{{Short description|Collection of states started by the Hausa people}} thumb|right|Major cities of Hausaland. Modern borders are in red. {{infobox ethnonym|person=m: Bahaushe<br/>f: Bahaushiya |people=Hausawa |language=Harshen Hausa /<br/>Halshen Hausa |country=Kasar Hausa /<br/>Masarautun Hausa}} {{other uses|Hausa}} {{History of Nigeria}} '''Hausa Kingdoms''' ({{Lang|ha|Masarautun Hausa}}), also known as '''Hausaland''' ({{Lang|ha|Kasar Hausa}}),<ref>{{cite book |last=Lapidus |first=Ira M. |title=A History of Islamic Societies |edition=3rd |location=New York |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2014 |pages=458–459 |isbn=978-0-521-51430-9 }}</ref> was a collection of states ruled by the Hausa people,{{Efn|The first uses of "Hausa" as an ethnonym date from the 16th and 17th centuries, prior to this ethnonyms were based on the states, such as ''Kanawa'' for Kano, ''Katsinawa'' for Katsina, ''Gobirawa'' for Gobir etc.<ref name="Amadu GHoA"/>{{rp|page=268}}}} before the Fulani jihads. It was situated between the Niger River and Lake Chad (modern day northern Nigeria). Hausaland lay between the Western Sudanic empires of Ancient Ghana, Mali and Songhai and the Eastern Sudanic empire of Kanem-Bornu.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Cartwright |first=Mark |title=Hausaland |url=https://www.worldhistory.org/Hausaland/ |access-date=2024-07-07 |website=World History Encyclopedia |date=9 May 2019 |language=en}}</ref>

Hausa oral traditions detail the Bayajidda legend, which describes the adventures of the Baghdadi hero, Bayajidda, culminating in the killing of the snake in a well at Daura and his marriage to the local queen Magajiya Daurama. According to the legend, Bayajidda's descendants founded the ''Hausa Bakwai'' (seven "true" states), as well as the ''Hausa Banza'' ("bastard" or "illegitimate" states).

==Mythology== {{main|Bayajidda}}

According to the Bayajidda legend, the Hausa states were founded by the sons and grandsons of Bayajidda,<ref name=":122">{{Cite encyclopedia |title=Hausa Polities: Origins, Rise |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of African History 3-Volume Set |publisher=Routledge |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=umyHqvAErOAC&q=historiography |last=Salamone |first=Frank |date=2005 |language=en |isbn=978-1-135-45670-2}}</ref> a prince of Baghdad who married Daurama, the last Kabara of Daura, and heralded the end of the matriarchal monarchs that had erstwhile ruled the Hausa people. According to the legend, Bayajidda travelled through Bornu, arriving at Daura, where he went to the house of an old woman called Waira and asked her to give him water but she told him the predicament of the land, how the only well in Daura, called ''Kusugu'', was inhabited by a snake called Sarki, who allowed citizens of Daura to fetch water only on Fridays.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |last=Hansen |first=Mogens Herman |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8qvY8pxVxcwC&dq=hausa+kingdoms&pg=PA483 |title=A Comparative Study of Thirty City-state Cultures: An Investigation |date=2000 |publisher=Kgl. Danske Videnskabernes Selskab |isbn=978-87-7876-177-4 |language=en |chapter=The Hausa City-States from 1450 to 1804}}</ref>{{Reference page|page=485}} Since ''sarki'' is the Hausa word for "king", this may have been a metaphor for a powerful figure. Bayajidda killed Sarki and because of what he had done the queen married him for his bravery. After his marriage to Daurama the people started to call him ''Bayajidda'' which means "he didn't understand (the language) before".<ref name=":122" /><ref name="lange">{{cite web |last=Abdurrahman |first=Alasan |author2=transcribed by Dierk Lange |title=Oral version of the Bayajidda legend |url=http://dierklange.com/pdf/fulltexts/hausa/08_Sources-Bayajidda-legend.pdf |access-date=2006-12-20 |work=Ancient Kingdoms of West Africa}}</ref>

===Hausa Bakwai=== The '''Hausa Bakwai''' were the seven "true" states (''birane'') that all Hausa people are said to derive from. According to tradition, Bayajidda and Daurama's son, Bawo, had six further sons with three wives (two per wife) who each founded a kingdom. Biram, the seventh kingdom, was founded by another son of Bayajidda, who he had had with a Kanuri princess (called Magira)<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=485}} while he was at Bornu. Daura is the "mother city" of the Hausa states.<ref name=":122" />

