Africa, المجلد 60،الأعداد 1-2Edinburgh University Press for the International African Institute, 1990 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 23
الصفحة 247
relations and understanding their structure . Educated Tarok are keenly aware of the peculiarities of Tarok kinship and the lack of anything like their kyanship among nearby peoples , except to a limited degree among the Angas . In Tarok ...
relations and understanding their structure . Educated Tarok are keenly aware of the peculiarities of Tarok kinship and the lack of anything like their kyanship among nearby peoples , except to a limited degree among the Angas . In Tarok ...
الصفحة 258
... Tarok kinship and society . They accordingly rejected Garba's recommendation as Christian in aims and origin , and incompatible with Tarok culture and tradition . Since then , to our knowledge there has been no new attempt to eliminate ...
... Tarok kinship and society . They accordingly rejected Garba's recommendation as Christian in aims and origin , and incompatible with Tarok culture and tradition . Since then , to our knowledge there has been no new attempt to eliminate ...
الصفحة 261
... Tarok kyanship , since their connubial groups upheld and enforced the same set of rights and duties . Accordingly , there was no need to invest the MMB with the authority that Tarok kyans possess over the marriage and children of their ...
... Tarok kyanship , since their connubial groups upheld and enforced the same set of rights and duties . Accordingly , there was no need to invest the MMB with the authority that Tarok kyans possess over the marriage and children of their ...
المحتوى
a study | 39 |
economic and political | 88 |
Incendiarism and other fires in nineteenthcentury Lagos | 111 |
حقوق النشر | |
5 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
abortion administration African Studies agricultural Akan Association authority Botswana British cent chapter chiefs clan colonial comrades Côte d'Ivoire crop cultivation cultural dada nana district dominant Dyula economic farmers farms filiation fire FRELIMO French Gambia Ghana Gikuyu girls groups guerrillas Hausa healers hectares Houphouët household ideology immigrants important individual institutions International irrigated Islam Ivoirian Jahaly-Pacharr Kalau Kamutuk Kenya kika kika kika killed kinship Korhogo Kulere kyamshi kyan kyanship labour Lagos land language lineage London male Mandinka marriage Mau Mau Mozambican Mozambique n'anga Native Ndau Nigeria nzok oathing rituals organisation patrilineal peasant plots political population precolonial programme recruitment refugees relations RENAMO reported Rhodesia rice production rural security forces Senoufo Shona social society Sokoto Southern spirit mediums structure symbolic Tarok terrorists traditional tribal University Press urban village West Africa women Zambezia Zimbabwe