Now for some interesting Early Modern sources
First is this very interesting source from the early 1800s that speaks of Reer Woqooyi such as those in Berbera practicing a form of protectionism where they did not allow non-Somali sailors such as Arabs to export goods but instead only allowed those goods to be shipped by Somalis themselves to places like Yemen:
source
Then there is this riveting information that says Somalis were engaged in the pearling and fishing of the Indian Ocean for centuries whilst lauding their swimming and diving skills:
source
I've actually encountered examples of their diving skills before. There'd be depictions of wealthy European yuppies throwing Somali fishermen coins and the Somalis would be dive deep into the sea and retrieve them. I remember one pretty cool looking one but sadly can't find it. Found this, however:
source
Moving on from that, we have this text on the Majeerteen sailing fleet during the mid to late 1800s:
source
And on the subject of the Majeerteen, it seems that contrary to what some sources I shared earlier in this thread claimed, they were an adventurous lot who sailed to places beyond a Arabia a good chunk before the mid 1800s. Apparently they were forming colonies on the Eritrean coast as early as the 1700s:
source
An Italian source describing the same:
Genealogy of one of the Majerteen tribes in Eritrea:
Mohammed Saleh Ahmed [Mahammed Abubakr] Yusuf Guled Yahya Ibrahim Daud Hasan Habib Ard El Nabi Warwaqsame Majeerteen
It's very interesting how he writes "
an instance of enterprise strongly marking the superiority of the Somauli over all other African tribes on the coast". It reminds me of this seemingly Early Modern German source a Somali shared—sadly without an exact dating—saying pretty much the same thing:
Also reminds me of
Speke saying "
The Nakhoda (captain), as is often the case in these primitive countries, kept no regular sailors, but trusted to finding men desirous of going to their country, who would work his vessel for him—all Somali being by nature sailors" not too long after this and
Richard Pankhurst saying "
The Somali people, notably those of the Gulf of Aden Coast, have a well-established tradition of sea-faring and travel to foreign lands" as I shared earlier in this thread.
It's amazing how little most Somalis today know about all this given that to the Europeans of the 1700s, 1800s and early 1900s it was common knowledge. And from some of their accounts as above it really does seem like we were THE East-African ethnic group par excellence in regards to sailing. Very dominant in this respect among the native peoples of western shores of the Indian Ocean from what I've seen.
@Midas @Khaem @TheLand @The alchemist @Step a side