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         Fang Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail
  1. Fang (Visions of Africa) by Louis Perrois, 2006-08-25

41. Peoples - Encyclopedia Article About Peoples. Free Access, No Registration Neede
Akan People of West africa, inhabiting principally Ghana Altaic peoples - Non-homogeneous peoples of the Amhara - indigenous people of central Ethiopia; Amish
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Peoples
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Peoples
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition This is a list of names of ethnic group Ethnicity is the cultural characteristics that connect a particular group or groups of people to each other. "Ethnicity" is sometimes used as a euphemism for "race", or as a synonym for minority group. While ethnicity and race are related concepts, the concept of ethnicity is rooted in the idea of societal groups, marked especially by shared nationality, tribal afilliation, religious faith, shared language, or cultural and traditional origins and backgrounds. Whereas race is rooted in the idea of biological classification of homo sapiens to subspecies according to morphological features such as skin color or facial characteristics.
Click the link for more information. s. A group can have several names (e.g., names in English language The English language is a West Germanic language, originating from England, built from several local languages of 6th century Norse conquerors, with a strong French influence added following the Norman Conquest of 1066. English spread worldwide with the rise of British colonialism, from the British Isles to Australia, Canada, India, South Africa, New Zealand, the United States and elsewhere.
Click the link for more information.

42. Equatorial Guinea: History
During the 17th cent. the mainland s indigenous pygmy peoples were displaced by The first president was Francisco Macías Nguema, a fang from Río Muni.
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/world/A0858022.html
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    Encyclopedia
    Equatorial Guinea
    History
    Before Independence
    Independence and Beyond
    In 1982 a new constitution was approved that called for a more democratic political structure. In 1992 legislation was passed providing for a multiparty democracy. However, by 1993, when legislative elections were held, only one party, Obiang Nguema Mbasogo's Democratic Party for Equatorial Guinea (PDGE), held significant power, and the regime was widely denounced for its continued repression of opposition groups. In the 1996 multiparty presidential elections, which were boycotted by major opposition parties, the president won a landslide victory. In the late 1990s, over 100,000 citizens lived in exile abroad, and there was wide dissatisfaction with the slow pace of reform. Obiang Nguema Mbasogo was reelected unopposed in 2002 after opposition candidates, expecting fraud, withdrew. In Mar., 2004, the government foiled an apparent coup attempt involving mainly South African mercenaries. Sections in this article:
    Economy
    Equatorial Guinea The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia

43. AllRefer Encyclopedia - Equatorial Guinea : History : Before Independence, Afric
During the 17th cent. the mainland s indigenous pygmy peoples were displaced by other groups, principally the fang, who now inhabit the area.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/E/EquatrGu-history.html
AllRefer Channels :: Health Yellow Pages Reference Weather SEARCH : in Reference June 08, 2004 You are here : AllRefer.com Reference Encyclopedia African Political Geography ... Equatorial Guinea
By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z E
Equatorial Guinea, African Political Geography
Related Category: African Political Geography Equatorial Guinea E Pronunciation Key History-
Before Independence
Bioko was claimed by (and until 1972 named after) FernAo do Po, a Portuguese navigator, in 1472, and AnnobOn was also claimed. During the 17th cent. the mainland's indigenous pygmy peoples were displaced by other groups, principally the Fang, who now inhabit the area. In 1778, Portugal ceded the islands, and also the commercial rights to a part of the African coast that included present-day RIo Muni, to the Spanish. Hoping to export Africans as slaves to their American possessions, the Spanish sent settlers to the islands, but they died of yellow fever, and by 1781 the region was abandoned by the Europeans. From 1827 to 1843 the British leased bases at Malabo (then called Port Clarence) and San Carlos from Spain for use by their antislavery patrols, and some freed slaves were settled on Bioko (then called Fernando Po). In 1844 the Spanish reacquired Bioko and began to occupy it. In 1879, a Cuban penal settlement was established there, and some of the convicts remained on the island after being released from prison. The general region of RIo Muni was awarded to Spain at the Conference of Berlin in 1885, and its boundaries were defined precisely in a treaty with France in 1900. The islands and RIo Muni were grouped together as the colony of Spanish Guinea.

