Africa Indigenous People Baule africa, african Anthropology General Resources. By peoples. Fon Frafra Fulani Hausa Hemba Holoholo Ibibio Idoma Igbira Igbo Ijo Kabre karagwe Kassena Katana http://www.archaeolink.com/africa_indigenous_people_baule.htm
Extractions: Baule Home Africa, African Anthropology General Resources By peoples Akan Akuapem Akye Anyi ... Zulu ArtWorld AFRICA - Baule "One of the Akan group sharing similar language and, in general, matrilineal inheritance. They broke away from the Asante of Ghana in the 18th century, bringing with them craftsmanship in gold and gold leaf decoration." - From University of Durham - http://artworld.uea.ac.uk/teaching_modules/africa/cultural_groups_by_country/baule/welcome.html Baule People "The Baule belong to the Akan peoples who inhabit Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire. Three hundred years ago the Baule people migrated westward from Ghana when the Asante rose to power. The tale of how they broke away from the Asante has been preserved in their oral traditions." You will find material related to history, culture, religion, political structure, art and more. - From University of Iowa - http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/people/Baule.html
Africa highlands came to dominate the indigenous Bantu founded later, among them Bunyoro, Ankole, Buganda, and karagwe. area) ruled over settled Bantu peoples from the http://www.emayzine.com/lectures/africa3a.html
Extractions: Africa Some 5 million years ago a type of hominid, a close evolutionary ancestor of present-day humans, inhabited southern and eastern Africa. More than 1.5 million years ago this toolmaking hominid developed into the more advanced forms Homo habilis and Homo erectus. The earliest true human being in Africa, Homo sapiens, dates from more than 200,000 years ago. A hunter-gatherer capable of making crude stone tools, Homo sapiens banded together with others to form nomadic groups; eventually these nomadic San peoples spread throughout the African continent. Distinct races date from approximately 10,000 BC. Gradually a growing Negroid population, which had mastered animal domestication and agriculture, forced the San groups into the less hospitable areas. In the 1st century AD the Bantu, one group of this dominant people, began a migration that lasted some 2000 years, settling most of central and southern Africa. Negroid societies typically depended on subsistence agriculture or, in the savannas, pastoral pursuits. Political organization was normally local, although large kingdoms would later develop in western and central Africa. see Aksum, Kingdom of
Project Overview maintain solar systems in karagwe district of mountain areas in africa through increasing Indig Significant Participation of indigenous peoples PA Promoting http://www.undp.org/sgp/cty/AFRICA/TANZANIA/ov.htm
MSN Encarta - Print Preview - Africa the states of Bunyoro, Ankole, karagwe, and Buganda African qualities and strengthening indigenous African religious were spread by Fulani peoples, who had http://encarta.msn.com/text_761572628___107/Africa.html
Extractions: Print Preview Africa Article View On the File menu, click Print to print the information. Africa V. History At some point between 130,000 and 90,000 years ago the first true human beings, Homo sapiens, evolved in eastern and southern Africa. These Stone Age humans had the same capacity for thought as modern human beings. They were capable of making tools such as hooks and needles made of bone, and precise stone blades. These stone blades could be used as scrapers and hand-knives, or attached to poles and sticks for use as spears or arrows. By 90,000 years ago Homo sapiens had begun to move out of Africa into the Middle East, Europe, Central Asia, and beyond. All modern human beings are descended from these original African ancestors. A. Early Africans By 40,000 years ago people could be found hunting and gathering food across most of the regions of Africa. Populations in different regions employed various technological developments in adapting to their different environments and climates. The most notable adaptations occurred in response to major climate changes. A.1.
