Mangi Saiye
Saiye | |||||
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King of Siha | |||||
Reign | c.1885 – late.1880s | ||||
Predecessor | Mangi Maletua of Old Samake | ||||
Successor | Mangi Ngalami of Siha | ||||
Born | c.1860s Komboko, Siha District, Kilimanjaro Region | ||||
Died | c.late 1800s Komboko, Siha District, Kilimanjaro Region | ||||
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Dynasty | Mmari | ||||
Religion | Traditional African religions |
Saiye or Saiye Mmari (c. 1865 – c. 1880s), also known as "Mangi Saiye of Siha"), ("Mangi Saiye" in Kichagga), ("Mfalme Saiye", in Swahili) was one of the many Chagga sovereigns. [1]From the 1860s through the 1880s, he ruled over one of the Chagga states, specifically the Siha Kingdom in what is now Siha District of Tanzania's Kilimanjaro Region. [2] Unlike his predecessor Mangi Maletua in Old Samake, he was the first ruler to govern the entire kingdom rather than just a portion of it. The word "Mangi" in Kichagga means "king".[3][4]
Rise to power
[edit]Following the poisoning of Mangi Maletua, power shifted to Saiye of the Mmari clan. [5]Captured in Komboko by the Waarusha during a raid, Saiye was raised among them, acquiring their martial techniques. Upon returning home, he reassured his community about the threat posed by the Waarusha, promising to train and fortify his people. [6] Supported by the elders—who supplied cattle to sustain the efforts—he organized defensive measures including trench construction and rituals to bind the warriors' loyalty.[7]
When the Waarusha planned an assault on Siha, Saiye devised a ruse by having his warriors disguise themselves as Maasai, allowing the invaders to enter the trenches before launching a coordinated ambush. [8]At the time, the local Chagga weapons were primarily short spears with small spearheads, produced by Mae blacksmiths and supplemented by arms from Usseri and Kibosho. Under Saiye’s leadership, Siha conducted its first external raid when Mang'aro—a brother of Machame’s King, Mangi Ndesserua—sought refuge with him and enlisted his assistance to depose his sibling and secure power in Machame.[7][9]
Deline and death
[edit]Saiye led two major raids during his brief rule. In the first raid, he crossed the Lawati River to the Namwi River in the Masama chiefdom, returning with many cattle. [10] In his second expedition, which extended into the Machame Kingdom by crossing the Kikafu River at Mang'aro, his forces were ambushed on orders from Ndesserua, resulting in heavy losses and Saiye's death—a battle that later bore his name and cemented his reputation as Siha's first great warrior.[7]
After Saiye's death in the late 1880s, the region experienced a power vacuum with only elderly leaders remaining. [11]Clan elders eventually elected Ngalami of the Mmari clan as the new mangi. Ngalami, a relative of Saiye, consolidated authority over most of the region—except Samake—and is credited as the first leader to unify Siha.[7]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Schanz, Johannes. "Mitteilungen über Die Besiedelung Des Kilimandscharo Durch Die Dschagga Und Deren Geschichte." Baessler-Archiv, 1913.
- ^ Dundas, Charles. Kilimanjaro and Its People: A History of Wachagga, their Laws, Customs and Legends, Together with Some. Routledge, 2012.
- ^ "Chagga people- history, religion, culture and more". United Republic of Tanzania. 2021. Retrieved 2023-04-08.
- ^ R.O. "The Chagga and Their Chiefs – History of the Chagga People of Kilimanjaro. By Kathleen M. Stahl. The Hague: Mouton, 1964. Pp. 394, Maps. 32 Guilders.” The Journal of African History, vol. 5, no. 3, 1964, pp. 462–464., doi:10.1017/S0021853700005181.
- ^ Dundas, Charles. Kilimanjaro and Its People: A History of Wachagga, their Laws, Customs and Legends, Together with Some. Routledge, 2012.
- ^ Schanz, Johannes. "Mitteilungen über Die Besiedelung Des Kilimandscharo Durch Die Dschagga Und Deren Geschichte." Baessler-Archiv, 1913.
- ^ a b c d Stahl, Kathleen (1964). History of the Chagga people of Kilimanjaro. London: Mouton and Co. p. 82. ISBN 0-520-06698-7.
- ^ Schanz, Johannes. "Mitteilungen über Die Besiedelung Des Kilimandscharo Durch Die Dschagga Und Deren Geschichte." Baessler-Archiv, 1913.
- ^ Dundas, Charles. Kilimanjaro and Its People: A History of Wachagga, their Laws, Customs and Legends, Together with Some. Routledge, 2012.
- ^ Moore, Sally Falk, and Paul Puritt. The Chagga and Meru of Tanzania: East Central Africa, Part XVIII. Routledge, 2017. ISBN 978-1-315-30949-1.
- ^ Moore, Sally Falk, and Paul Puritt. The Chagga and Meru of Tanzania: East Central Africa, Part XVIII. Routledge, 2017. ISBN 978-1-315-30949-1.