<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIV</h3>
<h4>HALAIB AND SAWAKIN KADIM</h4>
<p>It is hard to imagine anything more squalid than the
Egyptian fortress of Halaib, as it is spelt on the map, or
Halei as it is pronounced, which was our next halting-place,
and from which we succeeded in getting a little way inland.
The governor, Ismael, has been there seven years; he and
his family inhabit some wicker cages near the small white
fort, and gathered round them are the huts of his soldiers
and the cabins of a few Bisharin, who live under the
immediate protection of the fort. Ismael is possessed of
the only patch of cultivated land that we saw during the
whole of our expedition, where he grows gourds, peas,
and aubergines or brinjols. The man of most authority in the
place is Mohammed Ali Tiout, head of the Bisharin tribe
of Achmed Orab. He appointed his son, a fine, intelligent
young fellow of five-and-twenty, called <i>the batran</i> in the
local dialect, to act as our guide and protector during our
exploration of the Shellal range, which rises some miles
inland at the back of Halaib.</p>
<p>The people of this portion of the Soudan between the
coast and the Nile Valley, who do not own allegiance to the
Khalifa, belong to the Morghani confraternity of Mohammedans;
their young religious sheikh, a self-possessed, clever
lad of about twenty, lives at Sawakin, and his influence
amongst the tribes not affecting Mahdism is supreme. He
is devoted to British interests, and no doubt in the present<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/299.png">299</SPAN>]</span>
condition of affairs his co-operation will be of great value.
The Egyptian Government instructed him to write to the
sheikhs around Halaib and Mohammed Gol to insure our
safety, and to this fact I am convinced we owe the immunity
from danger we enjoyed, and the assistance given to us in
penetrating inland from Mohammed Gol. The Morghani
have the three cicatrices on either cheek, and as a confraternity
they are not in the least fanatical, and are well
disposed to Christians; very different to the Arabs we met
in the Hadhramout, and very different to the Dervishes with
whom they are on such hostile terms.</p>
<p>While at Halaib I paid several visits to the wife and
family of the mamour or governor. They were very civil
always, and used to kiss me. They looked quite as unsettled
in their airy brushwood arbours as if they had not resided
there steadily for seven years.</p>
<p>There were three huts about 12 feet by 8 feet, one
being a kitchen. There is a brushwood fence all round,
part having a shed for the stores and water jars. The wife is
a Turk, and has one plain grown-up daughter. There was
an old lady who made coffee, and a black maid slightly
draped in a sheet once white, but now of a general deep
grey, pure black in some parts. I liked getting coffee and
ginger best. The first day I had to swallow, smiling, tea
boiled and a little burnt.</p>
<p>All the furniture I saw was a 3-foot bed, three Austrian
chairs, a very common wooden table, and a little iron one
with a new and tight pink cotton cover and petticoat to
the ground. All was very clean but the maid.</p>
<p>The kind lady thought her dwelling so superior to mine
that she begged me to come and sleep in the bed with her in
shelter from the wind; tents, she said, were only fit for men.
