The Muslim Sayfawa dynasty had established its…
1259 CE
The Muslim Sayfawa dynasty had established its rule over all Kanem by the twelfth century.
At the same time, the Kanembu people had drawn closer to the new rulers and increased the growing population in Njimi.
Although the Kanembu had become the main power-base of the Sayfuwa, Kanem's rulers have continued to travel frequently throughout the kingdom and especially towards Bornu, west of Lake Chad.
Herders and farmers alike recognize the government's power and acknowledge their allegiance by paying tribute.
Kanem's expansion had peaked during the long and energetic reign of Sayfawa dynast Mai Dunama Dabbalemi, who has initiated diplomatic exchanges with sultans in North Africa and apparently arranged for the establishment of a special hostel in Cairo to facilitate pilgrimages to Mecca.
Having declared jihad against the surrounding tribes, he had initiated an extended period of conquest.
After consolidating their territory around Lake Chad, the Fezzan region (in present-day Libya) has fallen under Kanem's authority, and the empire's influence extends westward to Kano (in present-day Nigeria), eastward to Ouaddaï, and southward to the Adamawa grasslands (in present-day Cameroon).
Dabbalemi has devised a system to reward military commanders with authority over the people they conquered, but this system has tempted military officers to pass their positions to their sons, thus transforming the office from one based on achievement and loyalty to the mai into one based on hereditary nobility.
Dabbalemi has able to suppress this tendency, but after his death in 1259, dissension among his sons will weaken the Sayfawa Dynasty ad dynastic feuds degenerate into civil war, and Kanem's outlying peoples soon cease paying tribute.