GERMAN EAST AFRICA In karagwe certain quartzites, slates and schistose sandstones may be called the indigenous population consists been an immigration of HamitoNegroid peoples. http://45.1911encyclopedia.org/G/GE/GERMAN_EAST_AFRICA.htm
Extractions: GERMAN EAST AFRICA , a country occupying the eastcentral portion of the African continent. The colony extends at its greatest length north to south from 1 to 11 S., and west to east from 30 to 40 E. It is bounded E. by the Indian Ocean (the coast-line extending from 4 20 to 10 40 S.), N.E. and N. by British East Africa and Uganda, W. by Belgian Congo, S.W. by British Central Africa and S. by Portuguese East Africa. Area and Boundaries.On the north the boundary line Cuns N.W. from the mouth of the Umba river to Lake Jipe and Mount Kili B 36 C 4D V~c~t~=o:itfa~-an- Klngff - l~r ~ ~-~a~- T i~ ~l~nMeEag,, ~ CA M t5~ k s t~8~i11~ ~ sgs, ~ ~M~fns~~ ~ Mt.f~ ~~$i -. ~mbo4~~, ~ n ~fii ).Lg4ff~fI bon,y,!~ ng~do1, n~~iZ, sabasi fb,,,barn ~ C I I cXIIIm ar?j~~. ~,~h7-s r,, ~ ~%n ~ ~ ~ SC SLMnha,i J,~ ~ f - j,a~ if - , - - Man,,s~aI ~ ~ f~ ~Mi2OQOSOf5~ - ~ ~. ~Mo,,, a ~-n~n ~ IMt ~i~ ~ ~ ~ S, ~M.4I, ~ - n-a ~ .~ ~ i,. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ an - ~. ~,. Y~s ~ ~ alif - W~lh~In, ~ abora,, ~ ~ ~so5soatoagi Mo - ~ ~ -~ ~ Kwa Mge,a Ko,og Ma I cml) airnd.~ ~ Mirata a;~, ~Yt - n ~gar -. b 3~~r! T~ :~ ~
Africa's World Role From 1400 To 1800 Ethiopian highlands came to dominate the indigenous Bantu supplanted by a wave of Luo peoples migrating from among them Bunyoro, Ankole, Bugand a, and karagwe. http://dicksguides2.com/whafrica.htm
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Africa | Basic Facts > History > Eastern Africa Ethiopian highlands came to dominate the indigenous Bantu. an early wave of Luo peoples migrating from later, among them Bunyoro, Ankole, Buganda, and karagwe. http://www.geocities.com/aboutafrica/history/easternafrica.html
Kingdoms Of Africa highlands came to dominate the indigenous Bantu. later, among them Bunyoro, Ankole, Buganda, and karagwe. the 19th century, Bantuspeaking peoples had pushed http://www.afrc.af.mil/910AW/Black History Web/kingdoms_of_africa.htm
Extractions: Africa was the homeland of several great civilizations. On the gold-rich coast alone, which became the primary area for the capture and sale of Africans into slavery, were the kingdoms of Ghana, Benin, Mali, Ashanti, and the Songhai Empire. These early societies featured highly democratic forms of government with military divisions and profitable trade relations with European and Asian nations as well as with other smaller communities throughout the continent. They were also noted for their educational and cultural institutions. Many factors contributed to the decline of these kingdoms, inclluding the growth of the slave trade. The map right shows the major kingdoms on the African continent. East African Kingdoms kabaka ("king"). Farther to the south, in Rwanda, a cattle-raising pastoral aristocracy founded by the Chwezi (alternatively called Tutsi, or Hima in this area) ruled over settled Bantu peoples from the 16th century onward. Central African Kingdoms Bantu-speaking peoples moving east from the Congo region during the 1st millennium AD are thought to have assimilated local Stone Age peoples. Later Bantu immigrants, called the Karanga, were the ancestors of the present-day Shona people. The Karanga began constructing the Great Zimbabwe, an impressive stone compound housing the royal court, which became the center of powerful gold-trading state. They also formed the Mwene Mutapa Empire, which derived its wealth from large-scale gold mining. At its height in the 15th century, its sphere of influence stretched from the Zambezi River to the Kalahari to the Indian Ocean and to the Limpopo River.
