Africa, المجلد 51Oxford University Press, 1981 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 36
الصفحة 513
... continued use of non - Nuer intermediaries during the first two decades of the century ' fostered a number of misunderstandings . The administration had to rely on incomplete and largely one - sided information which presented the Nuer ...
... continued use of non - Nuer intermediaries during the first two decades of the century ' fostered a number of misunderstandings . The administration had to rely on incomplete and largely one - sided information which presented the Nuer ...
الصفحة 695
... continued in the twentieth century . Trade , which the Ohafia mostly learnt from their Abiriba neighbours , replaced warfare and was later , with the advance of modern education after c.1910 , supplemented with work in government ...
... continued in the twentieth century . Trade , which the Ohafia mostly learnt from their Abiriba neighbours , replaced warfare and was later , with the advance of modern education after c.1910 , supplemented with work in government ...
الصفحة 853
... continued north into the Horn . The Proto - Sam who remained behind in the Marsabit area became the Rendille . The first group to separate from the Eastern Sam were the Proto - Boni , followed by Jabarti Somalis , and then successive ...
... continued north into the Horn . The Proto - Sam who remained behind in the Marsabit area became the Rendille . The first group to separate from the Eastern Sam were the Proto - Boni , followed by Jabarti Somalis , and then successive ...
المحتوى
Land lineage and clan in early Aŋl | 449 |
a comparative | 465 |
an aspect of Nilotic ethnology | 496 |
6 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activities administrative African agricultural ancestors appears associated Avatime beer belief called century chief clan Coast colonial concerned continued crop cultivation culture dans detailed Dinka Diola discussion Dorobo early economic example existence fact farm farmers fields force given groups head household important income increase individual Institute interest International knowledge known labour land language lineage living London means noble northern Notes Nuer organisation organization original pays period person political population possible present Press problems production publications reason reference region relations rice rituals Sierra Leone slaves social society Songhay sources southern structure suggests swamp Table town trade traditional unit University upland village West Western women