Basimba people

The people who currently identify themselves as Basimba [1][2][3][4] or [5] BaShimba for many and Musimba [6] or MuShimba for singular are Bantu speaking, Community that exist in Uganda,[7] Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe , Haiti and DR Congo. Before the 13th Century they did maintain a shared identity as Basimba also defined in Swahili Language, as (a big lion),[8][9][10] associated with either these people or the place which they came from.

The name Basimba or BaShimba (also known as the big Lion)[11][12] was applied to the whole group by the early Ovambo people[13][14][15][16][17] as a nickname for the leopard totem Clan people also known as bena Ngo in Zambia[18][19][20][21][22] and in Uganda as abe Ngo.[23]

The founder of Buganda, Kato Kintu [24][25][26][27][28] in the 14th Century was the first Kabaka of the Kingdom of Buganda the father of Chwa I of Buganda in his immigration[29] to Buganda (by then known as Muwaawa), went with thirteen clans known as (Abalasangeye) under the Kintu dynasty,[30][31] and among these thirteen Clans was the Basimba Leopard (Ngo) Clan.[32][33][34] King Kateregga of Buganda,[35] between 1674-1680 C. at the current Butambala District, persecuted the Leopard (Ngo) Clan people killing four hundred of its members and causing others to conceal their Cultural identity. Given the pre-eminent role of the Leopard (Ngo) Clan in the Cult of Kintu, these people expected that in the event they were discovered to be briefly related to the Leopard (Ngo) Clan would have far reaching consequences and the same happened during Kabaka Jjunju of Buganda.

The Bashimba (Big Lion) of the Leopard totem Clan is a ruling Clan [36][37][38][39][40] among the Royal Clans [41] that moved from the Kingdom of Luba to Luapula Valley in Northern Rhodesia.

The leopard (Ngo) totem Clan is a Kingship group among the Basimba (Big Lion) people [42] which was persecuted so much in Buganda because of its royal links.[43][44][45][46] Among the many Leopard Clan branches, one of it was eligible for the throne. Reigning kings of Buganda would always capture this group and execute most of its men to reduce the risk of being overthrown.Clans give a sense of shared identity and descent to members.

After the death of Kabaka Nakibinge of Buganda,[47][48] his wife Nannono of the Leopard (Ngo) Clan between 1554 and 1556 AD, presided over as Kabaka for eighteen (18) month and the name Nabulya which literally means ‘I ate it’ insinuating I once took royal power was introduced in the Leopard (Ngo)Clan to remind other Clans in Buganda that a woman from the Leopard totem Clan once had power in Buganda Kingdom.

Migration and Settlement

Although little history has been known about the Basimba (Big Lion) people, more needs to be said because of their very close historical connection with the BaShimba [49] who all belong to the Leopard (Ngo) Clan. Most Basimba people claim their origin lies in the Congo, among the Luba people of the Kingdom of Luba. Little is actually known about these immigrants, but traces of their history are found in the legend of the Tabwa[50] ancestor.

Kyomba the ancestor of the Tabwa, a legendary man existed and lived on the Eastern shores of Lake Tanganyika. Faced with Hamitic pressures in the North and the people from the South to South, Kyomba and his companions crossed Lake Tanganyika by migrating to the Western shores of the Lake. Then Kyomba and his companions emigrated after the conspiracy mounted and hatched against him to the West and reached the shores of Lake Kivu. Then they crossed the Ruzizi and arrived Maniema and on the banks of river Lualaba to the second half of the 16th Century. Fanger son of Kyomba and his companions continued their migration up the river while others went elsewhere. The name Tumanya means “those that have followed the route by water’’ and Bena Kilunga means “those who followed the path on land in their migration”. The Bena Kilunga group migrated to the eastern banks of the Lualaba River and Lukunga River, together with Buanza, Mumba and the Basimba people.[51][52]

The Tumanya group migrated to Ankori or the Nkole people [53] and eastwards following the Luvua (Lualaba) while their companions Lualaba River to back the lagoons in Upemba Depression. It was around the 17th Century when the gradual arrival of people in the mountains from the plains of Lualaba Kamalondo and named these "Kundelungu" Mountains.[54][55] Finally, Tanga and his father Kyomba further migrated across the Luapula at the current location of the position of Kasenga and settled in southern Tanganyika where they were joined by members of Zimba Clan. [56][57] , avoiding quarrels will Movwe who migrated to the Marungu highlands.

