A viewset for viewing and editing Professional Military Officers.

GET /api/sc/professional-military-officers/?format=api&page=7
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "count": 473,
    "next": "https://seshat-db.com/api/sc/professional-military-officers/?format=api&page=8",
    "previous": "https://seshat-db.com/api/sc/professional-military-officers/?format=api&page=6",
    "results": [
        {
            "id": 301,
            "polity": {
                "id": 156,
                "name": "tr_konya_mnl",
                "long_name": "Konya Plain - Ceramic Neolithic",
                "start_year": -7000,
                "end_year": -6600
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 302,
            "polity": {
                "id": 155,
                "name": "tr_konya_enl",
                "long_name": "Konya Plain - Early Neolithic",
                "start_year": -9600,
                "end_year": -7000
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 303,
            "polity": {
                "id": 157,
                "name": "tr_konya_lnl",
                "long_name": "Konya Plain - Late Neolithic",
                "start_year": -6600,
                "end_year": -6000
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 304,
            "polity": {
                "id": 165,
                "name": "tr_neo_hittite_k",
                "long_name": "Neo-Hittite Kingdoms",
                "start_year": -1180,
                "end_year": -900
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " unknown. Present for the New Kingdom Hatti which preceded the Neo-Hittite Kingdoms: \"the core of the defence force was a full-time, professional standing army. ... They lived together in military barracks, so that they could be mobilized at a moment's notice.\"§REF§(Bryce 2007, 11)§REF§ According to H. Genz \"So far not a single burial from the Early Iron Age is known from Central Anatolia\"§REF§Genz H. \"The Iron Age in Central Anatolia\".In: Tsetskhladze G. R. (2011) The Black Sea, Greece, Anatolia and Europe in the first millenium BC. Paris. Pg: 343.§REF§ which makes it difficult tell whether professionalism was maintained."
        },
        {
            "id": 305,
            "polity": {
                "id": 173,
                "name": "tr_ottoman_emirate",
                "long_name": "Ottoman Emirate",
                "start_year": 1299,
                "end_year": 1402
            },
            "year_from": 1299,
            "year_to": 1328,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "Emir Orhan: \"A regularly paid force of Muslim and Christian cavalry and infantry was created by his vizier, Allah al Din. The horsemen were known as müsellems (tax-free men) and were organised under the overall command of sancak beys into hundreds, under subaşis, and thousands, under binbaşis. The foot-soldiers, or yaya, were comparably divided into tens, hundreds and thousands. These infantry archers occasionally fought for Byzantium, where they were known as mourtatoi. Müsellems and yayas were at first paid wages, but by the time of Murat I (1359) they were normally given lands or fiefs in return for military service, the yayas also having special responsibility for the protection of roads and bridges.\" §REF§(Nicolle 1983, 9)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 306,
            "polity": {
                "id": 173,
                "name": "tr_ottoman_emirate",
                "long_name": "Ottoman Emirate",
                "start_year": 1299,
                "end_year": 1402
            },
            "year_from": 1329,
            "year_to": 1402,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "Emir Orhan: \"A regularly paid force of Muslim and Christian cavalry and infantry was created by his vizier, Allah al Din. The horsemen were known as müsellems (tax-free men) and were organised under the overall command of sancak beys into hundreds, under subaşis, and thousands, under binbaşis. The foot-soldiers, or yaya, were comparably divided into tens, hundreds and thousands. These infantry archers occasionally fought for Byzantium, where they were known as mourtatoi. Müsellems and yayas were at first paid wages, but by the time of Murat I (1359) they were normally given lands or fiefs in return for military service, the yayas also having special responsibility for the protection of roads and bridges.\" §REF§(Nicolle 1983, 9)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 307,
            "polity": {
                "id": 174,
                "name": "tr_ottoman_emp_1",
                "long_name": "Ottoman Empire I",
                "start_year": 1402,
                "end_year": 1517
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "Emir Orhan: \"A regularly paid force of Muslim and Christian cavalry and infantry was created by his vizier, Allah al Din. The horsemen were known as müsellems (tax-free men) and were organised under the overall command of sancak beys into hundreds, under subaşis, and thousands, under binbaşis. The foot-soldiers, or yaya, were comparably divided into tens, hundreds and thousands. These infantry archers occasionally fought for Byzantium, where they were known as mourtatoi. Müsellems and yayas were at first paid wages, but by the time of Murat I (1359) they were normally given lands or fiefs in return for military service, the yayas also having special responsibility for the protection of roads and bridges.\" §REF§(Nicolle 1983, 9)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 308,
            "polity": {
                "id": 175,
                "name": "tr_ottoman_emp_2",
                "long_name": "Ottoman Empire II",
                "start_year": 1517,
                "end_year": 1683
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "Emir Orhan: \"A regularly paid force of Muslim and Christian cavalry and infantry was created by his vizier, Allah al Din. The horsemen were known as müsellems (tax-free men) and were organised under the overall command of sancak beys into hundreds, under subaşis, and thousands, under binbaşis. The foot-soldiers, or yaya, were comparably divided into tens, hundreds and thousands. These infantry archers occasionally fought for Byzantium, where they were known as mourtatoi. Müsellems and yayas were at first paid wages, but by the time of Murat I (1359) they were normally given lands or fiefs in return for military service, the yayas also having special responsibility for the protection of roads and bridges.\" §REF§(Nicolle 1983, 9)§REF§ \"Both [yaya] and the müsellems were gradually relegated to second-line duties late in the 14th century, and by 1600 such units had either been abolished or reduced to non-military functions.\"§REF§(Nicolle 1983, 9)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 309,
            "polity": {
                "id": 176,
                "name": "tr_ottoman_emp_3",
                "long_name": "Ottoman Empire III",
                "start_year": 1683,
                "end_year": 1839
