Fode Kaba
Fodé Kaba Doumbouya, also spelled Dumbuya, was a Diakhanke marabout in the 19th century, one of the leaders resisting French and British colonial expansion in Senegambia.
Early life
Fode Kaba Doumbouya was born in 1818 in Goumbel in Boundou, in what is now eastern Senegal. His father, Fode Bakary, was a prominent marabout and Islamic scholar who was invited first to the court of Faranba Tamba of Kabendu and later to Kerewane, near Pata, under the aegis of the local Nyancho ruler Silati Kelefa. At some point, the young Fode Kaba served under Maba Diakhou Ba.Career
In the early 1870s, Fode Kaba rebelled against Silati Kelefa, killing him when he refused to convert to Islam, and also killing one of his key allies, a Fula marabout. The king of nearby Fuladu, Alfa Molo, set out to punish him. In 1873 he destroyed Kerewane and killed Fode Bakary, but Kaba was in Nioro du Rip looking for allies at the time. Upon his return he launched a war against the Muslim Fula and against local animists in general. In 1876 he launched a series of raids against Balanta villages near Sedhiou, until forced to withdraw by the French colonial forces stationed there.In 1877, Balde and his British allies pushed Fode Kaba west, where he massacred the people of the village of Bapikoum and rebuilt it as a large fortified tata called Medina. This would be his base for the rest of his life, from which he controlled Fogny and eastern Kiang.In territory he controlled, Fode Kaba instituted a government based on Islamic principles, building mosques, posting talibes in conquered settlements, and banning the tapping of trees for palm wine. He frequently raided the Jola, leading to local depopulation, and would sell captives into Fuladu in exchange for horses and guns.
1890 the British wanted to rid themselves of Fode Kaba, whose raids were harming the agricultural productivity of the emerging Gambia Protectorate, but the French sheltered him. In 1891 he signed a protectorate agreement with the French, and in 1893 ceded his lands in Fogny to them.