Untitled Document have split ecosystems as well as indigenous groups some 50,000 remain, mostly in the karagwe district) the is some suggestion that the Maa 10 peoples on either http://www.bsponline.org/bsp/publications/africa/121/121/chap3.htm
Extractions: In this Chapter: Next Chapter A. Administrative and political international boundaries Return to TOC B. A historical overview of cooperation in the region ... Return to BSP Publications A . Administrative and political international boundaries The countries of Eastern Africa (defined here as comprising Burundi, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda, Somalia, and Tanzania) have a number of features in common. First, most countries were colonies. While Burundi and Rwanda were colonized by the Germans and then by the Belgians, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania were British colonial territories (Tanganyika was taken from Germany at the end of the First World War). Ethiopia was colonized by Italy but only for a short while. Eritrea was part of Ethiopia up to 1993. Djibouti was French, Somalia was Italian (though a part of it was colonized by Britain). Map 1 shows the countries and capital cities, and Table 3 summarizes their key statistics. These countries boundaries were established by their colonial regimes, and are largely political constructs. Although they might appear fixed, international boundaries have been fluid and have gone through some adjustments over the past 150 years. Border conflicts are unfortunately still common in parts of Africawitness the Eritrea-Ethiopia conflict of 19982000. These adjustments have seriously impacted the inter-connectedness of cultural and natural systems. Borders resulting from the colonial legacy have split ecosystems as well as indigenous groups. Borders were decided arbitrarily by colonialists using simple geographic features rather than ecosystems structures and human and wildlife movements. Rivers, mountains, and straight lines such as longitude and latitude were used to demarcate national boundaries (Griffin
: Map And Guide To Tanzania One known exception is the karagwe Kingdom in farmers, settlers, missionaries, planters, villages, indigenous people and peasants africa, its peoples and their http://www.ntz.info/gen/b00274.html
Extractions: These verses were quoted [p56] in an interesting little book An Introduction to the History of East Africa written by Zoe Marsh and G Kingsnorth in . Fortunately, the elephants are still there but enormous gaps in people's knowledge remain concerning Tanzania. [top] Home Sources Names ... Feedback Extract ID: 3957 Map and Guide to Tanzania 1995 Oct Page Number: 02a See also Laetoli Unknown to non-Africans before the colonial period, the prehistory of the interior of Africa has since been partly pieced together. Discovered by chance in by a German entomologist who stumbled across some fossils and bones, evidence of human life was found in Tanzania's Olduvai Gorge and the place attracted the attention of Professor
Maasai Northwestern Tanzania was also hit by Smallpox, particularly karagwe. 3 Maasai Parkipuny, Moringe The Human Rights Situation of indigenous peoples in africa. http://www.ntz.info/gen/n00359.html
Extractions: The area round Karatu was cultivated as early as 2,000 years ago by the Mbulu or Iraqw, a Kushitic group of people who migrated south from Ethiopia and the Yemen, and who still dominate the area today. The Maasai came fairly recently, in the early s, but were driven into other areas, more suitable for cattle herding, by repeated wars with their agricultural neighbours, and by sleeping sickness in their herds. [top] Home Sources Names ... Feedback Extract ID: 271 1810 Maasai Fosbrooke, Henry
Africanfront.com (AUF) kingdoms of Nkore, Shongora, Buhweju, and karagwe in the 1882 An indigenous revolt in the Egyptian Army threatens Together, we the peoples of africa will be http://www.africanfront.com/calendar3.php
SGP Project Information Region, Regional Bureau for africa. The project will promote awareness on solar electricity technology to indigenous people in karagwe district. http://www.undp.org/sgp/cty/AFRICA/TANZANIA/pfs5670.htm
Extractions: Last Updated:25-Mar-2004 04:59 AM (New York Time) Region Regional Bureau for Africa Country UNITED REPUBLIC OF TANZANIA Project Name Promotion of solar training and demonstration in rural areas Description Project aime at assisting a solar training facility called KARADEA to train solar technicians in the district who in turn will promote, install and maintain solar systems in Karagwe district. Focal Area (CC) Climate change Karagwe Development Association Grant Recipient Type (NGO) Non-government Organization Project Characteristics and Components Applies Comment Notable Community Participation KARADEA will do training of solar electricity technology. Purchase of equipment and cost of installation will be done by communities through own resources. Capacity-Building Component This project will build the capacity of farmers and technicians through 4 solar electricity demonstrations and 2 fairs.