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "Emir Orhan: \"A regularly paid force of Muslim and Christian cavalry and infantry was created by his vizier, Allah al Din. The horsemen were known as müsellems (tax-free men) and were organised under the overall command of sancak beys into hundreds, under subaşis, and thousands, under binbaşis. The foot-soldiers, or yaya, were comparably divided into tens, hundreds and thousands. These infantry archers occasionally fought for Byzantium, where they were known as mourtatoi. Müsellems and yayas were at first paid wages, but by the time of Murat I (1359) they were normally given lands or fiefs in return for military service, the yayas also having special responsibility for the protection of roads and bridges.\" §REF§(Nicolle 1983, 9)§REF§ \"Both [yaya] and the müsellems were gradually relegated to second-line duties late in the 14th century, and by 1600 such units had either been abolished or reduced to non-military functions.\"§REF§(Nicolle 1983, 9)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 310,
            "polity": {
                "id": 71,
                "name": "tr_roman_dominate",
                "long_name": "Roman Empire - Dominate",
                "start_year": 285,
                "end_year": 394
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The highest officers in the Roman military system were usually senators not professionals. There were, however, professional junior officers at least from the Roman Principate.<br>\"Typically the men who commanded armies and legions were senators. There were no military specialists in Roman government and no imperial high command. All senators alternated brief periods of military command with administrative posts, participation in domestic politics and careers as legal advocates. As military commanders they were, to a great extent, amateurs, even though most did a brief spell as a junior officer (tribune) in a legion. They would have depended on the professional junior officers (tribunes and centurions) as well as the training and discipline of the legionaries themselves to win battles.\"\"§REF§(Pollard and Berry 2012, 38)§REF§<br>\"Tribunes, like the legionary legate (commander), were drawn from Rome's social and political elite, the senatorial and equestrian orders, and were not professional soldiers. They alternated military service with political, judicial and administrative duties.\"§REF§(Pollard and Berry 2012, 39)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 311,
            "polity": {
                "id": 171,
                "name": "tr_rum_sultanate",
                "long_name": "Rum Sultanate",
                "start_year": 1077,
                "end_year": 1307
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Senior soldiers within the sultan's military retinue and the military governors. §REF§Fodor, Pal. “Ottoman Warfare, 1300-1453.” In The Cambridge History of Turkey, edited by Kate Fleet, Suraiya Faroqhi, and Reşat Kasaba, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. P.193.§REF§<br>Both officers and soldiers were employed by the polity on a full time basis. §REF§Fodor, Pal. “Ottoman Warfare, 1300-1453.” In The Cambridge History of Turkey, edited by Kate Fleet, Suraiya Faroqhi, and Reşat Kasaba, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. P.193.§REF§ A full time Islamic priesthood worked in the mosques."
        },
        {
            "id": 312,
            "polity": {
                "id": 167,
                "name": "tr_tabal_k",
                "long_name": "Tabal Kingdoms",
                "start_year": -900,
                "end_year": -730
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " unknown. The Assyrians in 836 BCE found the local settlements fortified \"so it is likely that fortifications were built in response to local conditions, rather than foreign invasion.\"§REF§(Melville 2010, 87-109) Melville, Sarah. \"Kings of Tabal: Politics§REF§ §REF§Competition, and Conflict in a Contested Periphery.\" in Richardson, Seth. ed. 2010. Rebellions and Peripheries in the Mesopotamian World. American Oriental Series 91. Eisenbrauns. Winona Lake.§REF§ The armed forces, likewise, might equally have been well-organized, albeit on a small scale. However, this does not mean the chief officers were full-time, specialist military officers, who did not also have other jobs."
        },
        {
            "id": 313,
            "polity": {
                "id": 101,
                "name": "us_haudenosaunee_1",
                "long_name": "Haudenosaunee Confederacy - Early",
                "start_year": 1566,
                "end_year": 1713
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Full-time specialists The warriors were represented in their own council: 'Closely allied with the Council of Elders was the women's council who brought the matters up before the council. Lafitau maintained: Separate from both the women's and elder's councils was the warriors' council which sought to influence authority decisions of the council of elders because they were the soldiers or ‘police’ of the village. Their internal affairs idsally were limited to military raids, games, and carrying out the military policy of the council of elders or League Council. In addition to the various councils, asseciations of men and women possibly existed for curing. Lafitau noted “I have been told that they have several sorts of private associations like fraternities” (Ibdd.:476). Fenton speculated that these associations were procursers of the “medicine societies” (Lafitau, 1724, 1:476). However, these associations seem to be the actual medicine societies and as such would have been village groups that criss-cross lineage, clan and moiety statuses.' §REF§Foley, Denis 1994. “Ethnohistoric And Ethnographic Analysis Of The Iroquois From The Aboriginal Era To The Present Suburban Era”, 24§REF§ Distinguished war-leaders were eligible for non-hereditary chieftainships: 'The powers and duties of the sachems and chiefs were entirely of a civil character, and confined, by their organic laws, to the affairs of peace. No sachem could go out to war in his official capacity, as a civil ruler. If disposed to take the war-path, he laid aside his civil office, for the time being, and became a common warrior. It becomes an important inquiry, therefore, to ascertain in whom the military power, was vested. The Iroquois had no distinct class of war-chiefs, raised up and set apart to command in time of war; neither do the sachems or chiefs appear to have possessed the power of appointing such persons as they considered suitable to the post of command. All military operations were left entirely to private enterprise, and to the system of voluntary service, the sachems seeking rather to repress and restrain, than to encourage the martial ardor of the people. Their principal war-captains were to be found among he class called chiefs, many of whom were elected to this office in reward for their military achievements. The singular method of warfare among the Iroquois renders it extremely difficult to obtain a complete and satisfactory explanation of the manner in which their varlike operations were conducted. Their whole civil policy was averse to the concentration of power in the hands of any single individual, but inclined to the opposite principle of division among a number of equals; and this policy they carried into their military as well as through their civil organization. Small bands were, in the first instance, organized by individual leaders, each of which, if they were afterwards united upon the same enterprise, continued under its own captain, and the whole force, as well as the conduct of the expedition, was under their joint management. They appointed no one of their number to absolute command, but the