Majeerteen traders travelling from Bombay to Aden on a steamer ship read an early Somali translation of "one thousand and one Arabian nights" by Major J.S King [1887]
Abdulkadir Hashi, The First Secretary of the Somali Embassy to the United Kingdom and his administrative staff in London.[1985]
Today, he became the Somali ambassador to the United Kingdom.
Sultan Mohamed Mahmud of the Warsangeli attacks and burns down Waqderiya after a section of the Warsangeli try to become independent from him[1883]
The Sultan also blockaded any ships from entering Waqdariya during this time.
Lieutenant Alfred Lewis, a British officer who served with the British Somaliland Camel Corps, talks about his war with the Majeerteen in Sanaag and the demolition of their fort in 1925[Recorded in 1979]
Na'ib Ali Farah of the Hobyo Sultanate[1930s]
Na'ib Ali Farah was born into the Mahmud Saleh[Arab Saleh tribe] and was the brother in law of Sultan Yusuf Ali Kenadid
"Ali Farah commanded 728 Askar around Hobyo"
Final stand of a Majeerteen rebel in Qoraxey against an Italian ambush[1926]
"The Migiurtini have the proud saying:
Only women bring well-being; men must give pain,"
🧾- La Tribuna Illustrata
Majeerteen War Song[1915]
"He who seeks the enemy finds the enemy!
We hope to kill you all
And to return to our country victorious!
To hell, to hell, infidels!
Shame on us if we don't kill you!
We hope to return to our country
And find Sambuks brought by the monsoon
Ina Caamir [Warsangeli mother of Kenadiid's father, Cali Ardaabasle]~1848
1. Golweyn lagu goosey oo gacal walaal la wad,
2. Anse llaah bay galladay o golxaale yimid
1. Golweyn was a disaster, and dear brothers have fallen,
2. But God favored me and 'Golxaale[Cali] returned safe
The Abgaal of Harardheere urge their Sultan, Yusuf Ali of the Hobyo Sultanate to intervene in their conflict with the Hawadle in the Middle Shabelle[1917]
A Hawadle poet however implores Sultan Yusuf Ali to not intervene in pastoral conflict and calls for peace in a poem:
The Majeerteen and their allies were simultaneously invading Berbera in Northern Somalia and Mungiyo[between Merka and Baraawe] in Southern Somalia in 1846/1847
This is according to eye witness and sometimes secondhand accounts by Burton, Guillain and the British colonial office