MansirMansir Muhammed

Data

Tables Hub

Curated datasets you won't find anywhere else. Sourced, granular, structured.

300datasets·3,856total records·9 topics
Topic · Dataset · Meta
History & GovernanceGroundnut Processing Industry (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
9 rec2 col·West Africa, tracking the urban market zones, highway processing centers, and agro-pastoral collection points inside the Yauri Emirate (specifically centering on Yelwa and the Dawanau Area along the Yelwa-Kontagora highway in Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria), with regional and international trade corridors extending to Borgu, Kano, Katsina, Sokoto, Bodinga, Illela, and cross-border networks in the Benin Republic.·2003 A.D. – 2014 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceGold Mining Industry (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
5 rec2 col·West Africa, tracking the gold mining pits, processing camps, and local markets centered around the Mararaba Birnin Yauri area (Yauri Local Government Area, Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria), with macroeconomic and export vectors stretching to regional hubs (Sokoto, Gusau, Lagos, Minna, Kano, Cotonou in Benin Republic) and global bullion capitals (Dubai and Saudi Arabia).·15 th Century A.D. – 2014 A.D·csv· dl
History & GovernanceSarakunan Majalisa (Council of State) (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
7 rec5 col·West Africa, tracking the urban administrative wards, palace gates, and decentralized geographic networks of mainland districts and river islands along the Niger basin within the Yauri Emirate (modern LGAs of Yauri, Ngaski, and Shanga in Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria)—explicitly mapping the historic transfer of extensive southern and western mainland fief domains into the Kontagora Emirate under British colonial border adjustments.·c. 1411 A.D. – 1960 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceFour Ruling Houses (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
4 rec4 col·West Africa, tracking the dynastic quarters, royal households, rural estates, and village headships inside the Yauri Emirate (specifically profiling family domains across Birnin Yauri, Yelwa, Garin Baka, Rikwahe, Rafin Kirya, and Illela within the modern LGAs of Yauri, Ngaski, and Shanga in Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria).·c. 1790 A.D. – 2014 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceFull List of Sarakuna (Kings/Emirs) of Yauri (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
46 rec6 col·West Africa, tracking the palace courts, royal tombs, island capitals, and administrative seats along the River Niger course within the Yauri Emirate (modern LGAs of Yauri, Ngaski, and Shanga in Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria), with genealogical and diplomatic networks tracing directly to Katsina, Zaria (Zazzau), Sokoto, and institutional networks in Kaduna and London (United Kingdom).·1411 A.D. – 2014·csv· dl
History & GovernanceState Formation Chronology (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
21 rec4 col·West Africa, tracking the river islands, banks, fortifications, and shifting administrative provincial boundaries along the Upper Middle Niger river course (specifically centering on Birnin Yauri, Matsafa Island, Ikun Island, Ngaski, and Shanga within modern Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria), with regional military and trade trajectories expanding outward to Katsina, Zaria, Nupe (Bida), Kontagora, Gwandu, and Sokoto.·c. 9th Century A.D. – 1918 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceEtymology of Yauri (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
4 rec3 col·West Africa, tracking the long-distance trans-savanna trade routes, merchant rest stations, and sovereign capitals across Northern Nigeria and the wider Volta River basin—specifically profiling the mercantile trails linking Birnin Yauri (Kebbi State) to Zaria (Zazzau/Kaduna State) and the Gwanja market centers in modern Ghana.·c. 1505 A.D. – 2014 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceGeographic Profile (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
12 rec3 col·West Africa, tracking the riverine courses, valleys, islands, and borderlands along the Upper Middle Niger basin (specifically centering on the contemporary LGAs of Yauri, Ngaski, and Shanga within Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria), with historic pre-conquest territorial lines expanding outward to the borders of Sokoto, Zamfara, Kaduna, and Nupe (Niger State).·c. 1905 A.D. – 2014 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceChapter Overview and Structural Content Mapping (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
