Pictures from Google Image Search

Sunni Ali

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Sunni Ali

Sunni Ali (died 1492) founded the Songhay empire of West Africa. Best known as a great military leader, he was called Ali Ber, or "Ali the Great." There is much controversy about his attitudes toward Islam.

Almost nothing is known about the early life of Ali (who received the title of sunni, or si, when he became king of Gao) except that he was raised among his mother's people, the Faru of Sokoto, from whom he learned the use of magical powers. When he grew older, he lived with his father, Madogo, the tenth si of Gao. Madogo was a strong military leader, and he too taught Ali the techniques of magic. Thus by the time Ali became si, he was adept in the arts of both war and magic.

In 1464, when Ali succeeded the fourteenth si, Sulaiman Dama, Gao was still a tributary province under the Mali empire, which was then weakening. Trade in the western Sudan was becoming less secure as the Tuareg and the Mossi raided more freely from the north and the south. Thus Ali came to power in a centrally located and relatively strong state at a time when a power vacuum was developing in the Niger Basin, and he immediately advanced against the Mossi and then moved to throw off Mali rule. He succeeded in permanently freeing Gao from the once great Mali empire and laying the basis for the Songhay empire, which was even greater. He could defeat the Mossi only in battles, however, and never even attempted to conquer these formidable non-Moslem foes.

Wars of Conquest

Much of Ali's military career was spent subduing the great cities of the Niger River. During the first year of his reign he began a 7-year siege of the city of Djenné, which according to traditions had resisted 99 assaults by Mali. Meanwhile he expanded further to the west, defeating the Dogon, and the Fulani of Bandiagara. By about 1467 he had added the Hombori to the south.

Timbuktu had been held by the Tuareg since 1433, when they had taken it from Mali. In 1467 the local governor, Umar, petitioned Ali to come and liberate his city from its invaders. In January 1468 Ali advanced with such a formidable force that both the Tuareg and Umar himself fled. Then the Songhay entered and sacked the city. Ali's ruthless slaughter of most of the Moslem ulema there earned him the unanimous disdain and vituperation of the Moslem chroniclers who wrote the Tarikhs, which contain the main written sources of his deeds. In the following years Ali mounted additional attacks on the Mossi, Fulani, Tuareg, and other peoples. By 1471 the city of Djenné fell. In contrast to the harsh treatment Ali had accorded the Moslems of Timbuktu, whom he felt to have collaborated with a foreign enemy, here he was generous and accommodated the ulema.

During the next decade Ali extended his conquests in all directions, but he continued to nurse a powerful grudge against the Tuareg leader, Akil, who had escaped during the fall of Timbuktu. Akil had fled to Walata, where he still remained in 1480. Since a major part of Ali's military strength lay in his river navy, the isolated plains town of Walata presented special difficulties. Ali conceived a bold scheme to build a canal between Lake Faguibine and Walata in order to deploy his navy in an assault. This was a distance twice that of the modern Suez Canal. Soon, however, work was abandoned when the Songhay had to repel an attack of their nemesis, the Mossi. Ali never resumed construction of this canal, but traces of it are still to be found in Mali.

In the remaining years of his reign Ali led more attacks on the Dogon (1484) and the Gurme, Tuareg, and Fulani (1488-1492). He also again purged Timbuktu Moslems in 1486.

Ali and Islam

A major problem of Sudanic emperors was that of balancing urban, or Moslem, interests against those of the much larger rural, or non-Moslem, population. Rulers were generally Moslems themselves, but they always had to remain tolerant of established, local religions. Ali was a Moslem, and he performed all the routine Islamic rites; but he regarded Islam as a potential threat to his political power. He sought to retain his support in the rural masses, and he feared that he would be cut off from their support if the urban Moslems were granted too many privileges.

Ali's achievements were mainly military. During the early years of his reign he was constantly on the move, and he is remembered as having been undefeated. The task of administrative consolidation was, however, left to his successor, Askia Muhammad. Ali seems to have innovated a system of provincial governors, but it was not developed and Gao's control of its new territories was very tenuous. Songhay agriculture was frequently upset by his military levies, but he eventually alleviated this problem by incorporating more and more war prisoners into his own forces.

Ali depended more upon the fear and respect which he commanded as a strong magician-king than upon the love and admiration of his subjects, as he was a cruel and short-tempered man. He occasionally ordered the execution of even a trusted member of his retinue, only to later regret his loss. His general Askia Muhammad several times escaped such hasty sentences.

On his return from an expedition against the Gurma in late 1492 Ali died, possibly drowning while crossing a river. He was succeeded by his son, Baru, who tried to reject all Islamic influence, and was therefore felled by a Moslem-sanctioned coup led by Askia Muhammad within 4 months.

Further Reading

There is no full-length biography of Ali. A chapter on him, translated from a French source, appears in P. J. M. McEwan, ed., Africa from Early Times to 1800 (1968). Other sketches of Ali's life can be found in Lavinia Dobler and William A. Brown, Great Rulers of the African Past (1965), and Adu Boahen, Topics in West African History (1966). Important general sources are E. W. Bovill, The Golden Trade of the Moors (1958; 2d ed. 1968); J. Spencer Trimingham, A History of Islam in West Africa (1962); and J. O. Hunwick, "Religion and State in the Songhay Empire, 1464-1591," in the International African Seminar, Islam in Tropical Africa, edited by I. M. Lewis (1966).