44. Atlas - Equatorial Guinea Map
Equatorial Guinea, independent republic, western africa, consisting of a The fang people, who fought their way to The fang, indigenous to the mainland but now
http://www.map.freegk.com/equatorial_guinea/equatorial_guinea.php

Introduction
People History Culture ... Disputes
Equatorial Guinea Introduction Back to Top Equatorial Guinea, independent republic, western Africa, consisting of a mainland section bordered on the north by Cameroon, on the east and south by Gabon, and on the west by the Gulf of Guinea; and, in the Gulf of Guinea, the islets of Corisco, Elobey Grande, and Elobey Chico, and the islands of Bioko (formerly Macías Nguema Biyogo, and previously Fernando Póo), and Annobón (Pagalu from 1973-1979). Equatorial Guinea has a total area of 28,051 sq km (10,831 sq mi). The capital is Malabo on the island of Bioko. Official Name- Republic of Equatorial Guinea
Capital City- Malabo
Population- 456,000
Languages -Spanish (official), English and other dialects
Official Currency -CFA Franc
Religions- Christian, others
Land Area -28,050 sq km (10,830 sq miles)
Equatorial Guinea Provinces Back to Top
7 provinces (provincias, singular - provincia); Annobon, Bioko Norte, Bioko Sur, Centro Sur, Kie-Ntem, Litoral, Wele-Nzas. Equatorial Guinea People Back to Top The majority of the population is African, but its composition is complex for a political unit so small in size. The Fang people, who fought their way to the sea in the 19th and early 20th centuries by subjugating the weaker tribes in their path, form about 80 or 90 percent of the population of the mainland region. North of the Mbini River are the Ntumu Fang, and to the south of it are the Okak Fang. Holding political power on the mainland, the Fang tend to migrate to Bioko, where their leaders hold most of the levers of political control. Coastal tribes, such as the Kombe, Mabea, Lengi, Benga, and others, have been in contact with European traders much longer, and a limited amount of miscegenation has taken place, especially on the island of Corisco. Spanish ethnographers refer to these coastal tribes as playeros. Both the Fang majority and the playero minority are Bantu.

45. Minorities At Risk (MAR)
Languages French and English (official); fang, Bamileke, Duala Group Type indigenous peoples Click here to view General sorts with other tribal people in the
http://www.cidcm.umd.edu/inscr/mar/data/camkirdi.htm
Kirdi in Cameroon
Total Area: 475,442 sq.km (with the great geographical diversity)
Capital: Yaounde
Population:15,029,000 (1998 U.S. Census Bureau estimate)
4/5th of Cameroonians live in the formerly French-east.
Languages: French and English (official); Fang, Bamileke, Duala, and other indigenous languages; Southern peoples are mostly Bantu speaking while Sudanic and Afroasiatic languages are widely spoken in the north.
Religion: Christianity (53% -concentrated in the south); traditional African beliefs (25% -predominantly southern peoples); Muslim (22% -mostly northern peoples including Fulani)
Major ethnic groups:
Bamileke (27%): a loose agglomeration of Bantu-speaking tribal groups which dominate the cultural and economic life of the western Cameroon;
Westerners (est. 20%): highly mobilized and active English-speaking minorities living in the west;
Fulani (8%): the dominant group in the north who are direct descendants of Sudanese Muslims who conquered the region in the 19th century; they have retained their own political structure which consists of 21 chiefdoms;

46. Equatorial Guinea. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
During the 17th cent. the mainland’s indigenous pygmy peoples were displaced by other groups, principally the fang, who now inhabit the area.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/eq/EquatrGu.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia See also: Equatorial Guinea Factbook PREVIOUS NEXT CONTENTS ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Equatorial Guinea (g KEY Malabo Land and People Economy Equatorial Guinea trades principally with Spain, the United States, Cameroon, Japan, and France. The main exports are petroleum, methanol, coffee, timber, and cocoa beans; the chief imports are petroleum products, food (especially rice), beverages, and machinery. Equatorial Guinea continues to depend heavily on foreign investment. It belongs to the Franc Zone.