general direction was left open to the strongest will, or the most persuasive voice.' §REF§Morgan, Lewis Henry, and Herbert M. Lloyd 1901. “League Of The Ho-De’-No-Sau-Nee Or Iroquois. Vol. I”, 67§REF§ 'When the power of the Ho-de[unknown] -no-sau-nee  began to develop, under the new system of oligarchies within an oligarchy, there sprang up around the sachems a class of warriors, distinguished for enterprise upon the war-path, and eloquence in council, who demanded some participation in the administration of public affairs. The serious objections to the enlargement of the number of rulers, involving, as it did, changes in the framework of the government, for a long period enabled the sachems to resist the encroachment. In the progress of events, this class became too powerful to be withstood, and the sachems were compelled to raise them up in the subordinate station of chiefs. The title was purely elective, and the reward of merit. Unlike the sachemships, the name was not hereditary in the tribe or family of the individual, but terminated with the chief himself; unless subsequently bestowed by the tribe upon some other person, to preserve it as one of their illustrious names. These chiefs were originally invested with very limited powers, their principal office being that of advisers and counsellors of the sachems. Having thus obtained a foothold in the government, this class, to the number of which there was no limit, gradually enlarged their influence, and from generation to generation drew nearer to an equality with the sachems themselves. By this innovation the government was liberalized, to the sensible diminution of the power of the sachems, which, at the institution of the League, was extremely arbitrary.' §REF§Morgan, Lewis Henry, and Herbert M. Lloyd 1901. “League Of The Ho-De’-No-Sau-Nee Or Iroquois. Vol. I”, 94§REF§ Given Morgan's remarks on personal enterprise as the source of military operations, the war-leaders should not be characterized as professional officers."
        },
        {
            "id": 314,
            "polity": {
                "id": 102,
                "name": "us_haudenosaunee_2",
                "long_name": "Haudenosaunee Confederacy - Late",
                "start_year": 1714,
                "end_year": 1848
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Full-time specialists The warriors were represented in their own council: 'Closely allied with the Council of Elders was the women's council who brought the matters up before the council. Lafitau maintained: Separate from both the women's and elder's councils was the warriors' council which sought to influence authority decisions of the council of elders because they were the soldiers or ‘police’ of the village. Their internal affairs idsally were limited to military raids, games, and carrying out the military policy of the council of elders or League Council. In addition to the various councils, asseciations of men and women possibly existed for curing. Lafitau noted “I have been told that they have several sorts of private associations like fraternities” (Ibdd.:476). Fenton speculated that these associations were procursers of the “medicine societies” (Lafitau, 1724, 1:476). However, these associations seem to be the actual medicine societies and as such would have been village groups that criss-cross lineage, clan and moiety statuses.' §REF§Foley, Denis 1994. “Ethnohistoric And Ethnographic Analysis Of The Iroquois From The Aboriginal Era To The Present Suburban Era”, 24§REF§ Distinguished war-leaders were eligible for non-hereditary chieftainships: 'The powers and duties of the sachems and chiefs were entirely of a civil character, and confined, by their organic laws, to the affairs of peace. No sachem could go out to war in his official capacity, as a civil ruler. If disposed to take the war-path, he laid aside his civil office, for the time being, and became a common warrior. It becomes an important inquiry, therefore, to ascertain in whom the military power, was vested. The Iroquois had no distinct class of war-chiefs, raised up and set apart to command in time of war; neither do the sachems or chiefs appear to have possessed the power of appointing such persons as they considered suitable to the post of command. All military operations were left entirely to private enterprise, and to the system of voluntary service, the sachems seeking rather to repress and restrain, than to encourage the martial ardor of the people. Their principal war-captains were to be found among he class called chiefs, many of whom were elected to this office in reward for their military achievements. The singular method of warfare among the Iroquois renders it extremely difficult to obtain a complete and satisfactory explanation of the manner in which their varlike operations were conducted. Their whole civil policy was averse to the concentration of power in the hands of any single individual, but inclined to the opposite principle of division among a number of equals; and this policy they carried into their military as well as through their civil organization. Small bands were, in the first instance, organized by individual leaders, each of which, if they were afterwards united upon the same enterprise, continued under its own captain, and the whole force, as well as the conduct of the expedition, was under their joint management. They appointed no one of their number to absolute command, but the general direction was left open to the strongest will, or the most persuasive voice.' §REF§Morgan, Lewis Henry, and Herbert M. Lloyd 1901. “League Of The Ho-De’-No-Sau-Nee Or Iroquois. Vol. I”, 67§REF§ 'When the power of the Ho-de[unknown] -no-sau-nee  began to develop, under the new system of oligarchies within an oligarchy, there sprang up around the sachems a class of warriors, distinguished for enterprise upon the war-path, and eloquence in council, who demanded some participation in the administration of public affairs. The serious objections to the enlargement of the number of rulers, involving, as it did, changes in the framework of the government, for a long period enabled the sachems to resist the encroachment. In the progress of events, this class became too powerful to be withstood, and the sachems were compelled to raise them up in the subordinate station of chiefs. The title was purely elective, and the reward of merit. Unlike the sachemships, the name was not hereditary in the tribe or family of the individual, but terminated with the chief himself; unless subsequently bestowed by the tribe upon some other person, to preserve it as one of their illustrious names. These chiefs were originally invested with very limited powers, their principal office being that of advisers and counsellors of the sachems. Having thus obtained a foothold in the government, this class, to the number of which there was no limit, gradually enlarged their influence, and from generation to generation drew nearer to an equality with the sachems themselves. By this innovation the government was liberalized, to the sensible diminution of the power of the sachems, which, at the institution of the League, was extremely arbitrary.' §REF§Morgan, Lewis Henry, and Herbert M. Lloyd 1901. “League Of The Ho-De’-No-Sau-Nee Or Iroquois. Vol. I”, 94§REF§ Given Morgan's remarks on personal enterprise as the source of military operations, the war-leaders should not be characterized as professional officers."
