Wassoulou

{{Short description|Historical area of West Africa}}

{{for|the musical genre|Wassoulou music}}

Image:Wassoulou map.png]]

Wassoulou, sometimes spelled Wassulu, Wassalou, or Ouassalou, is a cultural area and historical region surrounding the point where the borders of Mali, Ivory Coast, and Guinea meet. Home to about 160,000 people,{{cn|date=October 2024}} it is bordered by the Niger River to the northwest, and by the Sankarani River to the east. Inhabitants are known as Wassulu, Wassulunka or Wassulunke.

History

The history of Wassoulou before the 19th century is poorly attested in surviving sources, but it appears to have been a relatively decentralized and egalitarian society composed of jamana, alliances of small villages defended by walls.{{sfn|Klein|1999|p=116-7}} The region was in some respects tributary to the Segou Empire in the 18th and early 19th centuries, but still suffered regular slave raids.{{sfn|Klein|1999|p=118}}

Wassoulou is also the name of an Islamic state, the Wassoulou Empire (1870–1898), ruled by Samori Ture and centered on his capital, Bissandugu. In 1870, Samori overthrew an older Wassoulou state whose faama (ruler) was Dyanabufarina Modi.{{cite web |url=http://www.africanseer.com/rulers-of-africa/rulers-of-mali.php |title=Rulers of Mali |website=AfricanSeer |accessdate=14 May 2016}}{{cite web |url=http://rulers.org/malitrad.html |website=rulers.org |title=Traditional polities: Wassulu |accessdate=14 May 2016}} He established a hierarchichal government system for the first time, appointing the local Muslim convert Farbalay Jakite as his representative in the region in 1882.{{sfn|Klein|1999|p=115}}

The Wassoulunke rebelled against Toure multiple times. The first was in 1885 in response to the institutionalization of Islam in the empire and the suppression of animist practices. It was brutally put down by Toure's brother Keme Brema.{{cite web |last1=Ba |first1=Amadou Bal |title=L'Almamy Samory TOURE (1830-1900), résistant et empereur du Wassoulou |url=https://www.ferloo.com/lalmamy-samory-toure-1830-1900-resistant-et-empereur-du-wassoulou-par-amadou-bal-ba/ |website=Ferloo |access-date=30 September 2023 |language=French|date=11 February 2020}} The war between Samory and Kenedougou devastated the region, leaving thousands of refugees who were often sold into slavery or even sold themselves to avoid starving to death. Another rebellion after Samory's failure in the siege of Sikasso was also brutally suppressed.{{sfn|Peterson|2008|p=269}} Toure moved through again in 1891, forcibly moving much of the population east with him as he migrated, and massacring the town of N'Tentou when the inhabitants refused to leave.{{sfn|Peterson|2008|p=273}}{{sfn|Klein|1999|p=114}} Overall, the Samory Toure years saw the region almost completely depopulated.{{sfn|Klein|1999|p=115}}

Wassoulou continued to suffer instability and social conflict, including predation by colonial troops, well into the period of French domination.{{sfn|Peterson|2008|p=274}} As slavery gradually died out in the French Sudan, tens of thousands of freed slaves made their way back to their native Wassoulou in the decades before the First World War.{{sfn|Klein|1999|p=115}}

Population and Culture

The Wassoulou area is a center for the mingling of several ethnic groups. The Fulani people, who are believed to have migrated from the Fouta Djallon highlands, integrated with the indigenous Mandé populations, adopting a dialect of the Bambara language and local customs before the 18th century, coinciding with the spread of Islam. The culture of the Wassulunke of Fulbe ancestry is a unique blend of few traditional Fulbe practices and those of the indigenous Mandé peoples. {{cite journal |last1=Reysset |first1=Pascal |last2=Van Den Avenne |first2=Cécile |title=Le dire et le dit dans les entretiens: élements pour le traitement de la complexité du langage |journal=Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique |date=2001 |volume=70 |issue=70 |pages=23–52 |doi=10.1177/075910630107000104 |jstor=23891479 |s2cid=145793962 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/23891479 |access-date=7 November 2023 |issn=0759-1063}}{{cite journal |last1=Amselle |first1=Jean-Loup |title=L'ethnicité comme volonté et comme représentation: a propos des Peul du Wasolon |journal=Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales |date=1987 |volume=42 |issue=2 |pages=465–489 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/27583523 |issn=0395-2649}}

