Muzaffarids (Somalia)

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Flag of Mogadishu under the Muẓaffarids, according to Fernão Vaz Dourado's map of 1576

The Muẓaffarids (or Muẓaffar dynasty) were a Muslim Arab-Persian[1] dynasty that ruled the Banaadir coast with their capital at Mogadishu from the late 15th or early 16th century until around 1624 or possibly as late as 1700.[2][3] They were mercantile elite of Mogadishu of Arab and Persian extraction[4] that mixed with the local Somali population and cooperated with the Ajuran clan.[5] They were effectively independent,[3] but allied to the more powerful Ajuran Sultanate.[5][6] They resisted the Portuguese, but occasionally paid them tribute.[3][7] In the 17th century, the Muẓaffarids were conquered by the Somali Abgaal.[6]

The Muẓaffarid is the second known dynasty of Mogadishu. Its first attested ruler, ʿUmar al-Malik al-Muẓaffar, bore the title of sultan. He is known from his coins.[3] Coins were minted throughout the Muẓaffarid period. The prosperity of Mogadishu during this time stemmed from its status as a trade link between the interior and the sea and its alliance with Ajuran. The city, however, was already in decline when the Muẓaffarids took over.[6]

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