'Xavier Coppolani' was a
French military and
colonial leader, who was instrumental in the colonial
occupation and creation of modern-day
Mauritania.
Born to
Corsican parents in French-ruled
Algeria, he was transferred to
Senegal to lead the expansion of colonial rule north of the
Senegal river, where
Moorish tribes held firm against French rule. Their tribal rivalries provided Coppolani with an opportunity, and in 1901, he drew up a plan for moving into the territory with a combination of military and political strategies.
Alliances were drawn up with two of the main
marabouts of the territory, Shaykh
Sidya Baba and
Shaykh Saad Bouh, local leaders of
Qadiriyya Sufi brotherhoods. They were promised a dominant role in the colonial administration and protection for their
Zawiya tribes against the attacks of
Hassane warriors. In return they would use their religious influence to persuade the local
emirs to accept French rule. With military pressure applied, the strategy worked, and the
emirates of
Tagant,
Trarza and
Brakna all accepted French rule in 1903-04. The last emirate, in the northern zone of
Adrar, proved combatative. It was also backed by a third influential Qadiriyya marabout,
shaykh Ma al-'Aynayn, himself in turn supported by the
Sultan of
Morocco.
Coppolani was preparing to march on Adrar when he was
assassinated in 1905, by a member of the shaykh's
Gudfiyya brotherhood. The emirate was eventually defeated and forcibly incorporated into Mauritania in 1912, by
General Gouraud, but tribal revolts and raids persisted until 1934.