        },
        {
            "id": 315,
            "polity": {
                "id": 20,
                "name": "us_kamehameha_k",
                "long_name": "Kingdom of Hawaii - Kamehameha Period",
                "start_year": 1778,
                "end_year": 1819
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Chiefs and stewards were the military officers§REF§Sahlins, Marshall 1958. Social Stratification in Polynesia. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press. Pg. 19.§REF§, so there does not appear to have been any specifically *military* officers."
        },
        {
            "id": 316,
            "polity": {
                "id": 22,
                "name": "us_woodland_1",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Early Woodland",
                "start_year": -600,
                "end_year": -150
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 317,
            "polity": {
                "id": 34,
                "name": "us_emergent_mississippian_2",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Emergent Mississippian II",
                "start_year": 900,
                "end_year": 1049
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 318,
            "polity": {
                "id": 25,
                "name": "us_woodland_4",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Late Woodland II",
                "start_year": 450,
                "end_year": 600
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 319,
            "polity": {
                "id": 23,
                "name": "us_woodland_2",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Middle Woodland",
                "start_year": -150,
                "end_year": 300
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 320,
            "polity": {
                "id": 26,
                "name": "us_woodland_5",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Late Woodland III",
                "start_year": 600,
                "end_year": 750
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 321,
            "polity": {
                "id": 24,
                "name": "us_woodland_3",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Late Woodland I",
                "start_year": 300,
                "end_year": 450
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 322,
            "polity": {
                "id": 27,
                "name": "us_emergent_mississippian_1",
                "long_name": "Cahokia - Emergent Mississippian I",
                "start_year": 750,
                "end_year": 900
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 323,
            "polity": {
                "id": 296,
                "name": "uz_chagatai_khanate",
                "long_name": "Chagatai Khanate",
                "start_year": 1227,
                "end_year": 1402
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " As with Mongols."
        },
        {
            "id": 324,
            "polity": {
                "id": 469,
                "name": "uz_janid_dyn",
                "long_name": "Khanate of Bukhara",
                "start_year": 1599,
                "end_year": 1747
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 325,
            "polity": {
                "id": 464,
                "name": "uz_koktepe_1",
                "long_name": "Koktepe I",
                "start_year": -1400,
                "end_year": -1000
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 326,
            "polity": {
                "id": 287,
                "name": "uz_samanid_emp",
                "long_name": "Samanid Empire",
                "start_year": 819,
                "end_year": 999
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"Over the years, Turkic junior officers who had proven themselves at the platoon and squadron levels rose in the ranks, until by the time of Nasr II they dominated the officer corps.\" §REF§(Starr 2013) Starr, S. Frederick. 2013. Lost Enlightenment: Central Asia's Golden Age from the Arab Conquest to Tamerlane. Princeton University Press. Princeton.§REF§<br>Iqtas<br>\"Bukhara was held by the latter as an iqta ... as a conditional reward for services rendered in the capacity of governor with the right to levy for his own benefit a part of the income of Bukhara and, later, the entire income from the town. It is also clear from the legends on Samanid coins that Bukhara, Akhsikath, Kuba, Nasrabad and other towns and regions were held as iqtas for various periods of time by members of the dynasty and by senior military and civilian officials as rewards for their services. These grants were neither lifelong nor hereditary, although attempts were made to move in that direction and were resisted by the central government.\" §REF§(Davidovich 1997, 143) Davidovich, E A. in Asimov, M S and Bosworth, C E eds. 1997. History of Civilizations of Central Asia. Volume IV. Part I. UNESCO.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 327,
            "polity": {
                "id": 468,
                "name": "uz_sogdiana_city_states",
                "long_name": "Sogdiana - City-States Period",
                "start_year": 604,
                "end_year": 711
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " “The rulers and great merchants also maintained personal retinues or guards called Cakirs (Chin. Che-chieh, Arab. sâ.kariyya). In these guards, who, perhaps, were drawn from the sons of the aristocracy, one may see a possible source for the later gulam/mamluk system of the lslamic world (see below).4 §REF§(Golden 1992, 190)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 328,
            "polity": {
                "id": 370,
                "name": "uz_timurid_emp",
                "long_name": "Timurid Empire",
                "start_year": 1370,
                "end_year": 1526
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Professional soldiers.§REF§(Marozzi 2004, 1-2) Marozzi, J. 2004. Tamerlane. HarperCollinsPublishers. London.§REF§<br>However: \"Timur’s bureaucrats therefore resorted to the old trick of handing out vast tracts of land to relatives and favorites on the sole condition that the recipients make regular payments to the treasury.\"§REF§(Starr 2013) Starr, S. Frederick. 2013. Lost Enlightenment: Central Asia's Golden Age from the Arab Conquest to Tamerlane. Princeton University Press. Princeton.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 329,
            "polity": {
                "id": 353,
                "name": "ye_himyar_1",
                "long_name": "Himyar I",
                "start_year": 270,
                "end_year": 340
