedition established a camp on the right bank of the Chari River. The joint French–Bornuan force crossed the river and captured Kousséri, a fortress held by Rabih on the confluence of the Logone and Chari rivers. On 20 April, Gentil's expedition, tired and suffering from diseases, arrived at Kousséri and Gentil was made the local administrator.Template:Sfn

As administrator, Gentil authorized Lamy to take command of all the French expeditionary forces and ordered him to destroy Rabih.Template:Sfn Sanda Kura was used to sanction the attack, since Dikwa was technically within the agreed-upon German zone of influence in Africa. To get legal reason to invade Rabih's territories, Gentil made Gaourang II of Bagirmi write a letter to Sanda Kura, asking for assistance against Rabih's aggression in Bagirmi. The shehu was then instructed to reply back acknowledging his distress as legitimate. Sanda Kura then authorised Gaourang to join his forces and his allies in Bornu so they could all launch an attack against Rabih.Template:Sfn On 22 April, Lamy attacked a fortification held by Rabih and his forces at Lakhta, three miles from Kousséri.Template:Sfn During the battle, later known as the battle of Kousséri, Lamy was mortally wounded;Template:Sfn he was transformed into a hero in later French propaganda.Template:Sfn Rabih's forces were defeated after a few hours of fighting and Rabih attempted to flee the battlefield. During his escape, Rabih was shot and laid dying when he was killed by Abdoulaye Diallo, one of his own former soldiers.Template:Sfn

Legacy

Remains

File:Rabih az-Zubayr, severed head.jpg
1901 engraving by Jean Lavée of a 1900 photograph of Rabih's head on a pike

Diallo severed Rabih's head and brought it to the dying Lamy to prove Rabih's death.Template:Sfn The head was placed on a pike and carried to Kousséri,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn where it was displayed on the walls.Template:Sfn The fate of the rest of Rabih's body is not clear as different accounts tell different versions.Template:Sfn Gentil reportedly wished to bury the body,Template:Sfn but it was either trampled by the Bagirmi who had fought with the FrenchTemplate:Sfn or thrown in the Chari River.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Later in 1900, Rabih's son Fadlallah unsuccessfully requested the restitution of his father's remains.Template:Sfn

Rabih's head on a pike was photographed at some point. The identity of the photographer is unknown, but was probably one of the French officers who had participated in the campaign. Many of the officers, including Gentil, are known to have taken photographs during the conflict. The photograph was displayed in Kousséri and circulated within the family and professional network of the French officers that had taken part in the campaign.Template:Sfn In March 1901, the photograph was printed uncensored on the front page of the French newspaper L'Illustration.Template:Sfn Only one original print of the photograph is known to have survived, found in a booklet once belonging to Émile de Cointet, one of the French soldiers on the campaign. The French artist Jean Lavée produced an engraving of the photograph which was published in Gentil's accounts of the campaign, first in the magazine Le Tour du Monde and then in Gentil's book La chute de l'empire de Rabah ("The Fall of Rabih's Empire").Template:Sfn

Rabih's skull was kept after its display at Kousséri and became a French war trophy.Template:Sfn The skull was kept in a crate as a trophy by Gentil while he remained in Africa. Gentil at one point opened the crate to show some of the Banda people that Rabih was dead, and promised that the skull of Muhammad al-Sanussi, sultan of Dar al Kuti, would soon join his collection.Template:Sfn It was common for European colonial forces in this time to collect human remains in non-European territories after battles, through trade, or through grave robbing, to send back to Europe as anthropological specimens.Template:Sfn In late 1900, Gentil sent Rabih's skull to Paris,Template:Sfn where it became an anthropological specimen.Template:Sfn Photographs were taken of the skull from the front and in profilem to be used in anthropological and anatomy teaching. It is possible that Gentil himself, an avid lecturer at the time, made use of these photographs himself.Template:Sfn The photographs are currently kept by the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris.Template:Sfn The skull was placed in the collections of the Musée de l'Homme in ParisTemplate:Sfn and is believed to remain there, though its specimen number is apparently unknown.Template:Sfn

Aftermath and remembrance

Rabih's defeat paved the way for French colonisation of Chad.Template:Sfn Rabih was one of the last major opponents of the French colonial empire at largeTemplate:Sfn and the French made some use of Rabih as a justification for colonialism, pointing to him as an example of the "predatory practices of black populations".Template:Sfn After Rabih's defeat, his son Fadlallah continued to fight against the French and was elected by the Zubat al-Kubar as the next emir.Template:Sfn Rabih's other son Muhammad Niebe and his daughter Hawwa also took part in the struggle.Template:Sfn Fadlallah was killed by the French at Gujba on 23 August 1901.Template:Sfn Under the French and British, the shehus were reinstated in Bornu, albeit under colonial suzerainty.Template:Sfn The territory of the Kanem–Bornu Empire fell completely under colonial control in 1902.Template:Sfn

Rabih is a controversial figure in African history,Template:Sfn remembered both as a brutal slave-trader and destroyer of kingdoms, as well as an anti-imperialist nationalist and resistance fighter.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Rabih has been referred to as a military genius.Template:Sfn Memory of Rabih remained strong in the territories he ruled for decades after his death.Template:Sfn Among the people of southern Chad, Rabih's legacy is generally seen as a tragic tale of depopulation and devastation.Template:Sfn He has sometimes been called Le Maudit ("the Accursed")Template:Sfn and the "Black Sultan".Template:Sfn Songs about Rabih and is death were recorded among the Kanuri people in the 1930s and questions of the whereabouts of his skull were reportedly raised among the populace until at least the 1950s.Template:Sfn Tales and accounts of Rabih became more frequent in Chad in the 1960s and 1970s, as the country became independent.Template:Sfn Populations who were raided by Rabih's forces in the 1870s–1880s, prior to his conquest of Bornu, experienced his death as a great relief, still remembered as such when Nzakara testimonies were collected in the 1950s–1980s.Template:Sfn In Bornu itself, Rabih left a divisive and contentious legacy. Kanuri populations still retain a memory of Rabih as a bloodthirsty foreign invader, who was treacherously supported by the Baggara Arabs.Template:Sfn

References

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Sources

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External links

Template:Kanem–Bornu rulersTemplate:Authority control