Arki of Kanem


Arki, Arku, or Arkaman was the legendary ninth mai of the Kanem–Bornu Empire, ruling in the 10th and/or 11th century. According to later tradition, Arki was the last pre-Islamic ruler of the empire.

Life

Most versions of the girgam present Arki as the son of his direct predecessor, Bulu. Nachtigal's version instead makes Arki a son of the earlier mai Adyoma and thus Bulu's brother. Arki's mother is identified as Azisenna by Barth, Azasanna by Palmer, Arsat by Palmer, and Azasenaa by Cohen. Arki's mother is said to have been of Toubou origin, and hailed from the "Temagherí" or "Tumagari" tribe. One version of the girgam, translated by Palmer in 1912, states that Arki was "as white as silk", reflecting the fictional Arabising origin legends of later rulers of the empire, which claimed that they were of Arab ancestry rather than from a local group. It was common for later African Islamic ruling dynasties to invent fictional Arab descent as a source of prestige.
The girgam claims that Arki established several colonies of slaves in the lands north of Kanem, including in Toubou lands, settling 300 slaves at Dirka, another 300 at Siggedim, and another 300 in Zeila. The settlers may not have been exclusively slaves; many may also have belonged to the "Kanuri tribe of the Tura". The name Zeila is sometimes alternatively given as Rílana or Zílana, and is also stated to have been the site at which Arki died. It is difficult to verify whether this account is true. The establishment of the slave colonies may have been an effort to better monitor and control the trading and religious activities of the Berbers in the region.
Arki was succeeded as mai by his child Hu, who may have been a woman. Hu was the first Muslim ruler of the empire.