MSN Encarta - Africa states of Bunyoro, Ankole, karagwe, and Buganda This great concentration of people gave the African qualities and strengthening indigenous African religious http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761572628_14/Africa.html
Extractions: MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: logoImg('http://sc.msn.com'); Encarta Subscriber Sign In Help Home ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta Tasks Find in this article Print Preview Send us feedback Related Items African Art and Architecture African Languages more... Magazines Search the Encarta Magazine Center for magazine and news articles about this topic Further Reading Editors' Picks Africa News Search MSNBC for news about Africa Internet Search Search Encarta about Africa Search MSN for Web sites about Africa Also on Encarta Editor's picks: Good books about Iraq Compare top online degrees What's so funny? The history of humor Also on MSN Summer shopping: From grills to home decor D-Day remembered on Discovery Switch to MSN in 3 easy steps Our Partners Capella University: Online degrees LearnitToday: Computer courses CollegeBound Network: ReadySetGo Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions Encyclopedia Article from Encarta Advertisement Page 14 of 18 Africa Multimedia 159 items Dynamic Map View map of Africa Article Outline Introduction Natural Environment People of Africa Economy ... History E Kanem-Bornu In the Lake Chad region, far to the east of the Niger bend, trans-Saharan trade was controlled by the state of Kanem, founded by Nilo-Saharan Kanuri nomads in about 800. By 1000 Kanem came under the leadership of the Saifawa clan, who established an Islamic dynasty and a settled capital at Njimi, north of Lake Chad.
History Of Tanzania Sambaa under Kimweri, Rumanyika of karagwe and a what had happened for subjugating Tanzania and africa. British and Arabs, the indigenous people were decimated http://www.tanzania.org.za/history.htm
Extractions: Introduction Background Tanzania has a population of 32.0 million (1998) out of which 29.1 million are inhabitants of the mainland while the 0.9 million are living in Zanzibar. About 49% of the population is under 15, life expectancy is 54 while infant mortality is 103, birth rate is 46; total fertility rate is 7 and population growth rate is 2.8% as per 1997 estimates. Religious groupings include Hindu and Indigenous beliefs (20%); Christian (45%) and Muslim (35%). Though distributed unevenly, high densities are concentrated in the highlands, Lake Victoria Lake plains, the coastal plains and in urban areas. Soil fertility, Industrial and other economic development account for the population distribution. Tanzanians have an interesting story to tell about their origin. It is a fact that the instability in the earth crust during primeval times did split East Africa from mainland Africa by the great Rift valley. One of the sites with most favourable conditions in the valley, turned out to be the cradle of humankind. This is an early ape like creature whose footprints and skull were discovered by the Leakeys in 1959 and 1979. These evidences, which are products of archaeological discovery about the earliest ancestor were, obtained from the Olduvai Gorge and Laetoli. These areas were some of the habitats of the homo habilis and homo sapiens the old Tanzanians who could think and make stone tools. Important artifacts and the bones of the origin of the human species which were left behind have been estimated to be 1.75 million years old.
