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  1. Alhaji ou Alhaje Omar ibne Saíde Futi Tal (em árabe: حاج عمر بن سعيد طعل‎; romaniz.: al-Hajj Umar ibn Sa'id al-Futi Tal; ca. Futa Toro, Senegâmbia, 1796–1864) ou Omar Saidu Tal (em francês: Oumar Saidou Tall) foi um líder político, estudioso islâmico, sufista tijanista e comandante tuculor da África ...

  2. In November 2019, the French government returned the so-called sword of Omar Tall—which was actually a sword of Ahmadu Tall, Omar Tall's sonto the government of the Republic of Senegal. The sword was returned five years.

  3. The third major western African jihad of the 19th century was that of al-Ḥājj ʿUmar Tal ( c. 1797–1864), a Tukulor cleric from the Fouta-Toro. As a young man, ʿUmar went on the pilgrimage ( hajj) to Mecca (hence the honorific al-Ḥājj), and in all spent some 20 years away from his homeland.

  4. 12 de abr. de 2024 · ʿUmar Tal was a West African Tukulor leader who, after launching a jihad (holy war) in 1854, established a Muslim realm, the Tukulor empire, between the upper Senegal and Niger rivers (in what is now upper Guinea, eastern Senegal, and western and central Mali).

  5. Al-Ḥājj ʿUmar was one of several West African Muslim intellectuals who articulated a new vision of power in the region. These intellectuals linked legitimate political rule with mastery over Islamic knowledge that they claimed only they had. Yet these linkages between religious authority and political power remain understudied.

  6. Al-Hajj Omar ibn Said Tal (ca. 1797-1864) was a West African Moslem leader who started a holy war and established a far-reaching empire on the Upper Niger. Al-Hajj Omar was born in the Futa Toro near the town of Podar on the Senegal River.

  7. 19 de jun. de 2020 · Umar Tall hailed from the village of Halwar, in western Fouta Toro. He studied with and married into some prestigious Muslim families of the region, then accomplished the overland pilgrimage to Mecca, and became a leader of Islamisation in West Africa, particularly in the form of the Tijaniyya Sufi order.