*Daura (Gazaura ascended to the throne)<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=486}} *Kano (ruled by Bagauda)<ref name="Amadu GHoA">{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/general-history-of-africa-vol-4/page/n291/mode/2up?view=theater |last=Amadu |first=Mahdi |chapter=The Hausa and their neighbours in central Sudan |title=General History of Africa: Volume 4 |publisher=UNESCO Publishing |year=1984}}</ref>{{rp|page=270}} *Katsina (founded by Kumayau)<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=486}} *Zazzau (founded by Gunguma)<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=486}} *Gobir (founded by Duma)<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=486}} *Rano (founded by Zamna Kogi)<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=486}} *Biram/Garun Gobas (ruled by Biram,<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Akinlolu |first=Adelaja Abdulazeez |date=2016 |title=Facial Biometrics Using Akinlolu-Raji Image-processing Algorithm and Anthropological Facts Which Prove that Kebbi and Zamfara Hausas are Hausa Bakwai |journal=Sub-Saharan African Journal of Medicine |language=en-US |volume=3 |issue=1 |pages=45 |doi=10.4103/2384-5147.176320 |doi-access=free |issn=2384-5147}}</ref> city now called "Hadejia")

=== Hausa Banza/Banza Bakwai === The '''Hausa Banza''' or '''Banza Bakwai''' were referred to as the "bastard" or "illegitimate" states. According to tradition, Bayajidda had a third son with his concubine called Mukarbigari. Mukarbigari's descendants are then said to have founded seven other states which bordered the Hausa Bakwai to the west and south. Hausa tradition often refers to these as inferior to the Hausa Bakwai.<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=486}} Apart from Zamfara and Kebbi, the members of the Hausa Banza were neighbours of Hausaland, although notably it omits Kanem-Bornu and Songhai.<ref name="Amadu GHoA"/>{{Reference page|pages=278-9}} Borgu is sometimes included in the Hausa Banza.<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Falola |first=Toyin |url=https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Historical_Dictionary_of_Nigeria/QWTd1ftuCbwC?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=hausa+kingdoms&pg=PA148&printsec=frontcover |title=Historical Dictionary of Nigeria |last2=Genova |first2=Ann |date=2009-07-01 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing PLC |isbn=978-0-8108-6316-3 |language=en |chapter=Hausa Kingdoms}}</ref> They are:<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=486}}

*Zamfara (inhabited by Hausa-speakers){{Efn|Some traditions include Zamfara in the Hausa Bakwai.<ref name=":1" />}} *Kebbi (inhabited by Hausa-speakers) *Yauri *Gwari *Kwararafa (state of the Abakwariga (non-Muslim Hausa) or Jukun people)<ref name=":02">{{Cite journal |last=Bello |first=Zakariya Abubakar |date=July 2020 |title=History, Roles and the Challenges of the Institution of Aku Uka in Nation Building in the 21st Century |url=https://www.academia.edu/71424076 |journal=Fuwukari Journal of Politics & Devevelopment |volume=4 |issue=1}}</ref> *Nupe (state of the Nupe people) *Yoruba (Yoruba people)

==History==

=== Origins and rise === Hausa oral traditions hold that settlements were first established where ''iskoki'' (nature spirits) were found.<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=489}} Hausaland had great agricultural potential, and early positions of authority related to control of the land, fostered by kinship relations. Hausa chiefs were either family heads (''gidaje'') or religious officials tasked with rituals intended to ensure agricultural prosperity (''sarkin noma''; "kings of farming").<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=488}} The date of the foundation of the Hausa kingdoms is unknown, however urbanisation in northern Nigeria led to the formation of states, with fortified capital cities becoming centres of power and rule. The kingdoms controlled trade in the region,<ref name=":122" /> and were possibly first mentioned by Ya'qubi in the 9th century.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Levtzion |first1=Nehemia |url=https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000048669 |title=Corpus of early Arabic sources for West African history |last2=Hopkins |first2=J. F. P. |date=1981 |access-date=2025-07-17}}</ref>{{Reference page|page=21}} Hausa traders founded quarters (''sabon gari'') in various places, building an elaborate and efficient trading network.<ref name=":122" /> Civilians would sometimes follow their armies as traders or to provide services, and settle abroad, contributing to the diaspora.<ref name="Amadu GHoA" />{{Reference page|page=289}}

