Agumba people

The Agumba (also Gumba) people were an ethnic group who inhabited the plains of what is now central Kenya, but are now either extinct or assimilated.

They are known only through the oral tradition of the Kikuyu and Ogiek peoples, who credit them as being the original inhabitants of the territory. The Agumba are described as being hunter-gatherers, and pygmiesAccording to Kikuyu descriptions, they worked with iron and made pottery, and were beekeepers. They are probably reated to the Khoisan peoples of Southern Africa, especially the hunter-gatherer San people/Bushmen

The Agumba, along with several other groups, were sometimes called the Dorobo by the Maasai and other cattle-herding groups. This derogatory term was also used in much of the early academic anthropological literature on the area.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.