Buur Heybe


Buur Heybe is a small village in the southern Bay province of Somalia. It is the largest of several granitic inselbergs in the region's Doi belt.

History

The Gogollis Qabe or Gogoshiis Qabe, a local rock shelter, is the seat of the first professional excavation in the country. In 1935, Grazioni found a Middle and Later Stone Age archaeological sequence here. The ancient implements belonged to the Somaliland Stillbay culture typified by points and scrapers produced through flat percussion flaking. J.D. Clark a decade later excavated a nearby site, the Gury Waabay, located around half a kilometer to the north. In the 1980s, Brandt also excavated the granitic inselberg, uncovering a top level Holocene layer. Fourteen burials were found therein, which constitute the earliest chronometrically dated burials from the Horn of Africa and contain the earliest definitive grave artefacts in the wider region. A lower layer was likewise associated with the Stone Age Eibian industry. Another local rock shelter is referred to as Abka Eeden I Oboy Haawo. In addition, several rock formations in the area feature cave art.
Buur Heybe historically served as a key religious and political hub. According to oral tradition in the Doi belt, several dynasties were based in the town. The Eyle aver that the area was at various times invaded and occupied by a succession of early Cushitic settlers, the Jidle, Maadanle and Ajuran, whom they each managed to defeat. A number of ancient burial sites dated from this pre-Islamic period sit atop the mountain's peak, and are a center of annual pilgrimage. A trench near the holy places is said to serve as a passage toward heaven, and as such is off-limits to individuals possessing a nefarious past. These burial sites on the mountain's summit were later made into Muslim holy sites in the ensuing Islamic period, including the Owol Qaasing and Sheikh Abdulqadir al-Jilaani.
Additionally, the area is a center of pottery production. The Bur Ecological and Archaeological Project, established in 1983, uncovered hundreds of sherds from the site and other rock shelters. Oral tradition suggests that the Eyle were the first people to make pottery in Buur Heybe.

Demographics

Buur Heybe is today primarily inhabited by the Eyle, a sub-clan of the Rahanwayne of agropastoralists, potters and part-time hunters. Their ethnonym translates as the "hunters with dogs". The Eyle are believed to be remnants of the aboriginal San hunter-gatherers who inhabited southern Somalia prior to the arrival from the north of Afro-Asiatic populations of the Cushitic branch. Buur Heybe is consequently also known as Buur Eyle, in recognition of the first inhabitants in the surrounding villages of Howaal Dheri, Berdaale and Muuney.