Banu Gha
Banu Gha (Arabic: بنو غا) | |
---|---|
Nisba | al-Ghaliyi |
Location | Nigeria (majority) Northern Nigeria North Africa Morocco |
Descended from | Imam Ghali ('Alawi dynasty) |
Branches | House of Maiduniya, , Muallimawa, |
Religion | Islam |
The Banu Gha are part of the Nigerian Chieftaincy, nobility and aristocracy, the family is a noble sharifian house that belongs to the Madinawa clan in Northern Nigeria which claims descent from prophet Muhammad through his grandson Hasan ibn Ali and one of his claimed relatives Sharif ibn Ali who was declared sultan of the Tafilalt region in 1631.[1]The name Gha stems from the name of the dynasty's earlier founder Imam Ghali, whose descendants are found in the Northern Region of Nigeria in Kano State. The family participates in the Islamic leadership of the Emirate.[2]
History[]
The family being part of the Nigerian Chieftaincy System has produced numerous imams, Islamic theologians, traditional titleholders, bureaucrats and politicians in the Sokoto Caliphate,[3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10] some members of the scholarly family claimed descent from the Banu Hashim clan of the Quraysh Arabs through the Sharifian Alaouite dynasty and the Islamic prophet Muhammad,[11]members of the family identify themselves as Fulani, Hausa, Hausa-Fulani Arabs or Hausa-Fulani depending on their cultural assimilation. The claim of descent from the Arab tribe and the prophet is common in scholarly lineages throughout Northern Nigeria and the Sahara.[12][13][14]
In Kano Emirate, the Banu Gha and their relatives are known as Awliya Madinawa Malamai by some people, in reference to the city of Medina where they claimed to have originated from, situated in Western Saudi Arabia.[15]Members of the family who descended from the Jobawa clan on the maternal side are entitled to be appointed as Makaman Kano, due to the precedent established during the reign of Sarkin Kano Aliyu Babba, who appointed Sarkin Takai Umaru Dan Maisaje as Makaman Kano, even though his link with the Jobawa is through his father's mother Habiba, the sister of Malam Bakatsine. The traditional requisite of agnatic descent was not considered in the appointment, leading to the establishment of a precedent for the descendants of the Jobawa with paternal or maternal links to aspire to be appointed as Makaman Kano.[16] An Awliya Madinawa Malamai clan member Abdullahi Aliyu Sumaila, the progenitor of the Muallimawa dynasty, has a link to the Jobawa through his paternal great-grandmother, the daughter of the Village head of Sumaila, Sarkin Sumaila Akilu, a bajobe and son of Makaman Kano Iliyasu.[17]
Notable Banu Gha[]
- Imam Ghali
- Sheikh Shi'ithu Ghali
- Sheikh Ibrahim Shi'ithu Ghali
- Waliyi Abdurrahim-Maiduniya
- Aliyu-Talle Maiduniya Sumaila
- Abdullahi Aliyu Sumaila
- Ahmed Abdullahi Aliyu Abdurrahim Sumaila
- Aliyu Abdullahi Aliyu Sumaila
- Yusuf Abdullahi Sumaila
- Abdullahi Ahmed Sumaila
Dynasties[]
References[]
- ^ Hassan, Mohammed (2018). Islamic Religious Practices and Culture of the Al-Ghali Family. Tafida Printing Press.
- ^ Al-Wali, Muhammadu (1980). History of Banu Gha. Kano: Kadawa Printing Press.
- ^ Bashir, Ali (2000). Kano Malams in the Ninteenth Century. River Front Press.
- ^ Hassan, Mohammed (2018). Islamic Religious Practices and Culture of the Al-Ghali Family. Tafida Printing Press.
- ^ Abubakar, Badamasi. Trans Saharan Trade: Networks and Learning in Ninetenth Century Kano. Danjuma Press.
- ^ Aminu, Muhammad. The History of Al-Ghali Family. Gargaliya Press.
- ^ Sani, Muhammadu (1990). Arab Settlers in Kano. Sauda Voyager.
- ^ Balogun, Ismail A.B (1969). The penetration of Islam into Nigeria. Khartoum: University of Khartoum, Sudan, Research Unit.
- ^ Danlami, Yusuf (2005). Al-Ghali Family and its Religious Leaders. Danlami Printers.
- ^ Tarikh Arab Hadha al-balad el-Musamma Kano. Journal of Royal History. 1908.
- ^ Balarabe, Suleman (1987). The History of Kadawa Town. Bala Printing Press.
- ^ Norris, H.T. (1975). The Tuaregs:Their Islamic Legacy and Its Diffusion in the Sahel. England: Aris and Phillips, Ltd.
- ^ Last, Murray (1967). The Sokoto Caliphate. New York: Humanities Press.
- ^ Bello, Ahmadu (1962). My Life. Cambridge University Press.
- ^ Abdullahi, Ahmed (1999). Madinawan Kano. Danlami Printers.
- ^ Smith, M.G. (1997). Government in Kano 1350-1950. Westview Press, A Division of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc.
- ^ Abdullahi, Ahmed (1998). Tarihin Madinawa Jobawa. Kadawa Press.
- History of Northern Nigeria
- Sokoto Caliphate
- Fula people
- Nigerian Muslims
- Nigerian Sunni Muslims
- Hasanid dynasties
- Alid dynasties
- Alaouite dynasty
- History of Kano
- Kano
- African dynasties
- Muslim dynasties
- Sunni dynasties
- Noble families
- Nobility
- People from Kano
- Fula families
- Nigerian Fula people
- Nigerian families of Fula ancestry
- Nigerian families
- Nigerian noble families
- Noble families by nationality
- Muslim communities in Africa
- People from Kano State
- Families from Kano State
- People of colonial Nigeria
- Nigerian society
- People from Medina
- Medina
- Nigerian people of Arab descent
- African people of Arab descent
- People of Arab descent
- Quraysh
- West African people
- Hashemite people