47. Teaching Africa For K-12
africa/history/hisk12.html african indigenous Knowledge Systems Dr Bamana, Baule, Bwa, Dogon, fang, Hemba, Ibibio two year fieldtrip for young people to africa
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/africaneducation/teaching-africa-K
Topics Education : Teaching about Africa for K-12 Search: Countries Topics Africa Guide Suggest a Site ... Africa Home See also:
Absolutely Whootie
The stories, for K-12, are taken from books and are revised by children's comments "to best please the audience." Includes stories from Africa. http://hazel.forest.net/whootie/default.html
Africa - PBS / National Geographic / Thirteen/WNET NY Television Series, Sept. 9 - Oct. 28, 2001
Eight episodes cover the Savanna and a woman moving from the city to rural life (Serengeti, Tanzania), the Sahara (a 9 year old boy from Niger crosses the desert on camel to collect and sell salt, etc. Each episode has a slide shows, video clips (requires sound card, speakers). Photoscopes cover AIDS, urban life, conflict, women. There is an African Challenge quiz and teachers' guide (in Adobe PDF).
In the Africa for Kids section , spend a day with kids from Ghana and e-mail them, play the thumb piano / record your tune, (requires Flash, sound card), listen to a Swahili tale or read it yourself, make a Dogon mask. http://www.pbs.org/wnet/africa/
Africa Access
Guide to children's literature on Africa. Reviews are written by univ. faculty, librarians, and teachers many of whom are in African studies or have lived in Africa. Use the Search to locate, for ex., Swahili culture. Edited by Brenda Randolph. http://filemaker.mcps.k12.md.us/aad/

48. African Tribes
The ndako gboya appears to be indigenous; a spirit that castings ever made in black africa, share features of sculptural tradition among peoples inhabiting the
http://users.pandora.be/african-shop/tribe_info.htm

Home
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A complete African tribes art list, african sculptures and masks description. The visual, performing, and literary arts of native Africa, particularly of sub-Saharan, or black, Africa. The arts include the media of sculpture, painting, textiles, costume, jewelry, architecture, music, dance, drama, and poetry. visit Central Africa South Africa Madagascar Art West Africa Join our FREE MONTHLY NEWSLETTER packed with auction news, fairs, exhibitions, items descriptions, new websites, stolen items, buying tips,...
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A free group related on African art with more than 450 members. Share your love for African art.

49. The Africa Guide - Newsletter - August 2003
There are so many different people groups and Amhara, Bobo, Bushmen/San, Dogon, fang, Fulani, Maasai Musical Instruments and Dance indigenous African musical
http://www.africaguide.com/newsletter/034.htm
... where Africa comes to you ... HOME NEWS LETTER CONTACT US LINK TO US ... TRAVELOGUES
Newsletter - September 2003 CONTENTS:
Newsletter Sponsor

New to The Africa Guide

Travel Centre

Combination Safaris
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Latest Travel Advice
Quote of the month...
"It isn't the mountains ahead that wear you out, it's the grain of sand in your shoe"
Website of the month
Disasters Emergency Committee

Liberia Crisis Appeal - donate on-line. This Newsletter is sponsored by Beyenaris Tourism - Ethiopia A small family tourism business offering highly personalized tours, cultural encounters and safaris to individuals, couples and small groups of guests to Ethiopia. These are person to person tourism experiences and our tours help you meet the people doing things normal safari tour companies would not do! We try to tailor our tours to your interests, so please don't be surprised if we ask you questions about what you like doing in your time off. If you want something different come with us! NEW TO THE AFRICA GUIDE People and Culture The vast continent of Africa is so rich and diverse in it's culture, not only changing from one country to another but within an individual country many different cultures can be found.

50. ThinkQuest : Library : The Global Relations Of The Many Nations
1%, animist Languages French (official), fang, Myene, Bateke mainland Christian 45%, Muslim 35%, indigenous beliefs 20 mother tongue of Bantu people living in
http://library.thinkquest.org/18401/text/africa.html
Index
The Global Relations of the Many Nations
Throughout the world there are conflicts and issues that have wide-ranging effects. This site can help students understand some of these current events. For example, the religious situations in Afghanistan, Northern Ireland, or on the West Bankthis site covers them all and more. You even have the opportunity to voice your own opinions. Discover ways to get involved by visiting other links and learning more about global issues. Visit Site 1998 ThinkQuest Internet Challenge Languages English Students James Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Christopher Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Jeff Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Coaches Diane Windsor High School, Windsor, CT, United States Want to build a ThinkQuest site? The ThinkQuest site above is one of thousands of educational web sites built by students from around the world. Click here to learn how you can build a ThinkQuest site. Privacy Policy

