Namandirou

Namandirou
Namandirou (Njarmeew), within the Jolof Empire
CapitalSare
Religion
Traditional African religion, Islam
GovernmentMonarchy
Bëlëp 
• early 16th century
Wali Mberu Mbacke
Today part ofSenegal

Namandirou (also spelled Nammandiru), also known as Njarmeew or Geremeo, was a kingdom in what is now eastern Senegal.

Etymology

The name 'Namandirou' means 'country of abundance'.[1] It is the more ancient name, while 'Njarmeew' or 'Geremeo' was the name commonly used in the 15-16th centuries.[2]

History

The early history of Namandirou is murky. Oumar Kane, citing oral histories, proposes that the Jaaogo dynasty of Takrur originated there, ruling until roughly 1000CE.[3] After the conquest of Takrur by the Soninke Manna dynasty, Namandirou became their vassal, and was devastated by the Almoravids between 1072 and 1087.[2] Rokhaya Fall argues that it was likely a part of the Kingdom of Wuli during a period when Wuli controlled the entire area between the Ferlo Desert and the Faleme River.[1]

In the 13th century, Namandirou reappeared under the name Njarmeew, ruled by the Wolof Ndaw family who had originated north of the Senegal River.[2]

In approximately 1460 (according to Portuguese writer Andre Donelha), Namandirou was invaded by the Jolof Buurba, Tyukuli N'Diklam, although some scholars argue that another Buurba, Birayma N'dyeme Eler,[4] was responsible. After a long war, the Bëlëp (also Ber-lab, or king) of Namandirou was killed in a pitched battle, and the kingdom was conquered and given to a member of the royal family as a fief.[5][2][6] Yoro Dyao records that, in the early 16th century, Koli Tengella defeated Ber-lab Wali Mberu Mbacke and drove the remaining population out, but he may be conflating Koli's attack on the eastern Jolof Empire with the destruction of the independent kingdom half a century earlier.[7] This attack, among other things, helped weaken Jolof and set the stage for its disintegration at the Battle of Danki.[8]

After the fall of Namandirou, the Ndaw family took refuge in Saloum, becoming a key ally of Mbegane Ndour and eventually taking over the leadership of Ndoucoumane.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b Fall 2013, p. 19.
  2. ^ a b c d Kane 2004, p. 80.
  3. ^ Kane 2004, p. 77, 79.
  4. ^ Fall 2013.
  5. ^ Kane 2021, p. 46.
  6. ^ Fall 2013, p. 21.
  7. ^ Kane 2004, p. 152.
  8. ^ Boulegue 2013, p. 157.
  9. ^ Faye, Valy (2016). "Le Peuplement Du Saloum Oriental (Sénégal) Du Xvie AU Xixè Siècle: Des Mobiles Essentiellement Politiques". Revue Etudes Africaines. 3. Retrieved 10 February 2026.

Sources