- Kotoko kingdom
The Kotoko kingdom was a
West Africa n monarchy in what is today northernCameroon andNigeria , and southwesternChad . Its inhabitants and their modern descendants are known as theKotoko people .The rise of Kotoko coincided with the decline of the
Sao civilisation in northern Cameroon. A king headed the nascent state, which came to assimilate several smaller kingdoms. Among these were Kousseri, Logone-Birni, Makari, and Mara. Kotoko spread to parts of what is today northern Cameroon and Nigeria, and southwestern Chad by the mid-15th century. Logone-Birni emerged as the most influential of Kotoko's client kingdoms.The
Kanem Empire brought northern Kotoko into its sphere of influence early on. Through the actions of missionaries and conquerors, most of northern Kotoko had converted toIslam by the 19th century. That same century, Kotoko itself was completely subsumed into theBornu Empire , and Islam continued to spread. The Bornu rulers divided the territory into northern and southern halves, which allowed Logone-Birni in the south to maintain some degree of autonomy under itsparamount chief . Logone-Birni was divided into provinces headed by sub-chiefs.Kotoko, along with the rest of Bornu, was split among European powers during Africa's colonial period. In modern times, there has been some conflict between the Kotoko and the
Shuwa Arabs .References
*DeLancey, Mark W., and DeLancey, Mark Dike (2000). "Historical Dictionary of the Republic of Cameroon". 3rd ed.
*Fanso, V. G. (1989). "Cameroon History for Secondary Schools and Colleges: Volume 1: Prehistoric Times to the Nineteenth Century". London: Macmillan Education Ltd.
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