Somalia IMPERIAL PARTITION
Figure 2. Colonial Boundaries, 1891-1960
Italian triumphal arch, Mogadishu
Courtesy R.W.S. Hudson
Old port gate, Mogadishu
Courtesy R.W.S. Hudson
The last quarter of the nineteenth century saw political
developments that transformed the Somali Peninsula. During this
period, the Somalis became the subjects of state systems under
the flags of Britain, France, Italy, Egypt, and Ethiopia. The new
rulers had various motives for colonization. Britain sought to
gain control of the northern Somali coast as a source of mutton
and other livestock products for its naval port of Aden in
present-day Yemen. As a result of the growing importance of the
Red Sea to British operations in the East, Aden was regarded as
indispensable to the defense of British India. British occupation
of the northern Somali coast began in earnest in February 1884,
when Major A. Hunter arrived at Berbera to negotiate treaties of
friendship and protection with numerous Somali clans. Hunter
arranged to have British vice consuls installed in Berbera,
Bullaxaar, and Saylac.
The French, having been evicted from Egypt by the British,
wished to establish a coaling station on the Red Sea coast to
strengthen naval links with their Indochina colonies. The French
were also eager to bisect Britain's vaunted Cairo to Cape Town
zone of influence with an east to west expansion across Africa.
France extended its foothold on the Afar coast partly to counter
the high duties that the British authorities imposed on French
goods in Obock. A French protectorate was proclaimed under the
governorship of Léonce Lagarde, who played a prominent role in
extending French influence into the Horn of Africa.
Recently unified, Italy was inexperienced at imperial power
plays. It was therefore content to stake out a territory whenever
it could do so without confronting another colonial power. In
southern Somalia, better known as the Banaadir coast, Italy was
the main colonizer, but the extension of Italian influence was
painstakingly slow owing to parliamentary lack of enthusiasm for
overseas territory. Italy acquired its first possession in
southern Somalia in 1888 when the Sultan of Hobyo, Keenadiid,
agreed to Italian "protection." In the same year, Vincenzo
Filonardi, Italy's architect of imperialism in southern Somalia,
demanded a similar arrangement from the Majeerteen Sultanate of
Ismaan Mahamuud. In 1889 both sultans, suspicious of each other,
consented to place their lands under Italian protection. Italy
then notified the signatory powers of the Berlin West Africa
Conference of 1884-85 of its southeastern Somali protectorate
(see
fig. 2). Later, Italy seized the Banaadir coast proper,
which had long been under the tenuous authority of the
Zanzibaris, to form the colony of Italian Somaliland. Chisimayu
Region, which passed to the British as a result of their
protectorate over the Zanzibaris, was ceded to Italy in 1925 to
complete Italian tenure over southern Somalia.
The catalyst for imperial tenure over Somali territory was
Egypt under its ambitious ruler, Khedive Ismail. In the last
quarter of the nineteenth century, this Ottoman vassal sought to
carve out for Egypt a swath of territory in the Horn of Africa.
However, the Sudanese anti-Egyptian Mahdist revolt that broke out
in 1884 shattered the khedive's plan for imperial aggrandizement.
The Egyptians needed British help to evacuate their troops
marooned in Sudan and on the Somali coast.
What the European colonialists failed to foresee was that the
biggest threat to their imperial ambitions in the Horn of Africa
would come from an emerging regional power, the Ethiopia of
Emperor Menelik II. Emperor Menelik II not only managed to defend
Ethiopia against European encroachment, but also succeeded in
competing with the Europeans for the Somali-inhabited territories
that he claimed as part of Ethiopia. Between 1887 and 1897,
Menelik II successfully extended Ethiopian rule over the long
independent Muslim Emirate of Harer and over western Somalia
(better known as the Ogaden). Thus, by the turn of the century,
the Somali Peninsula, one of the most culturally homogeneous
regions of Africa, was divided into British Somaliland, French
Somaliland, Italian Somaliland, Ethiopian Somaliland (the
Ogaden), and what came to be called the Northern Frontier
District (NFD) of Kenya.
Although the officials of the three European powers often
lacked funds, they nevertheless managed to establish the
rudimentary organs of colonial administration. Moreover, because
they controlled the port outlets, they could levy taxes on
livestock to obtain the necessary funds to administer their
respective Somali territories. In contrast, Ethiopia was largely
a feudal state with a subsistence economy that required its army
of occupation to live off the land. Thus, Ethiopian armies
repeatedly despoiled the Ogaden in the last two decades of the
nineteenth century.
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