Hausa tradition describes the division of roles between the states, where Kano and Rano were centres of the textile industry (and thus called ''sarakuman babba''; "kings of indigo"), Katsina and Daura were trade centres (called ''sarakuman kasuwa''; "kings of the market"), Zazzau supplied slave labour to the other states (called ''sarkin bayi''; "king of the slaves"), and Gobir, as the northernmost city, was tasked with the defence of Hausaland from foreign invaders (called ''sarkin yaki''; "king of war").<ref name="Amadu GHoA"/>{{rp|page=270}} Throughout its history there was lots of immigration from the Sahel and Sudan into Hausaland, including herdsmen, fishermen, agriculturalists, merchants and traders, and ''mallam'', as well as some aristocrats''.'' Migrations from Bornu are thought to have been more long-standing, and Tuareg (who displaced the Gobirawa from Asben) and Fulani migrated to the region from the 14th and 15th centuries respectively. As nomadic pastoralists they sometimes made incursions into Hausaland looking for grazing land. Another group was the Wangara, who migrated in the 14th/15th centuries and were key to the spread of Islam through Hausaland. Though Islam likely spread to Hausaland from the north through Gobir or the east from Bornu, the first ruler to convert to Islam is thought to have been Yaji I of Kano (r. 1349-85) due to invitation from Wangara.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Akinwumi |first=Olayemi |last2=Raji |first2=Adesina Y. |date=1990 |title=The Wangarawa Factor in the History of Nigerian Islam: The Example of Kano and Borgu |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/20840012 |journal=Islamic Studies |volume=29 |issue=4 |pages=375–385 |issn=0578-8072}}</ref> The Wangara, like Songhai immigrants, gradually integrated and became Hausa.<ref name="Amadu GHoA"/>{{rp|285–91}}

During the reign of Kano's Yaji I (1349–85) he conquered and occupied Rano for two years, after which Rano continued to exist but never regained its sovereignty.<ref name="Amadu GHoA" />{{Reference page|page=271}} In the 15th century, a deposed ''mai'' of Bornu fled to Kano, leading to Bornu expanding westwards and vassalizing the Hausa states. It is unclear whether this included all of the states, or just Kano and Biram as M. G. Smith thought; regardless, tribute was sent through Daura. While it is unknown for how long Hausa states paid this tribute, Bornu continued to hold influence in the region.<ref name="Amadu GHoA" />{{Reference page|pages=279-80}}

===16th century onwards=== By the 15th century, the Hausa kingdoms were trading centers which competed with Kanem-Bornu and the Mali Empire.<ref>Hogben/Kirk-Greene, ''Emirates'', 82-88; Lange, ''Kingdoms'', 216–221, 554 n. 25.</ref> The primary exports were slaves, leather, gold, cloth, salt, kola nuts, animal hides, and henna. At various moments in their history, the Hausa managed to establish central control over their states, but such unity has always proven short. During the reign of King Yaji I (1349–85) Islam was first introduced to Kano via ''daʿwah'' from Soninke Wangara,{{Citation needed|date=July 2025}} and Islamisation often syncretised with Hausa animism.<ref>{{Citation |last=Haour |first=Anne |title=1. Hausa Identity: Language, History And Religion |date=2010-01-01 |work=Being and Becoming Hausa |pages=1–33 |url=https://brill.com/display/book/edcoll/9789004185432/Bej.9789004185425.i-310_002.xml |access-date=2025-07-19 |publisher=Brill |language=en |isbn=978-90-04-18543-2 |last2=Rossi |first2=Benedetta}}</ref>{{Reference page|page=14}} Many Muslim traders and clerics used to come from Mali, from the Volta region, and later from Songhay. King Yaji appointed a Qadi and Imam as part of the state administration. Muhammad Rumfa (1463–99) built mosques and madrassahs. He also commissioned Muhammad al-Maghili to write a treatise on Muslim governance.{{Citation needed|date=July 2025}} Many other scholars were brought in from Egypt, Tunis, and Morocco. This turned Kano and Katsina into centers of Islamic scholarship.<ref name=":122" /> Islamization facilitated the expansion of trade and was the basis of an enlarged marketing network. The ''Ulama'' provided legal support, guarantees, safe conducts, introductions and many other services. By the end of the 15th century, Muhammad al-Korau, a cleric, took control of Katsina declaring himself king. ''Ulama'' were later brought in from North Africa and Egypt to reside in Katsina. An ''Ulama'' class emerged under royal patronage. The Hausa rulers fasted Ramadan, built mosques, kept up the five obligatory prayers, and gave alms (''zakat'') to the poor. Ibrahim Maje (1549–66) was an Islamic reformer and instituted Islamic marriage law in Katsina. Generally Hausaland remained divided between the Muslim cosmopolitan urban elite and the local animistic rural communities. During this time period, Leo Africanus briefly mentions in his book ''Descrittione dell’Africa'' descriptions of the political and economic state of Hausaland during that time although it is unknown if he actually visited it; Hausaland seems to have been mostly of a tributary status by Songhai as in his description of Zamfara he comments that "their king was slaughtered by the Askiya and themselves made tributary" and the same is said for the rest of the region.{{Citation needed|date=August 2025}}

