634 
APPENDIX. 
Name of the King. 
Principal Events during the Reign of each King. 
Place where he 
died 
Length of 
the Reign 
in Lunar 
Years. 
Aritso. 
- 
? 
50. 
Son of Fune and 
Fukalshi. 
Katuri. 
Kaluwana. 
[250](?). 
Son of Aritso ben 
Fune. 
Ady6ivia,Ay6ma, 
or Watama. 
Son of Katuri and 
Tumayu, of the 
tribe of the Beni 
Ghalgha. 
His reign evidently falls in the last years of 
the 4th and the first of the 5th century of 
the Hejra; most probably in 390 — 410, or 
a.d. 1000—1019. 
Tatnuri. 
With an uncer- 
tain surname, 
Bereriya. (Ber- 
berfya ?) 
20. 
Bulu. 
Son of Ady6ma and 
Ghanjaya, of the 
tribe of the Kaye. 
Dheghjabad- 
mi, or Megh- 
jibadmi. 
16. 
A'rki. 
Son of Bulu and 
Azisenna, of the 
triue 01 me x e- 
magheri. 
Had plenty of slaves, of whom he settled 
300 in Dirka (probably Dirki), 300 in 
Siggedim, both in Kawar ; and 300 in 
Bilana, or Zilana, the place where he died. 
From this it is evident that he was master 
of the Tebu country. 
Bilana, or 
Zilana. 
44. 
Shu, or Huwa.* 
Son of A'rki and 
Tefsu, of the tribe 
of the Temagheri. 
Distinguished by his fine figure. If we knew 
that he " reigned by a viceroy or khalifa," 
we should conclude that he was an effemi- 
nate man ; but that is only M. JBlau's mis- 
apprehension. - }* 
Ghanta 
Kamna. 
4. 
Selma, or 'Abd 
el Jelil. 
Son of Shu and of a 
woman of the tribe 
of the Ghemarma. 
(Magharma ?) 
Was the last king of the dynasty of the 
Duguwa, or Beni Dugu, if we understand 
this name as coincident with idolatry. For 
although the chronicle distinguishes plainly 
between the Beni Dugu and the Beni 
Hume, nevertheless it is evident that Hume, 
the successor of 'Abd el Jelil, and the first 
Mohammedan king of Kanem, was his son. 
It is therefore clear that Beni Hume means 
nothing else than the Mohammedan kings, 
as contradistinguished from the Duguwa, 
the pagans.]: 
Ghumzu, 
With the surname 
Ridha. (?) 
4. 
* Thename of Huwa, as the name of a man, appears also in Imam A'hmed's history. 
t ^sA^vll) J • means only he ascended the throne, the B6rnu people regarding the dignity of the ruler of 
Kanem as a khalifate. 
t It is very remarkable, and confirms the dates of the chronicle marvellously, that El Bekri, who wrote towards the 
end of the dynasty of the Dtiguwa, in the reign of A'rki, a.d. 1067, says expressly (p. 45G,), that the inhabitants of 
Kanem were at that time idolaters. 
