Ouagadougou was the main
Mossi Kingdom in what is now
Burkina Faso, with its origins in the 15th century. The
Mossi were a warlike nation with formidable cavalry, who had successfully resisted all past invaders. With the decline of the central state in the 18th century,
Yatenga, with its capital at
Ouahigouya, had become independent of Ouagadougou, as had other places. During the 19th century there was sporadic warfare among the Mossi. Boukary Koutou's father, ruler of Ouagadougou, died in 1850 when Boukary was a young man. Boukary competed unsuccessfully with his brother Sanum to become ruler but was disallowed due to his youth. After fomenting a civil war against his brother, he was exiled to Banema on the border of the kingdom. There he made a living through slave trading, capturing the slaves in mounted
razzias directed at the villages of the
Gurunsi people. When Sanum died in 1890, he left no male heir, and all his brothers were in competition for the throne. The elders were reluctant to make Boukary the
Mogho Naba, since his rebellion had made him ineligible, but were persuaded when he surrounded their meeting place with soldiers. Although now the principal Mossi ruler, Wobogo was not in full control. At the time of Dr. Francois Crozat's visit in September 1890, the
Yako and
Yatenga people were engaged in civil war. Wobogo attempted to halt the fighting to avoid giving a poor impression to his European visitor, but was not successful. ==Character==