Muhammed Bello
Li
Muhammed Bello
Sot mbyin | a̱sam |
---|---|
A̱byin mbyin | Naijeriya, Sokoto Caliphate |
A̱lyoot nang á̱ ku tyia̱ nggu | Mohammed |
A̱lyoot kyangbwak | Bello |
A̱lyoot tyok | sultan |
A̱tuk mbyin | 1781, 1780 |
A̱keang mbyin | Wurno |
A̱tuk kwi | 1837 |
A̱keang kwi | Wurno |
A̱tyia̱ | Uthman Dan Fodio |
Nggwon | Ali Babba bin Bello |
Ta̱m | a̱tyukwai-nfwuo-á̱niet |
Cuk ji a̱ ku ba̱ng a̱ni | Sultan of Sokoto |
Nwap | A̱fa̱ta |
Muhammadu Belloyei (La̱ra̱ba: محمد بلو) wa ku ye Suli̱tan Sokoto a̱feang wu[1] a̱ si̱ tyok kyiak neet ma̱ a̱lyia̱ 1817 ba̱ng si̱ nat a̱lyia̱ 1837. A̱ ku ka ngyei a̱tyulyuut nkhang, bubwom, ma̱ng lyuut Khwikpaa̱pyia̱ wa ba̱t. A̱ ku ka ngyet a̱fai ma̱ng a̱tsak a̱cok Usuman ma Fodyo, a̱tyukpaat A̱byintyokkalip Sokoto ma̱ng Sulutan ntsa wu.[2] Di̱n jen tyok nggu ji, a̱ ku li̱n a̱ma yai Khwikpaa̱pyia̱ di̱ fam-a̱byin hu a̱mgba̱m, a̱ si̱ mban tat-a̱pyia̱ á̱tyok ma̱ng a̱nyiuk, a̱wot a̱ si̱si̱ mkpaat nkotu Khwikpaa̱pyia̱. A̱ khwu 25 Zwat Swak 1837, a̱na̱nyiuk nggu Abu Bakr Atiku si̱ ci̱t nggu, a̱wot a̱fai nggu wu Aliyu Babba si̱ kin ntung.[3]
Ya̱fang
[jhyuk | jhyuk a̱tyin ka]- ↑ Wilks,Ivor. Wangara, Akan, and Portuguese in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries (1997). Bakewell, Peter (ed.). Mines of Silver and Gold in the Americas. Aldershot: Variorum, Ashgate Publishing Limited. p. 17.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ "Log In - Oxford Islamic Studies Online". www.oxfordislamicstudies.com. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
- ↑ "History Atlas". www.historyatlas.com. Archived from the original on 2023-10-03. Retrieved 2020-05-26.