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The only professional soldiers were employed in the king's personal bodyguard.§REF§(Syvanne 2015, 134) Ilkka Syvanne. 2015. Military History of Late Rome 284-361. Pen and Sword. Barnsley.§REF§<br>\"The ancient Yemeni military structure consisted of four different elements: 1) the national troops called the Khamis under the king, or one of his generals; 2) levied troops from the highland communities; 3) cavalry (light and heavy); and 4) Bedouin allies/mercenaries. It is not known whether the Khamis consisted of professional soldiers or peasant conscripts, but the king's bodyguards certainly did consist of professionals.\"§REF§(Syvanne 2015, 134) Ilkka Syvanne. 2015. Military History of Late Rome 284-361. Pen and Sword. Barnsley.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 330,
            "polity": {
                "id": 354,
                "name": "ye_himyar_2",
                "long_name": "Himyar II",
                "start_year": 378,
                "end_year": 525
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The only professional soldiers were employed in the king's personal bodyguard.§REF§(Syvanne 2015, 134) Ilkka Syvanne. 2015. Military History of Late Rome 284-361. Pen and Sword. Barnsley.§REF§<br>\"The ancient Yemeni military structure consisted of four different elements: 1) the national troops called the Khamis under the king, or one of his generals; 2) levied troops from the highland communities; 3) cavalry (light and heavy); and 4) Bedouin allies/mercenaries. It is not known whether the Khamis consisted of professional soldiers or peasant conscripts, but the king's bodyguards certainly did consist of professionals.\"§REF§(Syvanne 2015, 134) Ilkka Syvanne. 2015. Military History of Late Rome 284-361. Pen and Sword. Barnsley.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 331,
            "polity": {
                "id": 541,
                "name": "ye_qasimid_dyn",
                "long_name": "Yemen - Qasimid Dynasty",
                "start_year": 1637,
                "end_year": 1805
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " 'The state the Qasimis formed in the midst of this was none the less impressive (for the rulers' genealogy see Fig. 6.1). Al-Qasim himself, who early in his fight against the Turks had wept over his children starving at Barat, was wealthy when the truce was signed. He built the mosque at Shaharah, then built houses for himself and his followers, planted coffee in al-Ahnum, and amassed more land than the public treasury (Nubdhah: 258, 334-6). The court expanded with the southern conquests. Al-Mutawakkil received an embassy from Ethiopia and exchanged gifts of fine horses with Aurangzib of India (Serjeant 1983: 80-1), while his relatives expressed concern about his monthly demands for funds from Lower Yemen. Further criticism of his taxation policy came from Muhammad al-Ghurbani at Barat, but in 1675 the levies on Lower Yemen were redoubled (ibid. 82). Under Muhammad Ahmad, 'He of al-Mawahib'\" (1687-1718), the exactions became more severe still, in support of a grandiose court and a large standing army complete with slave soldiers (ibid., Zabarah 1958: 451, 457; alShawkani 1929: ii. 98).' §REF§Dresch, Paul 1989. \"Tribes, Government and History in Yemen\", 200§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 332,
            "polity": {
                "id": 365,
                "name": "ye_warlords",
                "long_name": "Yemen - Era of Warlords",
                "start_year": 1038,
                "end_year": 1174
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " In the Sulayhid state: \"The queen was supported by two military chiefs - Amir Abu Himyar Saba ibn Ahmad of the Sulayhid family and Amir Abu l-Rabi' 'Amir ibn Sulayman of the Zawahi family - both in constant conflict with each other, thus weakening the Sulayhid state.\"§REF§(Hamdani 2006, 777) Hamdani, Abbas. Sulayhids. Josef W Meri ed. 2006. Medieval Islamic Civilization: An Encyclopedia. Volume 1, A - K, Index. Routledge. Abingdon.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 333,
            "polity": {
                "id": 637,
                "name": "so_adal_sultanate",
                "long_name": "Adal Sultanate",
                "start_year": 1375,
                "end_year": 1543
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "  “Precisely at the time when the Ethiopian throne was occupied by a series of under-aged princes, Adal was in the most capable hands of a powerful general called Mahfūz, who had dominated the political scene in Adal since the 1480s and who is variously given the title of imām, amīr and garad.” §REF§ (Tamrat 2008, 166) Tamrat, Taddesse. 2008. ‘Ethiopia, the Red Sea and the Horn’ In the Cambridge History of Africa: c. 1050 – c.1600 vol. 3. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp 98-182. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/search/Tamrat/titleCreatorYear/items/A68FCWWI/item-list §REF§ "
        },
        {
            "id": 334,
            "polity": {
                "id": 639,
                "name": "so_ajuran_sultanate",
                "long_name": "Ajuran Sultanate",
                "start_year": 1250,
                "end_year": 1700
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " “Another feature of Ajuran rule was a powerful armed, mounted army that policed the state and collected taxes, or ‘tributes,’ of cereal and livestock.” §REF§(Mukhtar 2003, 35) Mukhtar, Mohamed H. 2003. Historical Dictionary of Somalia. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/search/Mukhtar/titleCreatorYear/items/J8WZB6VI/item-list §REF§ "
        },
        {
            "id": 335,
            "polity": {
                "id": 660,
                "name": "ni_igodomingodo",
                "long_name": "Igodomingodo",
                "start_year": 900,
                "end_year": 1450
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " “The semblance of a military institution began to evolve during the reign of Ogiso Odoligie, the twenty-fourth king of the dynasty. He is reputed to have organised the first group of Benin warriors called Ivbiyokuo. Initially, the fighting force was restricted to the Avbiogbe but it was expanded to include all the Ighele age group, and this marked the beginning of a civic militia in Benin history. Thus, Odoligie became the first ruler in Benin to succeed in organising an army of his subjects. He was not a warrior king nor did he assign himself the responsibility of being the war commander of the army, nor was the Ezomo given the responsibility to be the commander of the Benin army. Rather, he created two new war chieftaincy titles, the Esagho ‘as the greatest war chief’ and the Olou as another ‘great war chief.’ They had the responsibility to co-ordinate and command the war leaders who were called Okakuo, and to also lead the militia in war. This was, indeed the birth of a really fighting force, although the extent in which they were trained in military discipline is not well known.” §REF§ Osadolor, O. B. (2001). The Military System of Benin Kingdom, c.1440–1897. University of Hamburg, Germany: 69. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/N4RZF5H5/collection§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 336,