I did not envy her her home in the drenching rain we had
all night and half one day. She wore a string round under<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/300.png">300</SPAN>]</span>
one arm, with seven or eight charms like good-sized pincushions
or housewifes of different coloured silks.</p>
<p>We made two expeditions from Halaib; the first was to
the ruins now known as Sawakin Kadim, which are on the
coast twelve miles north of Halaib. As only six camels could
be obtained we went by boat ourselves, leaving the camels
for the baggage. For this purpose we deserted the <i>Taisir</i>
and hired a smaller <i>kattira</i>, and having gone as near as we
could to land, and been in considerable danger from coral
reefs, on which we ran suddenly, nearly capsizing, we took
to the houri that we had towed astern. It was very like
sitting in a bath, and, after the houri, we had to be carried a
long way. We encamped not far from the shore, and had
to endure a dreadful <i>khamsin</i> and dust-storm from the
south, with such violent wind that I was blown down, and
Matthaios dug our beds out twice with a trowel; and the
next day we found the north wind nearly as bad. Why it
did not raise the sand I do not know.</p>
<p>Sawakin Kadim is like Berenice, nothing but a mass of
mounds, but it must at some time or another have been a
much larger place. We excavated one of these mounds, but
found nothing earlier than Kufic remains, unless the graves,
which were constructed of four large blocks of madrepore
sunk deep into the ground, may be looked upon as a more
ancient form of sepulture. We opened several, but unfortunately
they contained nothing but bones. Originally this
town must have been built on an island, or an artificial moat
must have been dug round it to protect it on the mainland
side; this is now silted up, but is traceable all along. Three
large cisterns for water are still in a fair state of preservation,
and I am told that a Kufic inscription was found here some
years ago. There seems no doubt that this town is the
one mentioned by the Arab geographers, Abou'lfida and
Edrisi, by the name of Aydab, which was a place of consider<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/301.png">301</SPAN>]</span>able
importance between Ras Bernas and Sawakin. There
are no traces elsewhere along this coast of any other town,
consequently we can fairly place it here. Abou'lfida says:
'Aydab is a town in the land of Bedja; it is politically
dependent on Egypt, though some say it is in Abyssinia.
This is the meeting-place for the merchants of Yemen and
the pilgrims, who, leaving Egypt, prefer the sea route and
embark for Yedda. In other respects Aydab has more the
aspect of a village than a town, and it is seven days' march
north of Sawakin, where the chief of the Bedjas lives.'
Counting a day's march at twenty-five miles, this would place
it near Halaib, which is 170 miles north of Sawakin. Hitherto
on our maps Aydab has been placed near Mohammed Gol,
but, as there are no traces of ruins there except the towers
to which we shall presently allude, this position for an
ancient town is untenable.</p>
<p>Edrisi tells us: 'At the extremity of the desert and
on the borders of the salt sea is Aydab, whence one crosses
to Yedda in one day and one night. Aydab has two
governors, one appointed by the chief of the Bedja, and the
other by the princes of Egypt.' From the fact that Aydab
is mentioned by none of the earlier geographers it would
appear not to have been one of the Ptolemaic settlements,
but a town of purely Arab origin. The people of Bedja, so
often alluded to by these Arabian geographers, seem to have
had considerable power, and to have occupied all the Soudan
and as far north as Berenice, being probably the precursors
of the Bisharin Amara tribes, which wander now over this
desert country. They were the recognised guardians of the
old gold-mines which existed in this district, and concerning
which I have more to say presently; and though vassals of
the Egyptian kaliphs, nevertheless they seem to have had
considerable local authority, and to have carried on wars on
their own account.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/302.png">302</SPAN>]</span></p>
<p>It is a curious fact that in the Aksumite inscriptions we
come across an account of wars and victories by the old
Ethiopian monarchs over the peoples of Kasuh and Bega to
the north of Abyssinia, which peoples Professor D. H. Müller
identifies with the people of Kush and the Bedja alluded to
by the Arab geographers.</p>
<p>In course of time the Bedjas seem to have disappeared
from the face of the earth and left nothing but their tombs
and a few ruined towns behind them; and for some centuries
it would appear that the coast of the Red Sea north of
Sawakin was uninhabited until in later years came fresh
colonists from the Nile Valley, whose descendants still
occupy it.</p>
<p>The tribal traditions of the district are all that we have
now to rely upon regarding the immigration of new inhabitants,
and they state that two brothers with their
families, one named Amer and the other Amar, came from
the Nile Valley near Wadi Halfa, and settled along the
coast of the Red Sea; from them are descended the Beni
Amer and Amara tribes of Bedouin. These brothers were
followed in due course by four other brothers, Ali, Kourb,
Nour, and Gueil, from whom the tribes and sub-tribes of the
Aliab, Kourbab, Nourab, and Gueilior are respectively
descended. These tribes have never been anything but
pastoral nomads, living in miserable mat huts, and spreading
themselves over the district at wide intervals in search
of pasture for their flocks. They entirely disown having
anything to do with the remains of buildings and tombs
found in their midst.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/303.png">303</SPAN>]</span></p>
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