Some members of the traditionally
pastoral Fula people began to settle in the Liptako area as early as the 15th century. In the early 19th century, escalating tensions between the
Islamized Fula and the ruling Gurma led to a
jihad, inspired by
Usman dan Fodio and the
Fulani War. This conflict destroyed Koala, largely pushed the Gurma out of the region, and established Fula rule. The newly-established Liptako was not fully independent, but rather an
emirate of the
Sokoto Caliphate, administered through an intermediate
suzerain in
Gwandu. Nevertheless, distance and local sentiment permitted Liptako's emir considerable local control. The emirship was a hereditary office with a traditional
order of succession defined by custom. The right of succession belonged to a male-descent child of the earliest surviving
familial generation; within a generation, children of older brothers had precedence over the children of younger brothers, and older brothers were preferred over their younger siblings. However, not all successions passed strictly in this manner. The French occupied the Liptako capital of
Dori on 30 April 1897, during the reign of Bokari Sori, but did not remove the emir, and largely permitted the precolonial political system to continue. In 1963,
Maurice Yaméogo, the first president of the independent
Republic of Upper Volta, formally disbanded the emirate. Nassourou continued to use the title, which remained a source of significant local respect and political influence. Currently, the emir of Liptako serves as a
tribal chief for the Fula in
Séno Province.
Pretenders Following the death of Aamadu Iisa, a
succession crisis occurred when Bokari Sori and Buhaari Iisa both claimed the emirship. In 1891, French military officer
Parfait-Louis Monteil visited Liptako amidst the crisis and entered into a treaty with Buhaari's son Boubakar, believing Buhaari to be the eventual next emir. In 1895, colonial administrator
Georges Destenave traveled to Liptako as part of an effort to confirm the status of French treaties with various local authorities and was informed that Buhaari was dead, having never become emir. After Nassourou Abdoulaye Dicko's death in 2010, representatives of the family selected the late emir's brother, Boubacar Bassirou Dicko, to succeed him in a ceremony on 10 December 2010. Four days later, a council of Liptako village chiefs elected Nassourou's son, Ousame Amirou Dicko, to the same office. The disputed succession was eventually resolved in favor of Ousame.
Family tree The emirs of Liptako claim descent from a
semi-legendary migrant named Birmaari Saala Paate, who was said to have followed a wandering bull from
Macina, in modern-day
Mali, to Liptako. • Birmaari Saala Paate • Seydu • Hamma Seydu •
II. Saalu Hamma Seydu • Iisa •
V. Aamadu Iisa •
VII. Bokari Aamadu Iisa •
VIII. Abdurramaan Aamadu Iisa • Buhaari Iisa • Boubakar •
IV. Seeku Saalu •
III. Sori Hamma •
VI. Bokari Sori •
X. Usmaan Bokari Sori •
XI. Nassourou Abdoulaye Dicko •
XII. Ousmane Amirou Dicko • Boubacar Bassirou Dicko • Faaruuku •
IX. Abdullaahi Faaruuku •
I. Braahima Seydu == See also ==