The Basimba or BaShimba immigrants seem to have come in ethnic groups under the leadership of Mambwe, Mauwe,[58] Katunku, Ngulya, Mwati, Kaabya, Ntembe, Namuyonjo, Kabolesa, Kitembwa and Kooli among others. When these people reached Luapula Valley the current Luapula Province in Zambia, Mwanza Region, Northern Tanzania and at Butambala in Uganda, they decided to settle and the leader became the family or the Clan head. As the Basimba or BaShimba settlement grew the original leader, after several generation, became to his descendants as mythical.

Basimba or BaShimba people are recognized to be indigenous peoples,[59][60] because they were the first comers among the immigrants in Zambia or Northern Rhodesia by then and in Tanzania,[61] According to local tradition the original inhabitants were a Clan called the Basimba who lived in the area of Busere on Ukara Island, in the South-East corner of Lake Victoria, but it is not known what language they spoke and there are none of their descendants surviving. Tradition makes no mention of fighting between the Basimba immigrants and the people whom they found in Uhaya in Tanzania and at Butambala in Uganda. The Bashimba of the (Leopard clan) successfully resisted Nkuba [62] in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia).

Original homeland

The original homeland of the Basimba [63] or BaShimba [64] people or their ancestry is shrouded in myths and legends. Whereas they seem to have lost contact with their original ancestors in Congo among the Luba people,leading to a cluster of Basimba (Big Lion) people migrate Northwards from Mweru – Luapula to Mwanza Region eventually erecting Human settlement's among the Haya people in Tanzania, then at Butambala District in the central region of Uganda, Buddu [65] in Masaka District, Ntakaiwolu in Busoga, Mpogo in Sironko District, Butaleja District and at Lupada, Naboa,[66] Budaka District, among the Gwere people, in the Eastern parts of Uganda. Other Bashimba people settled in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia) which was part of Zimbabwe.

Culture

The Basimba practice the culture of performing rituals and ceremonies of the Chishimba spirit similar to the,[67][68] Loa or kongo loa culture practiced by the Basimba people of Haiti who were sold in slavery in Haiti from Congo.

The Basimba (Big Lion) people in Uganda maintain the Basimba Spiritual stone, this stone represents the Chishimba spirit and is related to the institution of kingship. Its absence constitutes the absence of political power. According to Traditional African religions, the Chishimba spirit is synonymous to kingship and similar to the Kintu cult practiced by the leopard (Ngo) Clan people in Buganda. The Chishimba is kept in a specially prepared basket called ichipe ca calo—the basket of the nation or land. It is wrapped with bark cloth and kept in a specifically prepared shrine (ing’anda yaba Ba Chishimba or esawo lye ejjembe lya Basimba) dedicated to the spirit.[69][70][71][72]

Basimba people worked with Bunyoro-Kitara Kingdom's Priest in charge of the sacred pool of Muntebere. Each year the Bunyoro King sent a young slave-woman, two cows and a white sheep to the Priest. The slave-woman was given as a wife to one of the Abasimba Clan who was a servant of the Priest.

The Abasimba Dance

The abasimba dance of the Basimba people is a hunting dance performed by the Wajita or Jita people of Ukerewe Island.[73][74][75][76][77]

The Basimba people Clan names of Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia are named after their lineal ancestors.

Beliefs

Nowadays, between 40% to 50% of the Basimba people are Christians[78][79][80][81] and 50% are Muslim.[82] Besides that, traditional beliefs are very widespread among them. The most important features are ancestor-worship (the term is called inappropriate by some authors) and totemism.

The Basimba of Kisangani who martyred Dr. Paul Carison of the Christ Church during the Congo Crisis of 1964 to 1965 participated in the Simba Rebellion that was later defeated.[83]

Ancestors

According to Basimba tradition, an afterlife does take place in another world, it is another form of existence in another world. The Basimba attitude towards dead ancestors is very similar to that towards living parents and grandparents. There is a famous ritual to contact the dead ancestors that is practiced by the Basimba people.[84] It is similar to Haitian Vodou art related to Loa a Haitian vodou [85][86][87][88][89][90][91] religion practiced by the Basimba people of Haiti an Island that was proclaimed by Napoleon as an independent republic in 1804 and often lasts all night.