===Fall=== thumb|Hausa-Fulani Sokoto Caliphate in the 19th century Despite relatively constant growth from the 15th century to the 18th century, the states were vulnerable to constant war internally and externally. By the 18th century, they were economically and politically exhausted. Famines became very common during this period and the Sultans engaged in heavy taxation to fund their wars. Though the vast majority of its inhabitants were Muslim, by the 19th century, they were conquered by a mix of Fulani warriors and Hausa peasantry, citing syncretism and social injustices. By 1808 the Hausa states were finally conquered by Usuman dan Fodio and incorporated into the Hausa-Fulani Sokoto Caliphate.<ref>Smith, ''Daura'', 419-421.</ref>

== Government == {{Further|Sarauta}} Fulani pastoralists and foreign Islamic clerics were permitted to control their own administration under the supervision of the ''sarki'' (king).<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=492}}

== Culture and society == Ideals on social order were based on kinship, and foreign civilians were incorporated into the system by intermarriage, social reclassification, or were granted special privileges. Commerce between the states facilitated a common Hausa language, without mutually unintelligible dialects. Despite the conversion of rulers to Islam, many commoners continued to practice their traditional religion, or syncretised it with Islam, which was considered acceptable up until the Fula jihads in the 19th century. Commoners (''talakawa'') comprised units of farms operated by two or more families (''gandu'') which were headed by a legal representative (''maigida''). The ''maigida'' administered the unit and was tasked with reconciling disputes and ritualistic roles in ceremonies. New ''gandu'' were set up by a father adding to their son's land, to eventually be recognised as a distinct unit for tax purposes. This ideal patrilineal system was often disrupted by divorce (due to polygynous marriage being common), strong matrilineal bonds, and occupational specialisation. Men had titles corresponding to their occupations outside of farming season. Unmarried adults were considered social outcasts.<ref name=":0" />{{Reference page|page=|pages=492-3}}

== See also == * Hausa animism * Hausa literature

== Notes == {{Notelist}}

==References== {{Reflist}}

== Further reading == *{{cite book |last1=Hogben |first1=S. J. |first2=Anthony |last2=Kirk-Greene |title=The Emirates of Northern Nigeria |location=London |year=1966 |pages=145–155 }} *{{cite book |last=Lapidus |first=Ira M. |author-link=Ira M. Lapidus |title=A History of Islamic Societies |edition=3rd |location=New York |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2014 |pages=458–459 |isbn=978-0-521-51430-9 }} *{{cite book |last=Nicolas |first=Guy |title=Dynamique sociale et appréhension du monde au sein d'une société hausa |location=Paris |year=1975 }} *{{cite book |last=Palmer |first=Herbert R. |author-link=Richmond Palmer|title=Sudanese Memoirs |volume=3 |location=Lagos |year=1928 |chapter=Bayajidda legend |pages=132–146 }} *{{cite book |last=Smith |first=Michael |author-link=M. G. Smith |title=The Affairs of Daura |location=Berkeley |year=1978 }}

==External links== *[http://cache.eb.com/eb/image?id=5047&rendTypeId=4 Map showing Bornu and the Hausa Bakwai] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200725181100/http://cache.eb.com/eb/image?id=5047&rendTypeId=4 |date=2020-07-25 }} [http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/aflang/hausarbaka/Video_Files/M501_supp_Bayajidda_II.pdf Part II] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120315171045/http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/aflang/hausarbaka/Video_Files/M501_supp_Bayajidda_II.pdf |date=2012-03-15 }} *[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9054346/Muri Britannica] *[https://web.archive.org/web/20070106163339/http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/people/Hausa.html Art & Life in Africa] *[http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/africa/features/storyofafrica/4chapter5.shtml BBC] *[http://www.amanaonline.com/Sokoto/sokoto_9.htm Amana Online The Fulani Empire of Sokoto] *[http://www.amanaonline.com/Sokoto/sokoto_1.htm Amana Online Hausaland and the Hausas]

{{Sahelian kingdoms}}{{Hausa}}

Category:Countries in medieval Africa Category:Sahelian kingdoms *