When 4,000 Sudanese defeated 18,000 Ethiopians...Battle of the Dindar River

EdJo

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The Battle of the Dindar River was fought near the Dinder River in 1738, between the forces of the Ethiopian Emperor Iyasu II and the Sennar army under King Badi IV. The battle was a disaster for the Ethiopians and for Iyasu.

Stung by lampoons which called him Iyasu Tannush ("Iyasu the Little", in contrast to his earlier namesake "Iyasu the Great") and described him as more interested in pursuing his pleasures and amusements than to the well-being of his own subjects, Emperor Iyasu decided to conquer the Kingdom of Sennar. He summoned the army of Ethiopia, and marched west from Gondar into Sennar, following the course of the Dindar River.

The inhabitants of Sennar fell back before the overwhelming force of the Ethiopians, although some under Nail Wad Agib defected to the Ethiopians and saved their lives for the moment. Some local inhabitants along the Dindar (whom Wallis Budge describes as "Arabs") opposed the invaders, but Iyasu's general Waragna, commanding the vanguard of the army, scattered them "with great slaughter".

Although King Badi had assembled an army, he was unnerved at the size of the Ethiopian army before him. However, Hamis, a prince of Darfur in western Sudan, proposed a strategy to defeat the invaders. On his advice, the main part of the Sennar army feigned a retreat from the Ethiopian army, drawing them forward. Meanwhile, Hamis led 4000 horsemen around and behind the army and fell upon the main body of 18,000 men under the command of Wolde Leul. Welda Uhlo escaped with some of his officers, and a number of soldiers found safety in the nearby woods, but the rest were slaughtered in Hamis' attack. Hamis also captured a number of relics that Emperor Iyasu had brought with him, which included an icon of Christ and a piece of the True Cross. While a follower of Nail Wad Agib brought word of the ambush to the vanguard with Emperor Iyasu, it was clear that they would be unable to reach the fighting in time to save them.

Instead, Emperor Iyasu followed the main stream of the Nile north to where the Tekezé River entered it, wreaking destruction upon the villages he encountered, burning houses and capturing cattle, aware that he had been defeated. Once he reached the Tekezé, Iyasu followed that river upstream into his realm. Upon entering Gondar, the Emperor paraded the cattle his soldiers had captured proclaiming his campaign a success. However, he quietly sent his courtier Tensa Tammo to Sennar who ransomed the captured relics for 8,000 ounces of gold.

Notes
The following account, unless otherwise stated, is based on E. A. Wallis Budge, A History of Ethiopia: Nubia and Abyssinia, 1928 (Oosterhout, the Netherlands: Anthropological Publications, 1970), pp. 454f.

Remedius Prutky claims that Iyasu also lost his "golden crown", but Richard Pankhurst is skeptical about this claim (J.H. Arrowsmith-Brown [trans.], Prutky's Travels in Ethiopia and other Countries with notes by Richard Pankhurst [London: Hakluyt Society, 1991], p. 150 n.7)

James Bruce, Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile (1805 edition), vol. 4 p. 127

Battle of the Dindar River
 

EdJo

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I would love to know more about the Sennar Kingdom. I saw something saying that the Ottoman Empire tried to conquer them in the 16th century, but failed and lost in a battle. But i don't find much information about that.
 
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Sennar's history been slept on. We took that L cause Iyasu II was from all accounts on him, a true slave to his vices. Weak link of his bloodline. Thought he was bout to be that nikka but got the work lol.

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Here's a free google book that sheds some light on Sennar in the 18-19th century. Majority of the populous are known as the Hamran Arabs a.k.a. the Funj, who are closely related to the Beja, Nubians and the Habesha. Just want to clarify these are some of the real, pure-blooded black Arabs so don't think they're whitewashing them. Nilotic and Cushytic speakers have also dominated their politics as well like the Shilluk. I think the reason why it's not talked about is cause it gets absorbed willingly by it's neighbors who it shares populations with throughout the ages. It's also been known as kind of a neutral zone between the Nile kingdoms and the Ethiopian highlands where refugees and migrants get treated very well and are offered kinship and a place in society. Very unique history.
 
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