51. Food Without Frontiers - OpenDemocracy
functioning economies, now africa’s people face the Look, for instance, at the fang, who today and Portuguese model destroyed the indigenous social, cultural
http://www.opendemocracy.net/forums/thread.jspa?forumID=95&threadID=41658&messag

52. Search Lead Directory
Senegal Somalia - Seychelles - Tanzania - South africa - Zambia - Zimbabwe -. building and local empowerment - indigenous people -. fang Yan, Send a message.
http://www.virtualcentre.org/es/who/search.asp?bt=5

53. News & Information - Press Release
including Mpongwe, Benga, Kelen, and fang; many are decades of travel across Europe, africa, and the history and perspectives of the indigenous people of Gabon
http://www.ptsem.edu/know/pr-bin/2003/African Books.htm
Current Press Release
  • For Immediate Release
Princeton Seminary Alumnus and Texas Educator Donates Rare African Books to Seminary Princeton, NJ, July 16, 2003–The Reverend Dr. Henry Hale Bucher Jr. has donated his lifelong collection of rare Africana from the 19th and 20th centuries to the Princeton Theological Seminary archives. Bucher, currently chaplain and associate professor of humanities at Austin College, is a 1962 graduate of the Seminary. Bucher says he spent decades collecting West African books, especially about Gabon, because “as a pastor and educator, I knew I would never have great financial wealth to give back to Princeton, but I can contribute this once-in-a-lifetime gift to their scholarly assets.” Allison Petrilla claims the real value of the collection is beyond price, because “it would be nearly impossible to reassemble such a group of materials today.” Many of the books are written in African languages, including Mpongwe, Benga, Kelen, and Fang; many are in their original wrappers; many are cloth-bound or leather-bound. “Since very little has been written on Gabon relative to other African nations, and since many of the books are rare or fragile, this collection of Gabonia is unique in the country,” says Robert Petrilla.

54. Eugene Patron: Heart Of Lavender: In Search Of Gay Africa
in the 1913 about the fang people of present The very denying of indigenous homosexuality among African homosexual behavior to Africans and people of African
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/pwh/patron-africhomo.html
Back to People With a History Main Page
Back to People With a History: World Cultures Index

HEART OF LAVENDER:
IN SEARCH OF GAY AFRICA By Eugene J. Patron

Harvard Gay and Lesbian Review , Fall 1995.
(published here with permission) We will never know if Lucy was a lesbian. The discovery of the famous skeleton in Ethiopia in 1974 by Dr. Richard Leaky was the clearest proof to date of human evolution beginning on the African continent. Carbon dating revealed that Lucy lived some 3 to 3.7 million years ago. Yet, whether she ever lusted after other female Australopithecines is a secret that will remain hers for eternity. Lucy is not the only one with secrets. The recorded knowledge of sexuality in African societies is far from encyclopedic. Little more than anecdotal attention has been paid to departures from procreative sexual practices in traditional cultures. The issue of individual desires rarely makes it into a body of anthropological literature dominated by analysis of the collective. At best, homosexuality is allocated little more than a footnote to any discussion of sexuality in Africa. If anthropologists and other researchers needed an excuse to avoid the subject, they've only had to point to widespread denial of homosexual practices by Africans themselves. Homosexuality is often thrown on to the pile of unwanted debris and issues, such as consumerism, attributed to the legacy of European and Arab colonialism.

55. CQ Press: Book: International Encyclopedia Of Human Rights: Freedoms, Abuses, An
to Organize Convention Concerning indigenous peoples in Independent on the Right of peoples to Peace Extradition Fair Trial Families fang Lizhi Federalism Food
http://www.cqpress.com/product/International-Encyclopedia-of-Human.html

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Description The global importance of human rights issues has sparked an ongoing need to develop a universal language for human rights and the procedures for remedying violations, where remedies are, in fact, available. Giving the broadest scope to the terms human rights and freedoms, this reference encompasses constitutional rights and freedoms as well as those addressed in international and regional agreements. Through entries that define and describe concepts and terms, to text excerpts of documents, charts depicting global comparisons, essays on organizations, and biographies of activists and theorists, this reference will serve the research and information needs of students, scholars, activists, and interested citizens. As the title suggests

