Extractions: Choose Your Destination A Afghanistan Albania Algeria Angola Antigua Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Azerbaijan B Bahamas Bahrain Bangladesh Barbados Belarus Belgium Belize Benin Bermuda Bolivia Bosnia Botswana Brazil British Virgin Islands Brunei Durassalam Burkina Faso Bulgaria Burundi C Cambodia Cameroon Canada Cape Verde Cayman Islands C. A. R. Chad China Chile Congo Cote d'Ivoire Colombia Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic D Denmark Djibouti Dominica Dominican Republic D.R. of Congo E Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Eritrea Estonia Ethiopia Equatorial Guinea F Finland France G Gabon Gambia Georgia Germany Ghana Graet Britain Greece Grenada Guam Guatemala Guinea Guinea-Bissau Guyana H Haiti Honduras Hong Kong Hungary I Iceland India Indonesia Israel Italy Iran Iraq Ireland Ivory Coast J Jamaica Japan Jordan K Kazakhstan Kenya Kiribati Korea, South
The Center For Global Tolerance & Engagement: World Fast Facts Ethnicities, 35% fang, 29% Other Bantu, 25% Eshira, 9% European Density, 39 people per square km. Religions, 52% indigenous beliefs, 40% Muslim, 8% Christian. http://www.mc.maricopa.edu/dept/d34/cgte/cgtegcty.html
Extractions: FAST FACTS Location West Africa Capital Banjul Population 1.9 Million Density 119 people per square km Urban/Rural Split 26% Urban, 74% Rural Languages Mandinka, Fulani, Wolof, Diola, Soninke, English Religions No statistics Ethnicities 42% Mandingo, 18% Fulani, 16% Wolof, 10% Jola, 9% Serahuli, 5% Other
The Center For Global Tolerance & Engagement: World Fast Facts Languages, fang, Bulu, Yaounde, Duala, Mbum, Fulani, Pidgin English French origin, 20% Other European, 4% indigenous Indian and Density, 103 people per square km. http://www.mc.maricopa.edu/dept/d34/cgte/cgteccty.html
Extractions: FAST FACTS Location Southeast Asia Capital Phnom Penh Population 10.8 Million Density 61 people per square km Urban/Rural Split 21% Urban, 79% Rural Languages Khmer, French, Chinese, Vietnamese, Cham Religions 95% Theravada Buddhism, 5% Other Ethnicities 94% Khmer, 4% Chinese, 1% Vietnamese, 1% Other FAST FACTS Location West Africa Capital Yaounde Population 14.3 Million Density 31 people per square km Urban/Rural Split 45% Urban, 55% Rural Languages Fang, Bulu, Yaounde, Duala, Mbum, Fulani, Pidgin English, French, English Religions 35% Roman Catholic, 25% Traditional beliefs, 22% Muslim, 18% Protestant Ethnicities No statistics FAST FACTS Location North America Capital Ottawa Population 30.2 Million Density 3 people per square km Urban/Rural Split 77% Urban, 23% Rural Languages English, French, Chinese, Italian, German, Ukranian, Portuguese, Inuktitut, Cree Religions 47% Roman Catholic, 41% Protestant, 12% Non-religious Ethnicities 44% British origin, 25% French origin, 20% Other European, 4% Indigenous Indian and Innuit
Gorilla Trek Background Today, mainly manioc and bananas, which are not indigenous to this people during the Middle Stone Age and 26,000 people during the The largest is the fang. http://www.ewatravel.com/gorilla_trek_background.htm
Extractions: Background Gabon (formerly French Equatorial Africa) is home to the world's second largest area of tropical rainforest and is located on the Equator at the coast of central, west Africa. The nation has the highest per capita income in all of Africa due to its rich oil, timber, manganese, diamond and gold reserves and is also the location where Dr. Albert Schweitzer established his hospital over 80 years ago (still in operation). Gabon's forests contain a fabulous wealth and variety of flora and wildlife. Lopé National Park Our Gorilla Trek safari is centered in Lopé National Park, a protected area of 5,000 km² in central Gabon. Lopé consists of open land savannah surrounded with dense forests with small creeks that run through the reserve. Lopé has a relatively dry climate compared to most other equatorial rain forests because of its position in the rain shadow of the Chaillu mountain range. The entire southern area is covered by primary forest. Its fauna is typical for central Africa forests: primates, antelopes, buffalos, elephants. It has several emblematic primate species including gorillas, chimpanzees, mandrills, black colubus monkeys and the endemic, sun-tailed monkey, discovered in 1984. In Lopé some of the oldest traces of human artifacts in central Africa can be found dating from 400,000 years ago.
