Sultan Nur was the direct paternal descendant of the 18th century Habr Yunis chieftain
Ainanshe Hersi and great-grandson of
Deria Sugulle Ainanshe who became the paramount Habr Yunis sultan in 1836. He spent much of his early life before his sultanate as a religious Sufi pupil in
Hahi and Berato's Ahmadiyya
tariqa (known in Somali regions as Ahmadiyya not to be confused with the Ahmadiyya of
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad an
Ismaili Shia sect). The Ahmadiyya or properly known as the
Idrisiyya tariqa was founded by
Ahmad ibn Idris al-Fasi (1760–1837). During Nur's years in the Berato tariqa, the head mullah was one Mohamed Arab. and the head mullah of Hahi tariqa was Haji Musa. According to the wife of Sultan Nur, an Aden-born Somali, Nur could not read or write but he could converse in Arabic. However, according to Hayes Sadler's correspondence, Nur could read and write Arabic. Nur became a sultan after the death of his uncle, Sultan Hersi Aman (Hersi Aman Sultan Deriyeh Segulleh) (1824–1879), in an intertribal fight. Sultan Hersi, the chief of the Habr Yunis clan since the mid-1850s was killed in an inter-clan war with the sage
Haji Guled (Guled Haji Ahmed Segulleh) in 1879, a wise legendary elder who led the Habr Yunis clan, also an uncle of Sultan Hersi. This inter-clan war generated much poetry, celebrated poets emerged during the war, for instance the poems of a young teenager Jama Amuume
Jama the mute, a seventeen-year-old who lost two brothers in the war, who later avenged his brothers by killing one Warsame the culprit. One poem of Jama the mute was recorded by the Italian explorer
Luigi Robecchi Bricchetti in 1884. There was another poem by a lamenting woman who lost her brother and father in the war, probably the oldest Somali poem on record authored by a woman. Both poems were published in the late nineteenth century. 1906. The ascent of Nur to the sultanate caused a decade-long civil war when his great uncle Awad Sultan Deriyeh and eldest living son of Sultan Deriyeh declared himself a rival sultan in 1881. Drake Brockman a medical doctor in the Somaliland protectorate and the author of British Somaliland narrated the long conflict caused by Nur's ascent to the sultanate in his book Drake Brockman summarised Nur's story in 1911: Deriyeh, the head of the Rer Segulleh, was universally proclaimed Sultan by the rest of the Habr Yunis tribe, and was really the first of the Habr Yunis Sultans, although his father, Segulleh, had tried to pose as such. Sultan Deriyeh lived to a great age, and had no less than eighteen sons, of whom the first two were borne to him by a woman of the Makahil section of the Habr Awal tribe, and the elder of these, Aman by name, joining with his brother, formed the Ba Maka-hil, while his remaining sixteen stepbrothers formed the Baha Deriyeh. Aman had ten sons, the eldest of whom was Ahmed, who died before his father, who himself died before his old father, the aged Sultan Deriyeh. Now, as soon as Sultan Deriyeh died there was trouble as to his successor. The Ba Makahil claimed that Ismail and Hirsi, of their section, were entitled to the honour; but the Rer Segulleh and some of the Baha Deriyeh, said, "No, as several of the late Sultan's sons are still living, one of them should be their Sultan before any of the grandsons"; so they invited Awid Deriyeh to be their representative. In the meantime, Ismail was killed fighting with the Ogaden and Hirsi by the Baha Segulleh. The Ba Makahil now had to look for another successor, so they sent for Nur, the son of Ahmed Aman, and nephew to Ismail and Hirsi, who was living the life of a Mullah at
Hahi, near Odweina. Nur, much against his will, consented to be their Sultan, although he preferred the life he was leading as a Mullah. For some years now there were two Sultans of the Habr Yunis, namely, Sultan Nur of the Habr Yunis, Ba Makahil, and Sultan Awd Deriyeh of the Baha Segulleh; so it will be seen the powerful section of the Baha Segulleh had gone to the Baha Deriyeh for their representative". Awad Deriyeh was killed in a fight with the Ogaden Rer Ali, so the Baha Segulleh had to find another Sultan. Accordingly, they chose his brother Hirsi's son, Mattar; but this choice the Baha Deriyeh were not at all pleased with, so all the Habr Yunis tribe decided to meet and discuss the matter out and decide on one Sultan. After a great deal of discussion the two clans, Ba Makahil and Baha Deriyeh, who had claimants for the sultanate, decided to let them toss for it, the winner to be proclaimed Sultan, while the loser got one hundred camels as compensation from the winner. Sultan Nur won, and was proclaimed Sultan of the Habr Yunis tribe. Nur's ascent to the sultanate in the early 1880s coincided with the Mahdi uprising (1881–1885)
