Mohammed Bagayogo
Mohammed Bagayogo | |
---|---|
Born | 1523 |
Died | July 7, 1593 Timbuktu, Mali Empire |
Occupation(s) | Philosopher, Arabic grammarian |
Father | Mahmud Bagayogo |
Mohammed Bagayogo Es Sudane Al Wangari Al Timbukti was an eminent scholar from Timbuktu, Mali. Baghayogho originated from among the Juula people, who are a Mande ethnic group composed of merchants and scholars.[1]
History
He was born in Djenné in 1523, the son of Qadi Mahmud Bagayogo. As a youth he attended the majlis of Aḥmad b. Muḥammad b. Sa’īd, where he studied the Mukhtasar, along with the Mudawwana of Sahnun and the Muwatta Imam Malik along with his brother Ahmad.[2] When Askia Daoud asked him to become Djenne's qadi like his father, he resisted the appointment (as had his father, to Askia Ishaq I) and took shelter in the mosque with his brother for several months before escaping to Timbuktu with their teacher.[3]
Bagayogo eventually became the Sheikh and teacher of the famous scholar Ahmed Baba[4] at the Sankore Madrasah, one of three philosophical schools in Mali during West Africa's golden age (i.e. 12th-16th centuries); the other two were Sidi Yahya Mosque and Djinguereber Mosque. By 1583 he was a promient enough leader that he served as de facto Qadi of Timbuktu after the death of Al-Qadi Aqib ibn Mahmud ibn Umar, issuing judgments in front of the Sidi Yahya Mosque.[5] Bagayogo, with most of the rest of Timbuktu, backed the Balma'a's rebellion against Askia Muhammad Bani in 1588, but survived the purges led by his successor Askia Ishaq II.[6] He died on July 7, 1593, in the old town of Timbuktu.
Legacy
In addition to his erudition, Mohammed Bagayogo is remembered for his refusal to comply with Moroccan occupiers.[7] A significant amount of his writing has been preserved in manuscript form at the Ahmed Baba Institute, a repository for African literature. Some of the manuscripts found their way into French museums. A project is under way to digitalise these manuscripts which will lead to better understanding of the culture that flourished in Mali in the medieval period.[citation needed]
References
- ^ Hunwick, John (2003). "Timbuktu: A Refuge Of Scholarly And Righteous Folk". Sudanic Africa. 14: 16. ISSN 0803-0685. OCLC 9973518782. S2CID 160221532.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 296.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 351.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 285.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 283.
- ^ Gomez 2018, p. 362.
- ^ "History of Timbuktu, Mali". Archived from the original on July 4, 2007. Retrieved 2007-07-17.
Bibliography
- bin Yahya al-Wangari, Mukhtar. "Shaykh Baghayogho al-Wangari and the Wangari Library in Timbuktu." in Jeppie, Shamil, and Souleymane Bachir Diagne (eds.)The meanings of Timbuktu. University of Cape Town Press, 2010. pp.277-285 https://publication.codesria.org/index.php/pub/catalog/download/141/1238/4156?inline=1
- Adama, Hamadou. "Ahmed Bâba at-Timbuktî." In Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History. 2021.
- Gomez, Michael (2018). African dominion : a new history of empire in early and medieval West Africa. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691177427.
- Hunwick, John. "Timbuktu: A Refuge of Scholarly and Righteous Folk." Sudanic Africa14 (2003): 13-20.
- Hunwick, John. "Towards a History of the Islamic Intellectual Tradition in West Africa down to the Nineteenth Century." Journal for Islamic Studies 17 (1997): 4.
- Singleton, Brent D. "African bibliophiles: Books and libraries in medieval Timbuktu." Libraries & Culture 39, no. 1 (2004): 1-12.
- W. Massing, Andreas. "Baghayogho: A soninke Muslim diaspora in the mande world." Cahiers d’études africaines 176, no. 4 (2004): 887-922.