Establishment The Habr Yunis Sultanate finds its roots in the
Isaaq Sultanate which was established by the Rer Guled branch of the
Eidagale after the Isaaq successfully defeated the
Absame clan at Lafaruug in the 17th century. With time the Habr Yunis and later the
Habr Awal and
Habr Je'lo would break from the Isaaq Sultanate with the Habr Yunis forming their own Sultanate led by
Sugulle the son of the previous Habr Yunis Chieftain,
Ainanshe Hersi. The Sultan
Deria Sugulleh would establish his capital at Wadhan (Waram) near the Sheikh pass and tax and administer the affairs of the Habr Yunis from the town.
Expansion and Rayyad War Following Sultan Deria's death in the 1850s his grandson
Hersi Aman would come to succeed him and usher in an era of conquest. Hersi Aman belonged to the
Bah Makahil section of the Sugulle dynasty. In 1870 he would launch the
Rayyad Wars against the
Darood of
Hawd and
Dollo which would continue intermittently from 1870 to 1940 and give birth to a string of poems, the Guba poetic chain, one of the most well-known series in Somali history. Swiss Explorer Haggenmacher met Hersi Aman in 1873 and also wrote of a successful Habr Yunis battle in the Hawd that occurred during his visit The Habr Yunis had many wounded, but were also extremely rich in loot, the estimated number of loot was at least 10,000 camels. At the battle of Haro Dhiig (
Lake of Blood) in the Hawd, the victorious Habr Yunis had captured the Sultan of the Rer Haroun
Ogaden with many lives lost on both sides. The captured Sultan sent a message to Hersi saying as a notable he should be spared. In response, Hersi replied with
Laba Gob Kii Beer Jilicsan Baa Jaba meaning,
amongst two counterparts the soft-hearted shall perish and the captive Sultan was subsequently executed.
First Civil War Despite the great successes of
Hersi Aman and new territory acquired, the other branches of the Rer Sugule grew wary of his increasing power as a ruler and stood to challenge him, fearing his unchecked leadership. The wise
Guled Haji, another prominent member and elder of the Rer Sugule, had a fallout with Sultan Hersi, and his son was killed by one of Hersis' sons. Hersi's son approached his father and implored him to pay the traditional
mag compensation to Guled for the loss of his child. Hersi arrogantly rebuffed his son and all-out conflict would break out between Ba Awal (Hersi's branch) and Baho Sugule branches of the Rer Sugule. in 1906. The Sultan Hersi himself would be killed in battle after some early clashes and later his commander Warsame would also fall. Warsame's sister lamented to her son Ali for the loss of Hersi, her husband Geid and other relatives in this poem recorded separately by both Phillip Paulitschke and
Robecchi Brichetti. Following Hersi's death, the Rer Sugule gathered and the issue of compensation for the Sultan's death was a pressing issue. The conflict originally starting because no compensation had been paid to Guled Haji for his son. They decided that none would be paid and they would try to put this conflict to rest. The two Sultans engaged in a lengthy war and divided the Sultanate's territory, where Awad ruled the Sultanate from his chosen capital of
Burao and Nur from the Tuuyo plains and
Oodweyne.
Frank Linsly James visited Sultan Awad at Burao in 1884 and witnessed the dissenting situation between the two Sultans. Describing the political situation in the region and frequent raids between the two rival Rer Sugulleh factions and their allied Habr Yunis subclans It appeared the great Habr Gerhajis tribe was divided into two rival factions, the one owning allegiance to Sultan Owd, the other to his cousin, Sultan Noor. Between these two the country was about evenly divided, and the border-line was an everlasting scene of wars and rumours of wars, cattle raids, and attempted murders. The Haber-Gerhajis tribe had formerly been under one Sultan and were very powerful, making frequent raids into Ogadayn, but on his death, two cousins, Awad and Nur, divided the country between them. Awad was killed fighting in
Ogaden by the Reer Ali. This allowed Nur to establish himself at Burao and rule over the entirety of the Habr Yunis. The Baha Deria still did not concede defeat and would eventually choose Awad's nephew,
Madar Hersi, as their successor following Nur's death. Sultan Nur convened a
shir of the Habr Yunis and decided to draw lots to settle the dispute with his challenger
Madar Hersi rather than continue the senseless infighting that had lasted since Hersi Aman's death. Sultan Nur won the draw and gave Madar Hersi 100 camels as compensation and was proclaimed the uncontested Sultan of the Habr Yunis. The reunified rule under one Sultan Nur would last until the formation of the
Dervish Movement several years later in 1899. == Early Dervish Era ==