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Sunni Ali." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 9 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Sunni Ali." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (November 9, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404700149.html

"Sunni Ali." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Retrieved November 09, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404700149.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

FactSage and ChemApp: two tools for the prediction of multiphase chemical equilibria in solutions *,**.
Magazine article from: Pure and Applied Chemistry; 6/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...enables the user to calculate equilibria and thermodynamic properties...FactSage are of interest to chemical and physical metallurgy, chemical and corrosion engineering...handling of repetitive complex equilibrium calculations in application...leach solutions. Keywords: chemical ...
Recycling of magnesium alloys: Chemical equilibria between magnesium-lithium-based melts and salt melts
Magazine article from: Metallurgical and Materials Transactions; 6/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...and salt phases were determined by chemical analyses. The obtained data were evaluated...2LiCl + Ba (Reaction [3]). The equilibrium of Reaction [1] is much on the right...lithium alloys and deals with the chemical equilibria between magnesium-lithium melts and...
FIJACIÓN Y REDUCCIÓN FUNCIONALES COMO RAZONAMIENTOS DE SENTIDO COMÚN EN EL APRENDIZAJE DE LA QUÍMICA (I): EQUILIBRIO QUÍMICO/Fuctional Fixedness and Functional reduction as common sense reasonings in chemistry learning (I): Chemical Equilibrium
Magazine article from: Journal of Science Education; 1/1/2000; ; 700+ words ; ...external factors affecting equilibria (chemical equilibrium) and geometry and polarity...This first paper is about the chemical equilibrium. The incorrect...reduccion, functional fixedness, chemical equilibrium. INTRODUCCIN...
Cequel[R]: chemical equilibrium in Excel.(Engineering Tools)
Magazine article from: Mechanical Engineering-CIME; 4/1/2005; 368 words ; Cequel is an Excel Add-In that solves chemical equilibrium problems as a spreadsheet function. It is based...adiabatic flame temperature, or use it to determine equilibrium states for your own model. www.seainc.com info...
Cequel[R] chemical equilibrium in Excel.(Engineering Tools)
Magazine article from: Mechanical Engineering-CIME; 10/1/2005; 359 words ; Cequel is an Excel Add-In that solves chemical equilibrium problems as a spreadsheet function. It is based...adiabatic flame temperature, or use it to determine equilibrium states for your own model. www.seainc.com info...
Cequel[R]: chemical equilibrium in excel.(Engineering Tools)
Magazine article from: Mechanical Engineering-CIME; 6/1/2005; 368 words ; Cequel is an Excel/Add-In that solves chemical equilibrium problems as a spreadsheet function. It is based...adiabatic flame temperature, or use it to determine equilibrium states for your own model. [GRAPHIC OMITTED...
Molecular-level thermodynamic switch controls chemical equilibrium in sequence-specific hydrophobic interaction of 35 dipeptide pairs
Magazine article from: Biophysical Journal; 2/1/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...hence a maximum in the related equilibrium constant, K^sub eq...entitled "Thermodynamics, Chemical Reactions and Molecular Biology...360 Kelvin show that the "chemical bond" component of the overall...independent component of the chemical bond enthalpy is the inherent...
Prediction of equilibrium solubility of C[O.sub.2] in aqueous alkanolamines using differential evolution algorithm.(R&D NOTE)
Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering; 2/1/2008; ; 700+ words ; ...manufacture. Regenerative chemical absorption of the acid gases...knowledge of vapour--liquid equilibrium (VLE) of the acid gas over...mass transfer coupled with chemical reactions. The major problem...brief discussion about the chemical equilibria, vapour--liquid phase...
Phase Equilibria, Phase Diagrams and Phase Transformations: Their Thermodynamic Basis
Magazine article from: Chemical Engineering Progress; 10/1/2008; ; 433 words ; Phase Equilibria, Phase Diagrams and Phase Transformations...covers the theoretical basis of chemical equilibria and chemical engineering, with an emphasis...Theoretical descriptions of equilibrium conditions, the state of systems...
Influence of Calcium Salt Supplementation on Calcium Equilibrium in Skim Milk During pH Cycle
Magazine article from: Journal of Dairy Science; 5/1/2007; ; 700+ words ; ...2003). When subjected to chemical equilibria, Ca partition in milk varies...Protons and Ca ions are in equilibria with their respective phosphate...citrate salts (Brul, 1981). Equilibria are shifted toward the colloidal...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Equilibrium, Chemical
Encyclopedia entry from: The Gale Encyclopedia of Science Equilibrium, Chemical How chemical equilibrium works Upsetting our equilibrium Resources...has already come to equilibrium: There are certain equilibrium amounts of all four chemicals. But if the number of B molecules is increased...
chemical equilibrium
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition chemical equilibrium state of balance in which two opposing reversible chemical reactions proceed at constant equal rates with...thinsp;are the coefficients of the balanced chemical equation. The larger the equilibrium constant...
Chemical Equilibrium
Book article from: Science of Everyday Things CHEMICAL EQUILIBRIUM CONCEPT Reactions are...both the physical and chemical properties of a substance...of producing specific chemicals. Equilibrium is also...health. HOW IT WORKS Chemical Reactions in Brief What...
Equilibrium
Book article from: Chemistry: Foundations and Applications Equilibrium A state of equilibrium exists...to thermal, mechanical, and chemical changes. For example, within...is equal to the heat gain. Chemical equilibrium exists when a reversible chemical reaction occurs within a closed...
equilibrium
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition ...quickly to its position of equilibrium after being tipped. However...on a point is in unstable equilibrium. Some bodies, such as...temperatures are equal. Chemical equilibrium refers to reversible chemical reactions in which the reactions...