            "polity": {
                "id": 661,
                "name": "ni_oyo_emp_2",
                "long_name": "Ilú-ọba Ọ̀yọ́",
                "start_year": 1601,
                "end_year": 1835
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The Are Ona Kakanfo, Eso, etc. There’s an implication that there was state apparatus to pay military personnel, too (this quote seems to refer to the Eso, not to lower-ranking sodiers): “Second was the military might of the imperial army, which was based on the mobility of its strong army. The army which was made up of the Esos, constituted the nucleus of the imperial army. Third was the power that the state derived from its control of the trade route from the savannah to the sea (Awe, 1960:11). From the toll collected from the traders, the state could pay the soldiers and equip them.” §REF§ Akinwumi, O. D. (1992). The Oyo-Borgu Military Alliance of 1835: A Case Study in the Pre-Colonial Military History. Transafrican Journal of History, 21, 159–170: 160–161. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/J42GPW63/collection§REF§ "
        },
        {
            "id": 337,
            "polity": {
                "id": 671,
                "name": "ni_dahomey_k",
                "long_name": "Foys",
                "start_year": 1715,
                "end_year": 1894
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " “The regular army consisted of fourteen regiments of about eight hundred men strong, and three brigades of Amazons amounting altogether to three thousand. Two officers, ranked as councillors, commanded the army. The Gau, the commander-in-chief, led the right wing. During the campaign he shared the prerogatives of the king. The Kposu, second-in-command, led the left wing. In peace-time the Gau came under the Migan, on the king’s right; the Kposu came under the Meu, on the king’s left.Regular soldiers wore blue-and-white tunics and were organized into regiments and companies, under the command of an officer, each with its own drums and standard. Veterans wore indigo tunics and were called atchi. Among the others, the more numerous were the fusiliers, who fought with bayonets, and the blunderbussmen, or agbaraya. The Ashanti company was the élite corps, formed of the king’s hunters. Lastly, there were companies of archers, armed with poisoned arrows, a cavalry company, and a few artillerymen.The Amazons were organized into two separate corps: a permanent army and a reserve. The reserve company guarded the capital, and especially the palace, in war-time. In the nineteenth century the Amazons were highly organized. They wore uniforms similar to the men’s: sleeveless tunics, with blue-and-white stripes, reached to the knees; baggy breeches were held in at the waist by a cartridge belt. Members of the king’s bodyguard wore a band of white ribbon about the forehead, embroidered with a blue crocodile. Amazons lived at the palace and belonged to the king, who recruited them from free Dahomeans and captives. They were celibate and were forbidden to marry until they reached middle age, when they still needed the king’s consent. In peace-time they saw to their own needs by manufacturing pots or carving calabashes; both crafts were their exclusive monopoly.During the campaign the Amazon army was organized into three groups: the Fanti company - royal bodyguard - constituted the main body, and the left and right wings came under female officers who corresponded to the Gau and Kposu of the male army. Individual companies were distinguished by the arms they carried: bayonets, muskets (each musketeer was accompanied by a carrier), and bows and arrows (borne by the youngest recruits). The élite corps, the Fanti company, consisted of the famed elephant huntresses, the boldest and toughest of the Amazons.” §REF§Lombard, J. (1976). The Kingdom of Dahomey. In West African Kingdoms in the Nineteenth Century (Repr, pp. 70–92). Published for the International African Institute by Oxford University Press; 86–88. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/T6WTVSHZ/collection§REF§ "
        },
        {
            "id": 338,
            "polity": {
                "id": 672,
                "name": "ni_benin_emp",
                "long_name": "Benin Empire",
                "start_year": 1140,
                "end_year": 1897
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " “Some enigie held official positions in the state military organization.” §REF§Bradbury, R. E. (1967). The Kingdom of Benin. In West African Kingdoms in the Nineteenth Century (Repr, pp. 1–35). Published for the International African Institute by Oxford University Press: 10. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/Z8DJIKP8/collection§REF§ “Nor was there any concentration of military offices in oneorder. There were two alternative commands, one led by Ezɔmɔ (Uzama) assisted by Ologbose; the other by Iyasɛ with Edogun (Ibiwe Nekhua) as his second-in-command. Their warriors were recruited by the fief-holders on the Oba’s instructions.” §REF§Bradbury, R. E. (1967). The Kingdom of Benin. In West African Kingdoms in the Nineteenth Century (Repr, pp. 1–35). Published for the International African Institute by Oxford University Press: 28. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/Z8DJIKP8/collection§REF§ Specifically taking about period 1440CE–1600CE: “Finally, the army high command was constituted by four officers: the Oba as Supreme Military Commander, Iyase as General Commander, Ezomo as Senior War Commander, and Edogun as a war chief and commander of the royal troops.” §REF§Osadolor, O. B. (2001). The Military System of Benin Kingdom, c.1440–1897. University of Hamburg, Germany: 94. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/N4RZF5H5/collection§REF§ Specifically referring to 1801CE–1897CE period: “The top four military officers in Benin Army were the Iyase, the Ezomo, the Edogun and the Ologbosere. Three were all hereditary positions except the Iyase whose role in the state was first political.” §REF§Osadolor, O. B. (2001). The Military System of Benin Kingdom, c.1440–1897. University of Hamburg, Germany: 187. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/N4RZF5H5/collection§REF§  "
        },
        {
            "id": 339,
            "polity": {
                "id": 683,
                "name": "ug_buganda_k_2",
                "long_name": "Buganda II",
                "start_year": 1717,
                "end_year": 1894