Totems

Basimba totems (muziro) have been in use among the Basimba people since the initial development of their culture. Totems identify the different clans among the Basimba people that historically made up the dynasties of their ancient civilization. There are seven different totems that have been identified among the Basimba (Big Lion)people in Zimbabwe, Congo, Zambia and Uganda , such as the Basimba among the Haya Tribe in Tanzania,.[92] People of the same Clan use a common set of totems usually animals or birds.[93][94][95][96]

Examples of animal totems include Ngo/mbwili (Leopard),[97] Leopard Cat, Genet Cat which in the Lega language is known as Musimba[98][99] and also known as Kasimba in luganda language and known as Zimba in the Luba language and Nshimba in the Bemba language, Lion (Mpologoma), Mbwa (Dog), Kikere (Frog) and Nkoko (Rooster). People of the same totem are the descendants of one common ancestor (the founder of that totem) and thus are not allowed to marry or have an intimate relationship. The totems cross regional groupings and therefore provide a wall for development of ethnic group among the Basimba.

Basimba chiefs are required to be able to recite the history of their totem group right from the initial founder before they can be sworn in as chiefs.

Orphans

The totem system is a severe problem for many orphan, especially for Basimba or BaShimba women[100] married to other Clans. The Basimba people are afraid of being punished by ghosts, if they violate rules connected with the unknown totem of a foundling. Therefore, it is very difficult to find adoptive parents for such children. And if the foundlings have grown up, they have problems getting married and on their death they are not buried on the Basimba ancestral grounds.

Burials

The identification by totem has very important ramifications at traditional ceremonies such as the Basimba burial ceremony. A person with a different totem cannot initiate burial of the deceased. A person of the same totem, even when coming from a different tribe, can initiate burial of the deceased. For example, a Muganda of the Ngo (Leopard) totem can initiate burial of a Musimba of the Leopard totem and that is perfectly acceptable in Basimba tradition. But a Musimba of a different totem cannot perform the ritual functions required to initiate burial of the deceased.

If a person initiates the burial of a person of a different totem, he runs the risk of being asked to pay a fine to the family of the deceased. Such fines traditionally were paid with cattle or goats but nowadays substantial amounts of money can be asked for. If they bury their dead family members, they would come back at some point to cleanse the stone of the burial.

Basimba Clan groups

The Basimba people consider themselves subjects of the Chishimba, the Basimba's single paramount Chief. These Basimba people lived in villages of 50 to 100 people and are now numbering to 100,000 in number by 2016. There are seven Basimba (Big Lion) people Clan groups named after animals[101][102][103] and these are:-

  1. The Leopard, (Ngo) Clan.
  2. The Leopard Cat Clan.
  3. The Genet Cat (Kasimba) Clan.
  4. The Lion,(Mpologoma) Clan.
  5. The Frog Clan.
  6. The Dog Clan.
  7. The Rooster Clan.

Some of the Basimba people migrated northwards from Luapula valley after the disintegration of the Shila states and others remained in Northern Rhodesia currently known as BaShimba or abeena Ngo (Leopard) totem Clan. The BaShimba Leopard totem Clan is a ruling clan among the Lungu and Bemba.

Countries Basimba People Exist

Basimba or BaShimba[104] people exist in Zambia formerly known as Northern Rhodesia, Zimbabwe, Uganda, Haiti,DR Congo and Tanzania. For example, the omugurusi of the Basimba clan is Mauwe who on the day of his birth a dog had puppies. This dog often washed Mauwe as a child by licking him. Mauwe later out of gratitude, ordered his descendants to consider the dog as their friend, the word "Basimba" or "BaShimba" actually has several meanings. It may designate people of Basimba people origin regardless of where they live e.g. whether they live in urban areas or in the original rural Basimba areas of Mpogo, Sironko , Lupada, Naboa in Budaka District or Butambala District, Mooni,Mbale District[105] in Uganda, Luapula Valley in Zambia or Northern Rhodesia and Kagera Region among the Haya tribe in Bugorora Ward or County of Missenyi District in Tanzania. The original language of the Basimba people is unknown.

