Fatuma binti Yusuf al-Alawi (also called Fatima) was born in about 1650. Fatuma married her cousin Abdullah, King of the Utondwe, a
Swahili kingdom on the African coast opposite Zanzibar. They had a son, Hasan. Queen Fatuma ruled in a period of transition in East Africa from the colonial Portuguese to the rising power of
Oman. Fatuma remained loyal to the Portuguese, attempting to resupply
Fort Jesus, in Mombasa (modern Kenya) before its fall to the Omanis in the
1696–98 siege. Another account states that she sent ships to fight the Omani vessels. Fatuma was also said to have travelled to Portuguese
Goa to seek reinforcements for the beleaguered garrison. Zanzibar was subsequently raided by the Omanis who destroyed the Portuguese settlement there and constructed the
Old Fort of Zanzibar on the site of the Portuguese chapel and the house of a merchant. The Omanis kept one of the three cannons in the Old Fort trained on Fatuma's palace to enforce her compliance and prevent her from communicating with the Portuguese in
Mozambique. Fatuma died in 1715 and was buried in a family plot to the immediate south of the fort. Fatuma was succeeded by Hasan. Her grandson, Hasan's son, was the penultimate independent ruler of Zanzibar before the establishment of the Omani Sultanate. == References ==