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"There was no standing army in pre-colonial Buganda, although as we shall see, there was by the nineteenth century a class of chiefs associated with military duties, while a measure of what we might call ‘part-time professionalism’ lay at the heart of the Ganda military ethos.\"§REF§(Reid 2010: 51) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/2H64W34U/collection.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 340,
            "polity": {
                "id": 685,
                "name": "ug_buganda_k_1",
                "long_name": "Buganda I",
                "start_year": 1408,
                "end_year": 1716
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"There was no standing army in pre-colonial Buganda, although as we shall see, there was by the nineteenth century a class of chiefs associated with military duties, while a measure of what we might call ‘part-time professionalism’ lay at the heart of the Ganda military ethos.\"§REF§(Reid 2010: 51) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/2H64W34U/collection.§REF§ "
        },
        {
            "id": 341,
            "polity": {
                "id": 688,
                "name": "ug_nkore_k_1",
                "long_name": "Nkore",
                "start_year": 1450,
                "end_year": 1749
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"For a 'conquest state', Ankole was singularly lacking in even a defensive military capacity and clearly had never developed the organized force for carrying out any but the most casual of raiding operations. The absence of a military system for the defense of the territorial integrity of Ankole further attests to the nature of the society as a congeries of pastoral clans with only the most rudimentary institutions of chieftainship down through the reign of Ntare IV.\"§REF§(Steinhart 1978: 138) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/D3FV7SKV/collection.§REF§ "
        },
        {
            "id": 342,
            "polity": {
                "id": 700,
                "name": "in_pandya_emp_1",
                "long_name": "Early Pandyas",
                "start_year": -300,
                "end_year": 300
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " “The military administration was efficiently organized and a regular army was associated with each ruler.” §REF§ (Jankiraman, 2020) Jankiraman, M. 2020. Perspectives in Indian History: From the Origins to AD 1857. Chennai: Notion Press. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/7F5SEVNA/items/N3D88RXF/collection §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 343,
            "polity": {
                "id": 608,
                "name": "gm_kaabu_emp",
                "long_name": "Kaabu",
                "start_year": 1500,
                "end_year": 1867
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The following quote--though not entirely reliable--suggests the possible existence of a standing army, which implies the existence of full-time professional military officers. \"Labat’s account was published in 1725, but refers to events at around 1700, and though clearly drawing on second-hand information is worth citing: '[In Kaabu] at the start of this century there was a king called Biram Mansaté who lived more splendidly and magnificently than all the other kings of the region. He [...] always had six or seven thousand soldiers well armed and ready for war, through which means he harrassed all of his neighbours, making them pay regular tributes and punishing those who refused to pay with military executions, or again making them pay double. He had such a powerful control of his States, and everything was so well controlled, that merchants could easily leave their goods on the main roads without fear that anyone would touch them”.\"§REF§Green 2009: 94) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/V2GTBN8A/collection.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 344,
            "polity": {
                "id": 620,
                "name": "bf_mossi_k_1",
                "long_name": "Mossi",
                "start_year": 1100,
                "end_year": 1897
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Inferred from the following quote, which refers to \"permanent\" military chiefs. \"There was never a regular Mossi army, although there were, of course, permanent military chiefs.\" §REF§(Zahan 1967: 171) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/TVIRPGXD/collection.§REF§ "
        },
        {
            "id": 345,
            "polity": {
                "id": 626,
                "name": "zi_mutapa",
                "long_name": "Mutapa",
                "start_year": 1450,
                "end_year": 1880
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Possibly present, as comments by Mazarire clearly imply a military organization of some kind – though not necessarily a fully specialized one. Comments from Portuguese primary records analysed by Livneh seem to more clearly imply specialization, but the European pre-conceptions of the Portuguese documents these perceptions are sourced from may be distorting the reality of the situation. “Mutapa Gatsi Rusere, who succeeded to the throne in 1586, suffered a number of setbacks, among them the Maravi invasions led by Kapambo and Chikanda. These had fuelled divisions in the Mutapa army and subsequently led to a revolt by its high-ranking staff, including the general, or mukomohasha.” §REF§ (Mazarire 2009, 16) Gerald C. Mazarire, “Reflections on Pre-Colonial Zimbabwe, c. 850-1880s,” in Becoming Zimbabwe: A History from the Pre-colonial Period to 2008, eds. Brian Raftopoulos &amp; A.S. Mlambo (Harare, Weaver: 2009). Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/B9TK7GP8/item-details §REF§ “When the Mutapa planned a military expedition, the account goes, he gathered his ‘mutumbus’, who are like dukes, marquises and barons, for a war council. The European titles would denote control over land, and high standing. These, accompanied by the ‘priest’, Simboti (Cimbote), and ‘war counsellors’ decided on the plan of the coming war. Then it was delivered into the hands of the three ‘generals’, who were responsible for carrying out the decisions.” §REF§ (Livneh 1976, 112) “Pre-Colonial Polities in Southern Zambesia and their Political Communications,” Doctoral Dissertation, University of London, 1976. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/CWC584VN/item-details §REF§  "
        },
        {
            "id": 346,
            "polity": {
                "id": 669,
                "name": "ni_hausa_k",
                "long_name": "Hausa bakwai",
                "start_year": 900,
                "end_year": 1808