The BaShimba people living in Zambia's Northern province, among the Lungu and Bemba tribes speak the language which is most closely related to the Bantu languages the Lungu and ChiBemba (in Zambia and the DRC), Haya (in Tanzania) and Luganda of the Baganda and Lugwere of the Gwere people (in Uganda). In Uganda, Luganda is mainly spoken in the central and eastern parts of Uganda, and has become the most widely spoken language in the Country, although not always as a first language.

Genealogy

The History or Genealogy of the Basimba (Big Lion) people has given rise to numerous debates among historians to whether the Basimba people of the Leopard (Ngo) Clan in Uganda come with Kabaka, Kato Kintu[106][107] in the 14th Century or migrated either direct from Congo or Luapula valley to Uganda.[108][109][110]

Some historians, anthropologists and sociologists like David William Cohen, Ian George Cunnison,Hans Cory, Mwelwa Chambika Musambachine, Gideon Were,Stephen Kyeyune, Tausir Niane, Mary Douglas, M. Hartnoll, Dr. Schinz and Fisher A. B among others have written books about Basimba people but have not stated the names of the Basimba ancestors who left the Luba people in Congo and migrated to places like Zambia, Zimbabwe, Tanzania and Uganda. Some historians who have written History of Africa books, use imprecise narrative documents to make estimates which must be treated with caution. Societies like Anthropological Society of London and Ethnological Society of London have also not yet published a full physical or cultural aspects of the Basimba people or due to the pronunciation of the name Basimba as Vazimba who migrated from East Africa and settled in Madagascar.[111] The Vazimba are kinsmen of the Ba-Simba.[112][113][114][115][116][117][118][119][120][121][122][123][124][125][126][127][128][129][130][131][132][133][134][135][136][137][138][139][140]