56. Weird Stories From Asian Streets
Ornamental Baboon, which is actually from West africa, not from I saw video program of Piaroa, indigenous people in the eaten like crabs 3) use a fang as tooth
http://mirukashihime.cool.ne.jp/english/asia.htm
Full text of this page is available in Japanese. Click here
Weird Stories from Hong Kong / Asian Streets
* Monster House, Weirdest of the Hong Kong Pet street
* Nun's shop in huge "Weekend Market", Bangkok, Thailand

*The Countries of Edible Tarantulas

*Behind the Mysterious Stories: Selenocosmids

Special Link:
Don't miss Patrick's " Hong Kong Spiderweb " page (Chinese) with beautiful pics !!
Monster House, Wierdest of the Hong Kong Pet street
Tong Choi Street, Kowloon, Hong Kong (Kowloon Canton Railway "Mongkok" Station) Fax.2754-2968 The most popular kind of pets in Hong Kong is fish. It's pretty common to keep gold fishes and tropical fishes in huge tank at home. Some restaurant even keeps Asian Arowanas. "Mecca" of pet keepers is Tong Choi Street in Kowloon, where you can find dosens of pet shops dealing gold fishes, carps, tropical fises. Those shops are crowded with people during the weekends. There are shops selling hamsters, and a few reptile / amphibian dealers as well. Weirdest of those are Monster House with case ! Who in the earth can pick up King Baboon with your bear hands and bring back to your home ?!

57. Untitled Document
of Dyula, Yoruba, Hausa, Luhya, fang, Ugandan Nubians system is still hostage to an indigenous ruling oligarchy that does not incorporate the people in decision
http://web.africa.ufl.edu/asq/v1/1/4.htm
Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism. Mahmood Mamdani. (Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press, 1996) xi+353pp.
Reviewed By Michael Chege
Director, Center for African Studies
University of Florida, Gainesville

58. La Culture Camerounaise
their numerical strength is the Betifang whose traditions Stuttgart 1987) used the word indigenous to speak of and thus to identify the peoples who occupied
http://www.spm.gov.cm/cameroun/culture/cam_culture_a.htm

59. PEOPLE, PARKS, AND BIODIVERSITY: ISSUES IN POPULATION-ENVIRONMENT DYNAMICS
Central America, and subSaharan africa depend very protected areas with the involvement of indigenous people. management programs (Bodmer, Penn, fang, and Moya
http://www.aaas.org/international/ehn/biod/ness1.htm
PEOPLE, PARKS, AND BIODIVERSITY: ISSUES IN POPULATION-ENVIRONMENT DYNAMICS
Jeffrey A. McNeely and Gayl Ness
The World Conservation Union (IUCN)
The transformation of the energy basis of human society from wind and wood to fossil fuels has given the world a new type of adaptation - urban-industrial society - which is producing a massive transformation of the biological functions of the earth. The growth, productivity, and dominance of the human species has reached unprecedented heights, which may ultimately threaten human life on earth. However, humans typically respond to such threats with thoughtful and deliberate attempts to reduce the threat. The current threat is no exception, and it is producing much thought and action on both scientific and political fronts. Not the least among such actions is the attempt to understand and to deal more effectively with the dynamic interaction of population, resources, and the environment. This chapter represents one small contribution to this vast topic. It focuses on an important and somewhat neglected arena: the relationship among people, protected areas, and biodiversity. This chapter addresses such problems, beginning with a discussion of biodiversity. A consideration of the modern view of protected areas and a review of current knowledge of human population dynamics follows. A series of issues central to developing a better understanding of how people and protected areas affect biodiversity is then identified. Suggestions for a research agenda that will lead to improved understanding of the people-parks-biodiversity interface concludes the chapter.

60. RE: The Enduring Impact Of Imperialism And Colonialism On Africa
to the disunity and dysfunction of indigenous Africans; coups smaller, conflicting groups that people readily identified There were(are) the fang in different
http://www.themarcusgarveybbs.com/board/msgs/10588.html
RE: The Enduring Impact of Imperialism and Colonialism on Africa Posted by adamu liman send this to my mailbox Original message posted by: Adib Rashad Friday, 01/02/2004 05:44:02 Replies:
  • RE: RE: The Enduring Impact of Imperialism and Colonialism on Africa
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