642 
APPENDIX. 
Name of the King. 
Principal Events during the Reign of each King. 
Place where he 
died. 
Length of 
the Reign 
in Lunar 
Years. 
and deprived of his throne, he appears to 
have been obliged to seek refuge in the 
A'fno (Hausa) province of Kand, where 
he died, or more probably was killed. 
DlJNAMA. 
Was murdered after a short reign. 
Nanigham. 
2. 
Son of 'Omar. 
A. H. 
836—838. 
a.d. 1433-4. 
'Abd Allah, or 
Dala. 
Son of ' Omar, with 
the surname Da- 
kumuni. 
Was embroiled in a civil war with the ke- 
ghamma 'Abd Allah Dighelma, who even 
dethroned him, and made J/brahim the son 
of 'Othman king, but, on the death of the 
latter, restored him to the throne. The 
eight years attributed to his reign by the 
negligently-written chronicle seem to com- 
prise the two periods of his reign, before 
and after Fbrahim ; or it must be under- 
stood that I'brainm placed 'Abd Allah again 
upon the throne, after the death of ke- 
ghamma. 
Famelfa. 
8. 
A. H. 
g38 g4g # 
A.D. 
1435—1442. 
Fbrahim. 
Son of 'Othman. 
Seems to have excited the discontent of his 
subjects by neither keeping a regular court 
nor showing himself to his people. After 
a reign of eight years he was murdered by 
Kade (his brother?). Though this is the 
only king of the name of Pbrahim in the 
list of Bornu kings of the end of the 15th, 
or the beginning of the 16th century, it is 
evident that he could not have been a con- 
temporary of Leo Africanus, and that the 
latter erred, from lapse of memory, in the 
account of Africa which he composed seve- 
ral years after his visit to those countries, 
in calling the king who reigned over Bornu 
during the time of his visit Fbrahim. 
Zamtain. 
One day N. from 
Ghambaru. 
8. 
A. H. 
846—854. 
1 A. D. 
1442—1450. 
Kade. 
Son of 'Othman. 
Succumbed, after a short reign, to a rival, 
Dunama son of Biri. 
Amara, or 
Amaza. 
1. 
A. H. 854-5. 
A. D. 140U-1. 
DlJNAMA. 
Aghakuwah. 
4. 
Son of Biri. 
A. H. 
855—859. 
A.D. 
1451—1455. 
Mohammed. 
Maza. 
5 mo. 
Son of Matala. 
A. H. 859. 
A. D. 1455. 