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Full-time specialists “The role played by the horse in military affairs can also be seen from the number and rank of the titles pertaining to them, such as Ubandateakfi1 Madaki¡Madawaki (leader of the cavalry and/or commander-in-chief of the army) and Sarkin Dawaki (general in the cavalry division). The enhanced status of horses was also due to the innovations introduced by the acquisition oisulke (coats of mail) and the manufacture of lifidi (horse-trappings), whence the titles Sarkin Lifidi (general in the heavy cavalry division) and Lifidi (commander in-chief of the heavy cavalry division) which were among the highest ranking military officers.” §REF§Ogot, B. (Ed.). (1998). Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth century. Heinemann; University of California Press: 471. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/M4FMXZZW/collection§REF§ “The political, administrative and military aristocracy represented a uniform group which grew rich by various methods of exploitation, ranging from levies on the income derived from pillaging to almost mandatory political gifts.” §REF§Ogot, B. (Ed.). (1998). Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth century. Heinemann; University of California Press: 473. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/M4FMXZZW/collection§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 347,
            "polity": {
                "id": 687,
                "name": "Early Niynginya",
                "long_name": "Kingdom of Nyinginya",
                "start_year": 1650,
                "end_year": 1897
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \" In time, Ndori’s army became greater than that of his enemies and ended up including from four to six times more well trained warriors than the armies of other chiefs. Moreover, younger and stronger warriors were inducted into it whenever a new company was created. Each new company was instructed by one composed of veterans and learned from their experience so that after a few years the last recruits became the shock troops. Thanks to this organization, Ndori’s army surpassed by far the intore companies of its adversaries. Even royal security and military discipline benefited from the new organization, since it was no longer possible for a company to wield more than a small parcel of military power. True, every company maintained its internal esprit-decorps, but the size of the army reduced the effects of any indiscipline. Moreover, that size encouraged the appearance of an esprit-de-corps that expressed itself through its allegiance to the commander-in-chief. And finally, a first step toward a permanent army was taken when Ndori’s successor formed his new army from the last company of the preceding one).\"§REF§(Vansina 2004: 61) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/5J4MRHUB/collection.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 348,
            "polity": {
                "id": 611,
                "name": "si_mane_emp",
                "long_name": "Mane",
                "start_year": 1550,
                "end_year": 1650
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The following quote seems to suggest that military leaders also had secular functions. \"Traditionally the role of the Mende chief seens to have been that of a military leader, with absolute powers in secular matters, which were sometimes delegated to lieutenants in other parts of the chiefdoms.\" §REF§(Kup 1975: 37) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/36IUGEZV/collection.§REF§ "
        },
        {
            "id": 349,
            "polity": {
                "id": 612,
                "name": "ni_nok_1",
                "long_name": "Middle and Late Nok",
                "start_year": -1500,
                "end_year": -901
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Inferred from the following quote. \"In sum, we have not found unambiguous evidence of social complexity and the often suggested highly advanced social system of the Nok Culture. [...] As demonstrated by the uniformity of their material culture and their presumed belief system, most prominently reflected by the terracotta sculptures, external contacts within their culture must have existed. However, such a larger social network apparently was not organised and maintained in a way as to infer social inequality, social hierarchies or other signs of internal demarcation traceable by available archaeological data. None of the numerous excavations brought to light architectural remains of specified buildings or the spatial organisation of housing areas that might have been occupied by high-ranking members of the community. Further, among the admittedly few features interpreted as graves there is no evidence of any heterogeneity pointing to a difference between burials of elite members or commoners. Nowhere, an accumulation of valuable objects neither of iron nor any other materials signifying inequality in terms of property or prosperity was found.\" §REF§(Breunig and Ruppe 2016: 252) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/ES4TRU7R.§REF§ "
        },
        {
            "id": 350,
            "polity": {
                "id": 613,
                "name": "bf_west_burkina_faso_yellow_5",
                "long_name": "West Burkina Faso Yellow I",
                "start_year": 100,
                "end_year": 500
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Professional_military_officer",
            "professional_military_officer": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The following reconstruction of small communities consisting of extended families based in autonomous homesteads suggests minimal social diffrentiation. ”For the first 400 years of the settlement's history, Kirikongo was a single economically generalized social group (Figure 6). The occupants were self-sufficient farmers who cultivated grains and herded livestock, smelted and forged iron, opportunistically hunted, lived in puddled earthen structures with pounded clay floors, and fished in the seasonal drainages. [...] Since Kirikongo did not grow (at least not significantly) for over 400 years, it is likely that extra-community fissioning continually occurred to contribute to regional population growth, and it is also likely that Kirikongo itself was the result of budding from a previous homestead. However, with the small scale of settlement, the inhabitants of individual homesteads must have interacted with a wider community for social and demographic reasons. [...] It may be that generalized single-kin homesteads like Kirikongo were the societal model for a post-LSA expansion of farming peoples along the Nakambe (White Volta) and Mouhoun (Black Volta) River basins. A homestead settlement pattern would fit well with the transitional nature of early sedentary life, where societies are shifting from generalized reciprocity to more restricted and formalized group membership, and single-kin communities like Kirikongo's house (Mound 4) would be roughly the size of a band.”§REF§(Dueppen 2012: 27, 32)§REF§ "
        }
    ]
}