Somalia Historical Setting
Shaykh Abdulaziz Mosque, one of Mogadishu's oldest
historical structures
LOCATED IN THE HORN OF AFRICA, adjacent to the Arabian
Peninsula, Somalia is steeped in thousands of years of history.
The ancient Egyptians spoke of it as "God's Land" (the Land of
Punt). Chinese merchants frequented the Somali coast in the tenth
and fourteenth centuries and, according to tradition, returned
home with giraffes, leopards, and tortoises to add color and
variety to the imperial menagerie. Greek merchant ships and
medieval Arab dhows plied the Somali coast; for them it formed
the eastern fringe of Bilad as Sudan, "the Land of the Blacks."
More specifically, medieval Arabs referred to the Somalis, along
with related peoples, as the Berberi.
By the eighteenth century, the Somalis essentially had
developed their present way of life, which is based on pastoral
nomadism and the Islamic faith. During the colonial period
(approximately 1891 to 1960), the Somalis were separated into
five mini-Somalilands: British Somaliland (north central); French
Somaliland (east and southeast); Italian Somaliland (south);
Ethiopian Somaliland (the Ogaden); and, what came to be called
the Northern Frontier District (NFD) of Kenya. In 1960 Italian
Somaliland and British Somaliland were merged into a single
independent state, the Somali Republic. In its first nine years
the Somali state, although plagued by territorial disputes with
Ethiopia and Kenya, and by difficulties in integrating the dual
legacy of Italian and British administrations, remained a model
of democratic governance in Africa; governments were regularly
voted into and out of office. Taking advantage of the widespread
public bitterness and cynicism attendant upon the rigged
elections of early 1969, Major General Mahammad Siad Barre seized
power on October 21, 1969, in a bloodless coup. Over the next
twenty-one years Siad Barre established a military dictatorship
that divided and oppressed the Somalis. Siad Barre maintained
control of the social system by playing off clan against clan
until the country became riven with interclan strife and
bloodshed. Siad Barre's regime came to a disastrous end in early
1991 with the collapse of the Somali state. In the regime's place
emerged armed clan militias fighting one another for political
power. Siad Barre fled the capital on January 27, 1991, into the
safety of his Mareehaan clan's territory in southern Somalia.
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