Music

Wassoulou is the birthplace of Wassoulou music, a style which blends traditional and modern influences with strong female vocalists and a pentatonic hunter's harp. Wassoulou music is one of the two forms of West African music ethnomusicologists believe to be the origin of the American blues, which developed out of music forms dating back to the American slave trade from West Africa. Some of the most famous residents of Wassoulou include the singers Oumou Sangare, Ramata Diakite and Coumba Sidibe.{{cite journal |last1=Durán |first1=Lucy |title=Birds of Wasulu: Freedom of Expression and Expressions of Freedom in the Popular Music of Southern Mali |journal=British Journal of Ethnomusicology |date=1995 |volume=4 |pages=101–134 |doi=10.1080/09681229508567240 |jstor=3060685 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/3060685 |issn=0968-1221}}

See also

References

{{reflist}}

Sources

  • {{cite journal |last1=Klein |first1=Martin |title=ETHNIC PLURALISM AND HOMOGENEITY IN THE WESTERN SUDAN: SAALUM, SEGU, WASULU |journal=Mande Studies |date=1999 |volume=1}}
  • {{cite journal |last1=Peterson |first1=Brian J. |title="History, Memory and the Legacy of Samori in Southern Mali, C. 1880-1898." |journal=The Journal of African History |date=2008 |volume=49 |issue=2 |pages=261–79 |doi=10.1017/S0021853708003903 |jstor=40206642 |s2cid=155012842 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40206642 |access-date=8 October 2023}}

Further reading

  • [http://www.eddufao.com/joliot%202007.htm Échange école Joliot Curie, école Wassoulou, Février 2007], Joint French - Malian Education Project (EDDUFAO), in the villages of Guéna, Djélibany and Kaka.
  • [http://www.abidjan.net/qui/profil.asp?id=557 Portrait of the most famous Female Griot from Wassoulou: Oumou Sangaré], Abidjan.net.
  • [http://music.calabashmusic.com/world/Wassoulou/ calabashmusic.com's guide to Wassoulou Music].
  • [http://wassoulou.radio.org.ml/ Radio Wassoulou].
  • [http://mali.geekcorps.org/2004/10/04/first-digitally-created-broadcast-from-radio-wassoulou-yanfolila/ Geekcorps Mali » First digitally created broadcast from Radio Wassoulou - Yanfolila.] October, 2004.
  • [https://archive.today/20121214081515/http://mali.usaid.gov/article.php?id=0057_EN&lan=en&skin=3 Launch of the internet connection in Yanfolila] USAID, 29 January 2005.
  • [http://www.koulouba.pr.ml/spip.php?article884 Le Président de la République du Mali: Visit to Wassoulou, 2006]
  • [http://www.aec.msu.edu/agecon/fs2/mali_fd_strtgy/plans/sikasso/yanfolila/psa_wassoulou_balle.pdf PLAN DE SECURITE ALIMENTAIRE COMMUNE RURALE DE WASSOULOU BALLE, 2006–2010.] Projet de Mobilisation des Initiatives en matière de Sécurité Alimentaire au Mali (PROMISAM), 2006.
  • [http://www.helvetas-mali.org/programmes/Doc/Enqu%EAte%20Bougouni%20et%20Yanfolila.pdf Etude diagnostique pour le Marketing Social de l’Hygiène et de l’Assainissement dans les villes de Bougouni et de Yanfolila], Helvetas Mali - ASP-EAU, December 2004. (Includes detailed descriptions and basic statistics for two towns in the region).

Category:Regions of Africa

Category:Geography of Mali

Wassoulou region and culture

Category:Geography of Guinea

Wassoulou region and culture

Category:Denguélé District

Wassoulou region and culture

Category:French West Africa

Category:Fula people

Category:Mande languages

Category:Mandinka

Category:Bambara language

Category:Mali