Typophile Forums: Foreign Languages Fonts taught in schools) Gabon French (official), fang, Myene, Bateke the first language of most people is one Tonga, and about 70 other indigenous languages Zimbabwe http://www.typophile.com/forums/messages/14800/18836.html?1072891891
Search Lead Directory Malawi Namibia - Niger - Nigeria - Rwanda - Sudan - Senegal - Somalia - Seychelles - Tanzania - South africa - Zambia - Zimbabwe fang Yan, Send a message. http://www.virtualcentre.org/ru/who/search.asp?bt=5
Extractions: view this site in If you can't find it here, you can't find it anywhere! Home Help Contact Us Privacy ... Checkout Super Bargains Academic Computers / Notebooks Dictionary ESL-English as Second Language Games Gift Items! Handheld Dictionary Karaoke Keyboard Stickers Keyboards Kids Learn Microsoft Office Microsoft Windows Movies/Videos Software - Mac Software - Windows Spell Checking Translation More... Cameroon
BBPP: Bubis, Bioko's Indigenous Tribe Bioko s indigenous Bubi Tribe. saying, The Bubi have no grandparents, the older people of the tribe slain during the murderous regime of fang dictator Macias http://www.bioko.org/bubi/
Extractions: B I O K O H O M E Its original name, bestowed by a Portuguese sailor in 1472, was Formosa (the beautiful). When noted English explorer Henry M. Stanley saw it in 1884, the natural beauty of Bioko Island, to him, was "extraordinary ... the pearl of the Gulf of Guinea." With its towering volcanic peaks, thick, green-velvet blanket of lush rainforests and distinctive black sand beaches, Bioko is indeed a picture of tropical paradise. And to that paradise, some 3,000 years ago, fighting brutal surf in hand-dug canoes, came the original inhabitants the Bubi tribe. Isolated on their island, they formed a society, language and religion that was theirs alone, different from their mainland Bantu relatives and left to develop, undisturbed. Even slave-hunting, resource-hungry Europeans were intimidated by the Bubi's legendary savagery, more likely to take their vessels to the comparatively easy trading and slaving offered on the mainland West Africa shoreline. "A savage and cruel people live there," wrote a Portuguese explorer in the mid 1700's. But if they had openly welcomed the white men in huge vessels, the Bubi most likely would have found themselves shackled in the bowels of those boats, bound for New World plantations.
World Music Network Feature: David Darling new perspective from which to interpret the music of Taiwans indigenous people. a certain resolve that is not uncommon among the Bunun people. Shufang Wang. http://www.worldmusic.net/home/features/darling.html
MediaRights Remembering Wei Yifang, Remembering Myself River People Behind the Case of David Sohappy (1990) For great salmon runs of the Che Wana, the indigenous name for http://www.mediarights.org/search/browse.php?lo=800&cat_id=00005
SILESR Language Index the indigenous Languages of Southwestern Maluku fang FNG A Survey of the Lolo People Luang LEX Toward a Better Understanding of the indigenous Languages of http://www.sil.org/silesr/indexes/languages.asp
The Famuan this landmass and captured the brilliant indigenous people for indentured of change in this country for our people. Williams is a staff writer for The fang. http://www.thefamuanonline.com/news/2002/11/06/TheFang/Bear-Torch.Of.Progress-31
Extractions: document.write(''+''); Current Issue: document.write(currentissuedayname + ', ' + currentissuemonthname + ' ' + currentissueday + ', ' + currentissueyear); Contact Us Archive Login Register ... The Fang By Tynisha Williams Published: Wednesday, November 6, 2002 Once upon a time, there were prosperous villages in the beautiful continent of Africa.
