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Hausa Legend and Earth Pyramids in the Western and Central Sudan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
Extract
In 1907 M. Louis Desplaques described in Le Plateau Central Nigérien a series of large tumuli—pyramids of earth—the burial places of chiefs of a past era. He notes their existence at El Walaji and as far east as Aménaka, near Zinder, on the banks of the Niger near the Bassa rapids, west to Sikassa, and on the banks of the Senegal. On archaeological grounds, supported by a well-known passage from the Arab writer El Behri, he concludes that they were built by “red” or Berber races of the same stratum of population as the ancient inhabitants of the Ghana Empire. “They remain”, he writes, “as the sole witnesses of the activity, the industry, and civilization of these ‘red’ peoples, whose names and real origin we do not know”.
- Type
- Papers Contributed
- Information
- Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies , Volume 2 , Issue 2 , February 1922 , pp. 225 - 233
- Copyright
- Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1922
References
page 225 note 1 Larose, 1907, pp. 54–66.
page 226 note 1 This tree is sacred and is planted by pagan Hausas near tombs.
page 229 note 1 Hamaker—Specimen Catalogi, p. 203.
page 229 note 2 See the Hausa legend translated below.
page 230 note 1 See Mercier, , History of Africa, i, p. 338.Google Scholar
page 230 note 2 See MacMiehael, Tribes of Nordofun, s.v. Zaghawa.
page 231 note 1 “Notes on Some Asben Records,” Journal African Society, 1910.
page 231 note 2 The original is in Arabic.
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