ReliefWeb: IRIN Update 1260 For The Great Lakes port for Kigoma, Tanzania, sails between Bujumbura, Kigoma, karagwe the two Zephyrin Kalimba told a conference on the indigenous people of africa, held in http://wwww.reliefweb.int/w/rwb.nsf/0/1ca63fea14f04f4b85256ac0004d51b8?OpenDocum
Africa 11 John Speke and James Grant arrive at Krague (karagwe). 1860 an aborted rebellion of the indigenous Lozi against 1865 the population is about 87 people. http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Oracle/9853/History_Africa.html
Extractions: Chronicle of the World, D. K. Publishing, New York 1996, ISBN 0-7894-0334X GENERAL INFORMATION CENTRAL AFRICA EAST AFRICA NORTH AFRICA SOUTH AFRICA ... WEST AFRICA CENTRAL AFRICA BELGIAN CONGO (GEOGRAPHY: Central [Equatorial]Africa #5 S,25 E, a Belgian Colony, the capital at Leopoldville) seven Arab traders reach Urua in the northern province of Katanga the Msiri set up a trading station for ivory, copper and slaves in Katanga. 02/14: Richard Burton and John Speke discover Lake Tanganyika, arriving at Ujiji as the first Europeans. the slave trade develops in the North and East Congo. CONGO (see Belgian Congo LAKE VICTORIA (see Victoria Nyanza NYAM-NYAM (GEOGRAPHY: north west of Albert Nyassa and Victoria Nyassa, near the headwaters of the Congo River and west of headwaters of the Nile, also west of the headwaters of the Bahr-el Ghazal)
CURRENT SITUATION (Sub-Saharan Africa) the situation, and on the access of indigenous agencies to Butare with a reported 810 people killed of Rwandan refugees into Kyabilisa (karagwe district) with http://www.unsystem.org/scn/archives/rnis08/ch3.htm
Extractions: 18. Zambia (see Map 18) The security situation in Liberia and Sierra Leone has continued to deteriorate over the last two months and is now affecting an estimated 3 million people in the region. The increase in total population affected since the last RNIS report (2.8S million) is due to revised estimates of the number of internally displaced in Sierra Leone [UNHCR 24/11/94, WFP 11/11/94]. Trend in numbers of refugees/displaced and proportion severely malnourished and at high risk (black area). Current estimates of the populations affected by the conflict are summarized in the box below. Location Liberia Recent attempts to advance the peace process have achieved little effect on the ground. The Liberian National Conference and a separate meeting held between a number of armed factions, who feared marginalization at the conference, generated several important resolutions concerning disarmament, demobilization and governance. However, it appears that recommendations made at the two meetings are not being followed through and widespread fighting persists with consequent displacement of more refugees to Cote d'Ivoire, and to a lesser extent, Guinea [UNHCR 11/11/94].
CURRENT SITUATION (Sub-Saharan Africa) and even less in certain karagwe camps where 1) while the approximately 200,000 people in West indigenous NGOs might therefore be given greater encouragement http://www.unsystem.org/scn/archives/rnis10/ch3.htm
Extractions: 17. Zambia (see Map 1 and Figure 3A) A. Angola - Trend in numbers of displaced/war affected. Nutritional and food security information on affected populations is still patchy although, with some exceptions, most surveys in 1995 have indicated levels of wasting below 10%. Subject to the results of the coming harvest, some agencies are planning to phase out general ration distributions. There are however, still numerous reports of large numbers of people in desperate need of food aid. For example, one recent assessment found 21,000 people in need of immediate food assistance in UNITA controlled Quibala town, which recently became accessible. Additional relief requirements have also been identified in Huambo and resumption of full general rations (rations had recently been cut to half) have been reported as necessary in Cubal given the loss of the maize crop [WFP 25/03/95, WFP 07/04/95]. More recent information from Luena is that wasting levels have continued to rise and are currently as high as 20.3% (see Annex 1 (1b)). Several measures to improve the food distribution system have been taken as a result of this. These include automatic referral of families with malnourished children for enrolment on the general ration programme, opening 20 feeding kitchens serving all children under five years old, ex-camp residents and displaced persons identified as food insecure [WFP 07/04/95].