References

  1. The Bakitara, Cambridge University Press, 1923, p. 235
  2. Anthologia Anthropologica: The Native Races of Africa and Madagascar; a Copious Selection of Passages for the Study of Social Anthropology, from the Manuscript Note Books of Sir James George Frazer ..., P. Lund, Humphries, & Company, Limited, 1938, p. 334
  3. Harmsworth History of the World: Man and the universe. Japan. Siberia. China, Carmelite House, 1907, pp. 322,325
  4. Tanganyika Notes and Records: Issues 38-50, Tanganyika Society, 1955, p. 167
  5. The Luapula Peoples of Northern Rhodesia:Customs and History in Tribal Politics, Manchester University Press, 1959, pp. 63–64
  6. A Gazetteer of Ethnology, Maruzen-Kabushiki-Kaisha, 1908, pp. 55, 56
  7. The pre-colonial history of the salt lakes region of south western Uganda, c.1000-1900 A.D., Gideon S. Were Press, 1995, p. 305
  8. Proceedings-Indian History Congress, Indian History Congress, 1970, p. 58
  9. Modern Swahili Grammar, East African Educational Publisher Ltd, 2001, p. 42
  10. Philosophy, oral tradition and Africanistics: a survey of the ..., P. Lang, 1994, pp. 129, 137
  11. Allegorical Speculation in an Oral Society: The Tabwa Narrative ..., University of California Press, 1989, p. 20
  12. Peoples of the Lake Nyasa Region - Parts 1-3, International African Institute, 1950, p. 80
  13. Journal of African zoology, Volume 92, M.P. Basilewsky, 1978, p. 646
  14. Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography, Volume 8, Edward Stanford, 1886, p. 650
  15. Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography, Volume 8, Edward Stanford, 1886, p. 650
  16. Lantern, Volume 37, Adult Education Division, Union Education Department, 1988, p. 60
  17. Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography, Volume 8, Edward Stanford, 1886, p. 650
  18. The tribes of Zambia, the University of California, 2011, p. 38
  19. The Peoples of Zambia, Heinemann Educational, 1978, pp. 68,86
  20. The Tribes of Northern Rhodesia, Government Printer, South Africa, 1956, p. 31
  21. The tribes of Zambia, University of California, 1978, p. 38
  22. The Peoples of Zambia, Heinemann Educational, 1978, p. 68
  23. Conflict in Africa: Concepts and Realities, Princeton University Press, 2015, p. 173
  24. shaping the Society Christianity and Culiture: Special Reference to the African Culture of Buganda, Author House, 2012, p. 94
  25. The historical tradition of Busoga, Mukama and Kintu, Clarendon Press, 1972, pp. 86,87,88
  26. Chronology, migration, and drought in interlacustrine Africa, Africana Pub. Co, 1978, p. 150
  27. Afrique des Grands lacs, Zone Books, 2003, p. 113
  28. Myth, Ritual, and Kingship in Buganda, Oxford University Press, 1991, p. 95
  29. History of Buganda: From the Foundation of the Kingdom To 1900, Africana Publishing Company, 1972, pp. 35, 94, 95
  30. Expanding frontiers of African history: the inter-disciplinary ..., University of Calabar Press, 1988, p. 153
  31. The Bitter Bread of Exile: The Financial Problems of Sir Edward Mutesa II, Progressive Publishing House, 2013, p. 6
  32. Beyond the Royal Gaze: Clanship and Public Healing in Buganda, University of Virginia Press, 2010, pp. 36,37,38,39
  33. Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century, James Currey, 1959, p. 208
  34. Kingship and State: The Buganda Dynasty, Cambridge University Press, 2002, pp. 102, 117, 118, 173, 187, 211, 213
  35. The Kings of Buganda, East African Publishing House, 1971, p. 42
  36. Zambia Museums Journal - Volume 8, National Museums of Zambia, 2003, p. 80
  37. Ba Shiru - Volume 12, Issue 1 - Volume 13, Issue 1, University of California Press, 1981, p. 60
  38. The New Diffusionist, Volume 2, New Diffusionist Press, 1972, p. 7
  39. The Azande: and related peoples of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan and Belgian Congo, Issues 7-9, International African Institute, 1953, p. 65
  40. Ethnographic survey of Africa; East Central Africa, Parts 9-13, Published for the International African institute by the Oxford university press, 1953, pp. 65,137,138
  41. Changing Roles: The History of the Development and Disintegration of Nkuba's Shila State to 1740, University of Wisconsin, 1976, pp. 27,28
  42. Twenty Five Years in East Africa, Cambridge University Press, 1921, p. 167
  43. Chronology, migration, and drought in interlacustrine Africa, Africana Pub. Co, 1979, p. 150
  44. Twenty-five Years in East Africa, Cambridge University Press, 1985, p. 167
  45. The Handbook of Uganda, government of the Uganda Protectorate, 1913, p. 90
  46. The Handbook of Uganda, government of the Uganda Protectorate, 1920, p. 129
