Template talk:History of Somalia
Egypt EyaletThe Ottomans most certainly did rule over Zeila, Berbera and other coastal and interior Somali cites. These cites were also run by separate Ottoman/Turkish Governors.[1][2][3][4][5] Not just that, but there were also Ottoman/Turkish garrison stationed in them as well.[6][7][8][9] This not "undue weight" in any way as you claim this to be. AcidSnow (talk) 01:21, 7 July 2014 (UTC) As I expected none of your sources go back further than claims/incidents of the mid-1800s. Zeila and Berbera were part of Ifat and Adal for most of their golden ages. After the Adal-Abyssinian wars, the cities went through a period of decline and sought protection from the Ottomans in Yemen and modern Saudi Arabia - both Ottoman provinces with actual identifiable Pashas and Turkish garrisons - against roaming Portuguese fleets. In that entire period not a single "Turkish" governor ruled those Somali cities, instead it were either Somali or Afar governors practicing local rule for the most part unless there was regional friction. In all of your sources however the leaders from the latter two ethnic groups along with their soldiers and mercenaries have been dubbed "Turkish". A historical error to say the least, not just in terms of culture, phenotype but also clear genetics since neither group is Turkish in origin or were known in those specific centuries as "Turks". The Cambridge History of Africa - Volume 5 - Page 57 on ZEILA:
The Cambridge History of Africa (same page) on BERBERA:
Typing "Turkish Garrison" with "Zeila" in google is all well and good, but there is actually no evidence of a permanent garrison comparable to the historic provinces of the Ottoman Empire where actual direct rule was practiced. We have no Pasha or permanent Turkish garrison ruling Zeila or Berbera, like the Pasha of Massawa. The inclusion of these sporadic episodes into the template of an entire country's history is clearly undue weight considering these cities at the time of nominal rule had significantly declined in prosperity and their populations did not number more than 3000 at best out of a Somali population of two million. More importantly the particular article you have added ("Egypt Eyalet) as an entity did not hold sway over Zeila until the 1870s, and only for a brief 10 years. Similarly their attempts at holding Berbera in the 1830s and 50s faced continuous local opposition and an actual presence was not achieved until the 1870s, again for a brief 10 years. The Cambridge History of Africa - Volume 5 - Page 86:
This justifies my protest at including these short episodes into a country history template when it did not influence all the important factors that make up the identity of the country, be it the clan-system, the language, the culture, the faith, unlike the other political entities part of the template. The majority of these episodes were "claims" made from far away rather than direct rule. (the Ottomans could not convince the British that these cities were theirs and the latter engaged in treaties with the chiefs of those cities). Its undue weight to place this brief situation in the same league as the actual Somali dominated/native dynasties such as the Ifat Sultanate, the Kingdom of Adal, the Sultanate of Mogadishu, the Ajuuraan Empire, the Geledi Sultanate as well as the early 20th century Somali states and sultanates, who directly held sway over multiple dozen Somali cities, towns, villages, ports, caravan routes, beachlands, jungles, rivers, mountainous regions, and could confidently be considered to have impacted the entire country's history. You will not find me removing the Italian and British periods either because they for an actual considerable time did hold sway over the majority of the country and left behind a legacy, good or bad, that is visible to any student or scholar following the Somali Studies platform. See the history of China template as an example of actual relevant history being given their due place as opposed to brief episodes such as the Boxer Rebellion or the Japanese occupation. Its for that reason that I have once again removed that article from the history template. --90.207.208.40 (talk) 11:53, 8 July 2014 (UTC) WidthI see no reason why this shouldn't use the default width. using the default avoids issues with stacked infoboxes/sidebars in the same article having differing widths. Frietjes (talk) 17:20, 20 July 2014 (UTC)
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