According to Muslim tradition, Bilal ibn Rabah was a freed slave, possibly of
Abyssinian descent, who accepted Islam and became one of the
Sahabahs of
Muhammad. Bilal ibn Rabah bears the distinction of being the first
muezzin in Islam. According to
Mandinka/Bambara legends dating to the period after the conversion to Islam and passed down by
djelis, Bilal had seven sons, one of whom settled in the
Manding region. This son, Lawalo Keita, had a son named Latal Kalabi Keita, who later sired Damul Kalabi Keita. Damul Kalabi Keita's son was Lahilatoul Keita and the first
faama of the city of
Niani. It is through Lahilatoul that the Keita clan becomes a ruling dynasty, though only over the small area around Niani. It was common practice for griots in West Africa to invent Islamic ancestors for their royal clients, to enhance their prestige and legitimacy, and this is certainly the case for the Keita. The earliest ancestors have Islamic names, while later ones have clearly non-Islamic names, but it's impossible now to determine which of these are inventions and which may have a basis in historical reality. ==List of imperial
mansas of Mali==