  47. "The History And Life of Kabaka Nakibinge". Royalark.net. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  48. "Ssekabaka Nakibinge Is Buried At Kongojje, Busiro". Buganda.com. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  49. Mutomboko Ceremony and the Lunda-Kazembe Dynasty, Kenneth Kaunda Foundation, 1989, pp. 89,95,103
  50. Zambia Museums Journal - Volume 8, National Museums of Zambia, 2003, p. 1
  51. A history of the Bemba: political growth and change in north-eastern Zambia before 1900, University of Wisconsin Press, 1973, pp. 152, 401, 410
  52. Tabwa: The Rising of a New Moon, a Century of Tabwa Art, University of Michigan Museum of Art, 1985, p. 88
  53. African Concord, Issues 72-96, Concord Press of Nigeria, 1986, p. 20
  54. The Meteorology and Climate of Tropical Africa, Springer, 2008, p. 402
  55. Gift: Economy, Society, and Environment in Central Africa, University of Wisconsin Press, 2006, p. 12
  56. Tabwa: The Rising of a New Moon, a Century of Tabwa Art, University of Michigan Museum of Art, 1985, p. 9
  57. Memory: Luba art and the making of history, Museum for African Art, 1996, p. 230
  58. Customary Law of the Haya Tribe, Tanganyika Territory, Negro University Press, 1945, pp. 307,348,349,350
  59. Ethnographic survey of Africa; East Central Africa, Parts 9-13, Oxford university press, 1953, p. 137
  60. Ethnographic Survey of Africa, Volume 2, Issue 13, International African Institute, 1962, p. 137
  61. "Tanzania Notes and Records". 1956: 54.
  62. Ethnographic Survey of Africa: East Central Africa, Parts 1-4, International African Institute, 1950, p. 80
  63. man past and present, Cambridge University Press, 1989, p. 250
  64. Allegorical Speculation in an Oral Society: The Tabwa Narrative ..., Volume 122, University of California Press, 1989, p. 20
  65. The historical tradition of Busoga, Mukama and Kintu, Clarendon Press, 1972, pp. 86,87,88,93,95
  66. A History of African Motherhood: The Case of Uganda, 700-1900, Cambridge University Press, 2013, p. 163
  67. Questioning Misfortune: The Pragmatics of Uncertainty in Eastern Uganda, Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 128
  68. The Book of Life, Knowledge and Confidence, Pacific Press, 2012, p. 112
  69. A Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo, Duke University Press, 1999, pp. 288,314,410,463
  70. African Study Monographs, Volumes 24-25, Research Committee for African Area Studies, 2003, p. 61
  71. African Arts, Volume 36, African Studies Center, University of California, Los Angeles, 2003, p. 36
  72. Emblems of Passage: Art of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas : Selections from Friends of Ethnic Art Members' Collections, Museum of Craft & Folk Art, 2002, p. 40
  73. World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theater: Africa, Routledge, 2013, p. 300
  74. Mashindano!: Competitive Music Performance in East Africa, Mkuki na Nyota Publishers, 2000, p. 180
  75. Continuum Companion to Twentieth Century Theatre, A & C Black, 2006, p. 746
  76. Publication, Issue 20, The Institute, 1981, p. 118
  77. Mutomboko Ceremony and the Lunda-Kazembe Dynasty, Kenneth Kaunda Foundation, 1989, pp. 96,97
  78. Annual Report of the American Bible Society, American Bible Society, 1971, p. 58
  79. Zaire Church News-Volumes 1-60, Congo Protestant Council, 1912, p. 60
  80. The Baptist Quarterly: Incorporating the Transactions of the Baptist Historical Society, Issues 1-8, Baptists, 1972, p. 60
  81. Church, Clan and the World, Gleerup, 1974, p. 22
  82. Women Writing Africa: The eastern region, Feminist Press at the City University of New York, 2007, p. 255
  83. Annual Report of the American Bible Society, Volume 156, American Bible Society, 1971, p. 58
  84. Questioning Misfortune: The Pragmatics of Uncertainty in Eastern Uganda, Cambridge University Press, p. 126
  85. Full Guide to Becoming a Real Wizard, Witch Or Necromancer, Lulu. com, 2009, p. 62
  86. Doo Doo That Voodo, Pedia Press, p. 1
  87. Mythologies, Pedia Press, p. 496
  88. Creole Religions of the Caribbean: An Introduction from Vodou and ., NYU Press, 2003, p. 102
  89. Hegel, Haiti,: And Universal History, University of Pittsburgh Press, 2009, p. 129
  90. Roots of Haiti's Vodou-Christian Faith: African and Catholic ..., ABC-CLIO, 2014, p. 73
  91. The Spirits and the Law: Vodou and Power in Haiti, University of Chicago Press, 2011, p. 260
  92. Origins of Kingship, Traditions and Symbolism in the Great Lakes Region of Africa, Coronet Books Incorporated, 2008, p. 89
  93. Africa and the Wider World: East, central, and southern Africa since 1800, Longman Nigeria, 1965, pp. 45,118
  94. South African Journal of Science: Being the Organ of the South African Association for the Advancement of Science, Volumes 17-18, South African Association for the Advancement of Science, 1920, p. 220
