Early history Saloum and the surrounding region is known for its many ancient burial mounds or "
tumuli" (
podoom in
Serer) containing the graves of kings and others. The kingdom also has numerous mysterious stone circles whose function and history are still debated by scholars, most of which pre-date the formation of the kingdom. who saw the entire region as their home. In the 11th century, the Serers of
Takrur were persecuted for their Serer religious beliefs by the new Muslim convert and usurper, king
War Jabi and his Muslim ally forces - resulting in the
Serer exodus from Takrur. Those Serers headed south including Saloum - joining their distant Serer relatives. For more on that, see
Serer medieval history. Fall has advanced the claim that, the first inhabitants of the region, according to oral tradition, were a
Mande people who immigrated from the
Wagadu Empire to flee a drought, likely towards the end of the first millennium CE. The princess of Wagadou would marry into the Serer noble families such as the Joof, Njie, etc., giving birth to a Wagadou maternal dynasty in much of Serer country. For more on that, see
Joof family,
Teigne, and
Serer maternal clans. Before
Maad Saloum Mbegan Ndour, Saloum existed in some form, but it is unclear what form it took. The area was composed a series of chiefdoms and independent villages, many of which led by Serer
Lamanes and/or part of the
Jolof Empire's sphere of influence. The core of what would become the Kingdom of Saloum was a Lamanic state called Mbey, with the capital at
Njop. An alarmed French governor
Émile Pinet-Laprade marched on Saloum at the head of 1,600 regulars, 2,000 cavalry, and 4,000 volunteers and footsoldiers. At the
Battle of Pathé Badiane outside of Nioro, however, the marabout forces led by
Lat Dior drove the French back towards
Kaolack. As well as forcibly converting traditional states and their populations to
Islam, Maba Diakhou Bâ sought to abolish the traditional caste system of the
Serer states. He is the current King of Saloum as of 2024, and the maternal uncle of the current King of Sine, Niokhobaye Fatou Diène Diouf, from
the Royal House of Semou Njekeh Joof. ==People and Society==