Maydh - History

History

According to Augustus Henry Keane, Maydh represents an early center of dispersal of the Somali people. National genealogies collected by the scholars Cox and Abud assert that many clan patriarchs are buried in or nearby the town.

The city of Maydh was home to Sheikh Isaaq (Sheekh Isaxaaq), who, according to tradition, moved to Somalia from the Arabian Peninsula in the 12th or 13th century CE. He is considered to be the founding father of the large Isaaq clan that primarily inhabits the Somaliland region of Somalia, as well as parts of Djibouti and the Ogaden. Sheikh Isaaq's domed tomb is also located here. The graves of the ancestors of the Issa and Gadabuursi clans, whose territories are several hundred miles away, are located nearby.

Northern Somalia in general is home to numerous such archaeological sites, with similar edifices found at Haylaan, Qa’ableh, Qombo'ul and Elaayo. However, many of these old structures have yet to be properly explored, a process which would help shed further light on local history and facilitate their preservation for posterity.

In his medieval Futuh Al-Habash ("Conquest of Abyssinia") documenting the Ethiopian-Adal War, the chronicler Shihab ad-Din notes that the Harti Darod were at the time the predominant authority in Maydh. He thus consistently refers to them as the "People of Mait".

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