  95. The Encyclopædia Britannica - Volume 22, Encyclopædia britannica Company, Limited, 1929, pp. 300,316
  96. Encyclopædia Britannica: A New Survey of Universal Knowledge, Volume 22, Encyclopædia Britannica, 1956, p. 318
  97. Totemism and Exogamy, Vol. II (in Four Volumes), Cosmo, Inc., 2013, p. 624
  98. Lega Culture; Art, Initiation, and Moral Philosophy Among a Central African ..., University of California Press, 1973, p. 146
  99. Africa-Tervuren, Volume 25, Amis du Musée royal de l'Afrique centrale, 1979, p. 77
  100. A Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo, Duke University Press, 1999, p. 288
  101. The Oxford Encyclopedia of African Thought: Abol-impe, Volume 1=, Oxford University Press, 2010, p. 382
  102. The Native Races of Africa and Madagascar, the University of Michigan, 1938, p. 321
  103. Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics-Volume 2, Scribner, 1957, pp. 352, 353
  104. Works Issued by the Hakluyt Society, The Society, 1901, p. 207
  105. Keeping The Faith, Lulu.com, 2017, p. 183
  106. People's Names: A Cross-cultural Reference Guide to the Proper Use ..., McFarland & Company, 1997, p. 305
  107. Dictionary of African Historical Biography, University of California Press, 1989, pp. 72, 109
  108. Tanganyika Notes and Records: Issues 13-20, Tanganyika Society, 1942, p. 3
  109. Tanganyika Notes and Records: Issues 13-18, Tanganyika Society, 1942, p. 3
  110. From Blessing to Violence: History and Ideology in the Circumcision Ritual ..., Cambridge University Press, 1986, p. 42
  111. Ancestors, Power and History in Madagascar, BRILL, 1999, p. 330
  112. The Earth and Its Inhabitants …: South and East Africa, University of California, 1895, p. 447
  113. Man, Past and Present, University Press, 1900, p. 250
  114. Movement, Borders and Identities in Africa, University of Rochester Press, 2009, p. 275
  115. Medieval Africa, 1250-1800, Cambridge University Press, 2001, p. 190
  116. Between Five Lines: The Development of Ethnicity in Tanzania with ..., Nordic Africa Institute, 1997, p. 97
  117. African Abstracts: Bulletin Analytique Africaniste-Issues 6-7, International African Institute, 1955, p. 36
  118. Early Kingdoms in Madagascar, 1600-1700, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1970, p. 45
  119. Letters from Kenya and Tanzania to Institute of Current World Affairs, 1954, p. 22
  120. Tanganyika Notes and Records – Issues 56-61, Tanganyika Society, 1961, p. 172
  121. Nada: the Southern Rhodesia Native Affairs Department Annual, Issue 28, Southern Rhodesia Dept of Native Affiairs, 1951, pp. 58,59
  122. Memory: Luba art and the making of History, Museum for African Art, 1996, p. 230
  123. Zaire, the political economy of underdevelopment, Praeger, 1979, p. 216
  124. Rebellion and Social Protest in Africa: Ninth Annual Spring..., African Studies Program, 1982, pp. 21,22,23,33
  125. The Creation of Tribalism in Southern Africa, University of California Press, 1989, p. 205
  126. Tanganyika Notes and Records-Issues 56-61, Tanzania Society, 1961, p. 172
  127. Tanzania Notes and Records – Issues 77-80, Tanzania Society, 1976, p. 49
  128. Ancestors, Power and History in Madagascar, BRILL, 1999, p. 330
  129. Lost People: Magic and the Legacy of Slavery in Madagascar, Indiana University Press, 2007, p. 220
  130. Ancestral Encounters in Highland Madagascar: Material Signs and Traces of ..., Cambridge University Press, 2014, p. 245
  131. Antananarivo Annual and Madagascar Magazine: A Record of Information on ... Madagascar, Issues 5-8, Press of the London missionary society, 1881, pp. 23,27,124
  132. The Antananarvio Annual and Madagascar Magazine, Volume 2, Issues 5-8, London Missionary Society Press, 1896, pp. 223, 224, 227
  133. East Africa and the Orient: Cultural Syntheses in Pre-Colonial Times, Africana Publishing Company, 1975, pp. 175, 181, 186
  134. Beckett in Black and Red: The Translations for Nancy Cunard's Negro, The University Press of Kentucky, 2015, p. 75
  135. Madagascar, Mauritius and Other East African Islands, S. Sonnenschein, 1901, pp. 61,62
  136. Historical Traditions and the Foundations of Monarchy in Imerina, University of California, 1975, pp. 36, 37, 367
  137. Madagascar and France: With some account of the Island, Its people, Religious Tract Society, 1885, pp. 49,50
  138. East African Protectorate, Psychology Press, 1966, p. 16
  139. The African Dispersal in the Deccan: From Medieval To Modern Times, Orient Balckswan, 1996, p. 33
  140. David Griffith and the Missionary “History of madagascar”, BRILL, 2012, p. 529
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.