Bati del Wambara


Bati del Wambara fl. 1559, was the Harari wife of the 16th-century general, Ahmad ibn Ibrahim, and then his successor, Nur ibn Mujahid. She was extremely influential in shaping both her husbands' military policies in their campaigns against the Ethiopian Empire.

Biography

Bati del Wambara was born the daughter of Mahfuz, Emir of Harar and later governor of Zeila. She married Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi and accompanied him in his jihad to make Ethiopia a Muslim province.
Arab Faqih, the sixteenth-century Adalite author recounts an incident in which she resisted the pressures from the Adal army, who insisted that she refrain from joining them in their invasion of Abyssinia:
During this expedition, she gave birth to two sons - Muhammad in 1531 and Ahmad in 1533. When her husband was killed and their eldest son captured by the forces of Emperor Gelawdewos, del Wambara successfully negotiated with the Dowager Empress Seble Wongel to exchange the captured brother of Gelawdewos for the boy. Del Wambara then fled to Harar with 40 soldiers and 300 horsemen.
In 1552, nearly 10 years after Imam ibn Ibrahim's death, she insisted that Nur ibn Mujahid eliminate the emperor of Ethiopia prior to their marriage. She is supposed to have pushed him into reviving the jihad in order to avenge the death of her deceased husband. In 1559, Nur ibn Mujahid's forces fought against the heavily outnumbered Emperor Gelawdewos in Fatagar, and the dead body of Ethiopian emperor was beheaded, reportedly on the order of del Wambara.