16 rec4 col·West Africa, focusing on the shifting riverine ecologies, islands, banks, and mainland administrative districts along the River Niger inside the Yauri Emirate (disaggregated into the 3 contemporary Local Government Areas of Yauri, Ngaski, and Shanga in Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria), with regional intellectual, political, and commercial vectors connecting to Timbuktu, Katsina, Zamfara, Kebbi, Nupe, Bussa, and Zazzau.·1411 A.D. – 2014 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceNative Authority Financial Data (c. 1960) (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
12 rec2 col·West Africa, tracking the pastoralist migratory pathways, municipal courts, marketplace collection posts, and centralized administrative offices inside the Yauri Emirate (modern Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria), with regional transhumance circuits connecting to the wider Sokoto Province and the Niger River basin.·1959 A.D. – 1964 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceEthnic Groups of Yauri (Hausa Presence in the Waters of the Niger)
11 rec7 col·West Africa, focusing on the shifting riverine ecologies, islands, banks, and mainland districts along the River Niger inside the Yauri Emirate (modern Kebbi State, Northern Nigeria), with migratory and linguistic vectors extending outward to Songhai territories, Katsina State, Borgu, Niger State (Rijau/Kontagora), and Kwara State (Ilorin).·c. 1411 A.D. – 2014 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceKey Actors — Caliphate (British Conquest of the Sokoto Caliphate)
15 rec3 col·West Africa and the Central Sudanic savanna, tracking the palace courts, garrison gates, and military theaters across the Sokoto Caliphate—specifically profiling the geopolitical decisions and commands emanating from the central capital of Sokoto, across the northern hubs of Kano, Kaura-Namoda, and Bauchi, the riverine emirates of Nupe, Kontagora, and Yawuri, down to the southern frontier of Ilorin and the eastern borderlands of Yola (Adamawa).·1898 A.D. – March 1903 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceKey Actors — British (British Conquest of the Sokoto Caliphate)
6 rec3 col·West Africa, tracking the imperial command centers, corporate boardrooms, mapping routes, and forward military headquarters across Northern Nigeria—specifically profiling operational corridors extending from the Niger-Benue confluence through Nupe, Bida, Kontagora, and Ilorin, up to the high-intensity northern conflict zones of Bebeji, Kano, and the metropolitan capital of Sokoto.·1897 A.D. – March 1903 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceResistance by Emirate — Typology (British Conquest of the Sokoto Caliphate)
9 rec4 col·West Africa and the Central Sudan, mapping the administrative lines, secret underground networks, and military theaters across Northern Nigeria—specifically detailing the tactical operations of Nupe, Bida, Ilorin, Yola (Adamawa), Kano, Sokoto, Bauchi, Gombe, and Zaria.·1897 A.D. – March 1903 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceFortifications — Kano Walls (British Conquest of the Sokoto Caliphate)
6 rec2 col·West Africa, tracking the structural architecture, entry gates, and defensive perimeters of the Kano metropolis (Kano State, Northern Nigeria), situated within the wider network of fortified border cities and garrisoned emirates across the pre-colonial Sokoto Caliphate.·February 1903 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceCaliphate Forces by Campaign (British Conquest of the Sokoto Caliphate)
4 rec4 col·West Africa and the Central Sudanic savanna, tracking the palace networks, fortified walls, and defensive perimeters across Northern Nigeria—specifically detailing the battle fields and city gates of Nupe, Kontagora, Kano, and the metropolitan capital city of Sokoto.·1898 A.D. – March 1903 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceBritish Forces by Campaign (British Conquest of the Sokoto Caliphate
3 rec6 col·West Africa and the Central Sudanic savanna, tracking the lines of march, artillery positions, and battlegrounds of the British colonial forces across Northern Nigeria—specifically profiling the garrison depots, river crossings, and city gates of Nupe, Bida, Kano (Kabuga Gate), Kaura-Namoda, and the metropolitan capital city of Sokoto.·Early 1901 A.D. – March 1903 A.D.·csv· dl
History & GovernanceChronological Timeline — British Penetration and Conquest (British Conquest of the Sokoto Caliphate)
28 rec5 col·West Africa and the Central Sudan, tracking the riverine trade routes, savanna emirates, and capital defense nodes across the Sokoto Caliphate (modern Northern Nigeria, Southern Niger, Northern Cameroon, and Southwest Chad)—explicitly detailing active military operations and engagements inside Nupe, Bida, Ilorin, Borgu, Yauri, Gwandu, Yola, Illo, Yelwa, Kontagora, and the metropolitan capital of Sokoto.·1833 A.D. – 1900 A.D.·csv· dl
page 1 / 17