World Food Habits Bibliography: Africa for the anthropological study of food, eating habits, and nutrition in africa http://www.lilt.ilstu.edu/rtdirks/AFRICA.html
Extractions: FOOD AND CULTURE Africa Aborampah O. 1985. Determinants of Breast-feeding and Post-partum Sexual Abstinence: Analysis of a Sample of Yoruba Women, Western Nigeria. Journal of Biosocial Science . 17:461-9. [infant feeding; Africa] Aboud FE; Alemu T. 1995. Nutrition, Maternal Responsiveness and Mental Development of Ethopian Children. Social Science and Medicine [child nutrition; Africa] Acho-Chi C. 2002. The Mobile Street Food Service Practice in the Urban Economy of Kumba, Cameroon. Singpore Journal of Tropical Geography . 23(2):131-48. [food distribution; Africa] Almedom AM. 1991. Infant Feeding in Urban Low-income Households in Ethiopia. Ecology of Food and Nutrition . 25:97-109. [infant nutrition; Africa] Anigbo OA. 1987. Commensality and Human Relationship among the Igbo. University of Nigeria Press. [social relations; African; Nigeria; Igbo] Aunger R. 1994. Sources of Variation in Ethnographic Interview Data: Food Avoidances in the Ituri Forest. Ethnology . 33(1):65-99. [food proscriptions; Africa; Zaire] Aunger R. 1994. Are Food Avoidances Maladaptive in the Ituri Forest of Zaire?
ArtLex On African Art african art, defined with images of examples, great quotations, and links to other resources. of africa's northern parts diverse as africa's africa, Brazzaville Zaire, Kongo people, Nail http://www.artlex.com/ArtLex/a/african.html
Extractions: A frican art - Ceremonial sculpture masks , and crafts produced by African tribal cultures , as well as by the African cultures of colonial and post-colonial periods. Generally African art means sub-Saharan art, with the cultures of Africa's northern parts typically referred to as Egyptian and North African. Making generalizations about the visual culture of any group of people is a crude endeavor, especially with a culture as diverse as Africa's. With this thought in mind, know that this survey, as any must be, is tremendously limited in its breadth and depth. Examples of African art: Ife (Yoruba), Nigeria, Shrine Head , 12th century - 14th century, terra cotta , 12 x 5 3/4 x 7 inches, Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Mali, Bougouni or Dioila area, Bamana peoples, Mother and Child , 15th-20th century, wood height 48 5/8 inches (123.5 cm), Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY. Nigeria, Edo peoples, Court of Benin, Pendant Mask: Iyoba , 16th century, ivory iron copper height 9 3/8 inches (23.8 cm), Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY. See mask and pendant Nigeria, Edo peoples, Court of Benin
Fang fang An Epic Journey. http://www.frif.com/new2003/fang.html
Extractions: Select a subject AIDS/HIV Adolescence Africa African- Americans Aging Amer. Studies Animated Films Anthropology Architecture Art Asia Balkans Biographies Business Civil Rights Communications Criminal Justice Death/Dying Ecology Economics Education Environment Ethics Family Film Studies France Gay/Lesbian Globalization Health History Human Rights Indigenous- Peoples Ireland Jewish Studies Journalism Labor Studies Latin America Law Literature Media Medicine Middle East Music Native People Nature Philosophy Photography Politics Psychology Racism Religion Russia Science Sociology Theater Urban Studies Vietnam Women World War II Youth FANG mixes documentary and fiction techniques to recount an African art object's journey through a century of peril and adventure, and uses the film styles of each historical period to tell its story - a whole century of Western attitudes towards African culture packed into 8 minutes. "Fast, funny and provocative. The film focuses attention on the arbitrary and changing nature of the categories of 'art' in Western culture and raises important questions about the integrity of the object and the relationship between museum exhibition of objects and their value on the art market. It takes me two lectures to cover this material; this film does it in 8 minutes."
Don't Hurry Back - Viewing Race Film Cobb s contemplative piece on her journeys to West africa. http://www.viewingrace.org/browse_sub.php?film_id=85&subject_id=7