LC control no. | no2022093553 |
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Descriptive conventions | rda |
Personal name heading | Kanté, Soumaoro, active 13th century |
Variant(s) | Kanté, Soumangourou, active 13th century Kanté, Sumanguru, active 13th century Kanté, Sumaworo, active 13th century Sosso Koudou Soumaoro, active 13th century |
Beginning date | 12 |
Profession or occupation | Susu (African people)--Kings and rulers |
Found in | International Conference on Manding Studies, 1972, Camara, Laye. Le rêve dans la société traditionnelle malinké: page 1 (Sosso Koudou Soumaoro; Soumaoro; a dream about him before the battle of Kirina, told by Balla Fassaké Kouyaté [griot of Soundiata]) Green, Toby. A fistful of shells, 2019: pages 44-45 (Sumanguru Kante, vanquished predecessor of Sunjata Keita, founder of the Mali Empire; Sumanguru was a sorcerer, a follower of African religious practice in contrast to Sunjata, who was Muslim; Sumaworo, in Mandinka or Bambara excerpt) page 49 (Sumanguru Kante, sorcerer-king) Wikipedia, July 29, 2022 (Soumaoro Kanté, also known as Sumaworo Kanté or Sumanguru Kanté; 13th-century king of the Sosso people; he seized Koumbi Saleh, capital of the recently defunct Ghana Empire and conquered several neighboring states, including the Mandinka, whose prince Sundiata Keita then built a coalition of smaller kingdoms to oppose him at the Battle of Kirina, c. 1235, defeating the Sosso and leaving Sundiata's new Mali Empire dominant in the region; portrayed as a villainous sorcerer-king in the Epic of Sundiata, the national epic of Mali) The epic of Sumanguru Kante, 2017: pages 14-18 (discussion of the historicity of the Sumanguru epic; in Manding culture Sumanguru and his fellow epic actors are historical characters, many of them apical ancestors of clans; 14th-century North African historian Ibn Khaldun named ancient Mali's 'greatest king' as Mari Jata (plausibly identified with Sunjata) and described how this king vanquished the Susu; Sumanguru is not mentioned in that or any other written source so far discovered before the late 19th century; the earliest [written] references to Sumanguru that we possess were made by French military officers in the 1880s and 1890s) pages 152-153 (there are conflicting accounts of Sumanguru's demise in the Sunjata epic: that he was turned into stone, that he disappeared into a mountain, or that he was killed by Sunjata; rock formations and a cave on Nyanankuru, a hill near Koulikoro, are associated with Sumanguru) International Conference on Manding Studies, 1972. Leynaud, E., and Y. Cisse. Note sur l'histoire de la Haute Vallée du Niger (Mandé): page 13 (Soumangourou Kanté, chief of the Sosso; at the beginning of the 13th century the Sosso had devastated [the empire of] Ghana (Wagadou) and Soumangourou attacked the Manding, and massacred Naré-Fa-Maghan and 9 of his 11 children; one of the survivors, Dankarantuma, fled to Kissi country and his descendants there carry the collective name of Léno; the other survivor, Soundyata, disabled, was spared by Soumangourou) |