Muhammad Ahmad. Various Mahdi and
Senussi emissaries visited the Somali coast rallying the population behind their respective Sufi branches. According to Walsh, the British resident counsel at the Somali coast, these two Sufi sects and their followers occasionally collided in Berbera. Nur welcomed the Senousi emissaries and they were regular visitors to his hamlet according to Walsh. Beyond a few minor encounters with the British at the coast in 1886 and 1892, nothing major occurred. in 1890-1891 Awad Sultan Deriyeh was killed in an Ogaden raid and his nephew Mattar Hersi (Mattar Hersi Sultan Deriyeh) was chosen as a rival sultan by some sections within the Segulleh dynasty, the traditional holders of Habr Yunis sultanate. In February 1899, rival Sultan Madar/Mattar Hersi, after having assisted in recovering raided livestock for the mullahs from Kob Fardod, received support for his sultanate from the religious settlement and Mohammed Abdullah Hassan began to champion Mattar's cause. Upon a visit to the
Habr Je'lo they recited this
geeraar praising the Sultan. This poem was recorded by British officer
J.W.C. Kirk and included in his book.
The Berbera Mission incident and the rise of Sultan Nur (1898–1899) According to the primary British archival records from 1898 and 1899, the catalyst for the Dervish movement was not a religious dispute in the interior, but a direct political and social confrontation in the port of Berbera led by Sultan Nur Aman. British Foreign Office files document a growing friction regarding the French Roman Catholic Mission in Berbera. The "emotional trigger" that mobilized Sultan Nur occurred when he encountered a Somali boy at the mission school. When asked his name and clan, the boy allegedly replied that his name was "John" and that he had no clan, only the "Mission." To a sovereign leader like Sultan Nur, this represented the total erasure of Somali identity and lineage. He interpreted the mission's actions not merely as religious conversion, but as the "buying" of Somali children to dismantle the traditional social and religious structures of the protectorate. Sultan Nur and a delegation of elders brought a formal grievance to the British Consul-General, James Hayes Sadler. As recorded in the meeting transcripts, Sadler dismissed their concerns as "baseless" and "superstitious." The breakdown of diplomacy was sealed when Sadler famously suggested that if the children were being cared for and educated, the elders "should be grateful rather than complaining." This dismissive retort—prioritizing feeding over the preservation of the Somali soul—was viewed as a profound insult to Sultan Nur’s sovereign honor and served as the specific catalyst that drove the Habr Yunis leadership to formally support an armed uprising. In a critical report sent to the Foreign Office in April 1899, Sadler explicitly named Sultan Nur as the "principal agitator" who had moved into the interior to spread news of the mission’s actions. By the end of March 1899, Sultan Nur reached Kob Fardod (near Burao). It was here that he met with Elmi Duala chief headman of the local Reer Yusuf the Musa Ismail head of the clans a Habr most importantly the chief mullah, namely Haji Osman Abdullah Naleya the head of Rashidia- Ahmedia and other religious scholars. The Architect of Resistance: While the Sayyid provided the religious oratory, Sultan Nur provided the military weight of the Habr Yunis and the political legitimacy of a deposed ruler. His arrival at Kob Fardod in late March is documented as the formal inception of the Dervish movement, marking him as the movement's political founder and primary architect. In response to his mobilization efforts, Sadler gathered a group of elders and issued a decree attempting to depose Sultan Nur and replace him with a pro-British nominee. This administrative move effectively declared war on Sultan Nur’s authority, cementing the transition from a religious protest to a national Dervish rebellion. == A chronology of the first two years of the Dervish movement, February 1899 – March 1901==