Askia Nuh resisted the invasion of the Moroccan Pasha, Mahmud ibn Zarqun, by costly warfare. Sometime shortly after the death of
Askia Muhammad Gao, Pasha Mahmud sent a contingent of hundreds of musketeers to pursue Nuh in
Dendi, but this proved ineffective as Nuh killed nearly half of them at the Battle of Burni and avoided capture. Sometime during mid 1592 Ibnou Bentsi, one of his military commanders, massacred a
Saadi reinforcement of 400 musketeers sent from Morocco. At first he led his army in person but after some time put Muhammad w. Banshi in charge of them, who continued to give the Moroccans more defeats. In 1594, having failed to capture Nuh and the casualties piling up, Mahmud was forced to cease the conflict and retreated, but was killed in the same year during a failed attack with 1,200 musketeers against the
Dogon people with his head being cut off and sent to Nuh, who then sent it to Kanta Dawud of
Kebbi, probably allies of Askia Nuh. The new pasha called Mansur continued the war against
Dendi Kingdom and Nuh adopted guerilla warfare once again. This state of affairs lasted until 1599, when Nuh's followers became tired of the war and deposed him in favor of his brother
Harun. ==References==