Africa
Ba-Kuba Wa-Taita
Ba-Kongo, Ba-Lolo Wa-Nyatura
including— Ba-Kuti Wa-Iramba
Mushi-Kongo Ba-Mbala Wa-Mbugwe
Mussorongo Ba-Huana Wa-Kaguru
Kabinda Ba-Yaka Wa-Gogo {
possible
Ka-Kongo Ba-Pindi Wa-Chaga { Masai
Ba-Vili Ba-Kwese { element
Ma-Yumbe &c.
Ba-Lumbo Older Bantu
Ba-Sundi Tribes of the Congo Wa-Nyamwezi,
Ba-Bwende bank including—
Ba-Lali Wa-Genia Wa-Sukuma
}Trans-
Ba-Kunya Ba-Soko Wa-Sumbwa
}itional
Ba-Poto Wa-Nyanyembe }to
Mobali Wa-Jui
}Bantu
Mogwandi Wa-Kimbu }of
Na-Ngala{ Connected Wa-Kanongo
}recent
Ba-Bangi{ with Zandeh Wa-Wende
}immi-
{ group
}gration
Wa-Buma
Ba-Nunu Wa-Gunda
Ba-Loi Wa-Guru
Ba-Teke Wa-Galla
Wa-Pfuru Wa-Sambara
Wa-Mbundu Wa-Seguha
Wa-Mfumu Wa-Nguru
Ba-Nsinik Wa-Sagara
Ma-Wumba Wa-Doe
Ma-Yakalia Wa-Khutu
&c Wa-Sarmo
Wa-Hehe
TRANSITIONAL Wa-Bena
FROM CENTRAL Wa-Sanga
TO SOUTHERN Wa-Swahili (with Arab
BANTU elements)
Amoela Connected are—
Ganguela Wa-Kisi
Kioko Wa-Mpoto }
Minungo Ba-Tonga }
Imbangala Ba-Tumbuka }
Ba-Achinji Wa-Nyika }
Golo Wa-Nyamwanga }
Akin to
Hollo A-Mambwe }
Luba-
&c. Wa-Fipa }
Lunda
Mbunda peoples, Wa-Rungu }
group
including— A-Wemba }
Bihe A-Chewa }
Dembo A-Maravi }
Mbaka Ba-Senga }
Ngola Ba-Bisa }
Bondo A-Jawa (Yaos)
Ba-Ngala Wa-Mwera
Songo Wa-Gindo
Haku Ma-Konde
Lubolo Ma-Wia
Kisama Ma-Nganja
&c. Ma-Kua
SOUTHERN BANTU
(South and South-East Africa)
Ba-Nyai } Ama-Zulu, including—
Ma-Kalanga, } Affinity Ama-Swazi
including } with Ama-Tonga
Mashona } Bechuana Matabele
Ba-Ronga } Angoni
Ba-Chuana, Ma-Gwangwara
including— Ma-Huhu
Ba-Tlapin Ma-Viti
Ba-Rolong Ma-Situ
Ba-Ratlou Ma-Henge
Ba-Taung &c.
Ba-Rapulana Ama-Xosa, including—
Ba-Seleka Ama-Gcaleka
Ba-Hurutsi Ama-Hahebe
Ba-Tlaru Ama-Ngqika
Ba-Mangwato Ama-Tembu
Ba-Tauana Ama-Pondo
Ba-Ngwaketse &c.
Ba-Kuena Ova-Herero
&c. Ova-Mpo
HAMITO-BANTU BUSHMEN
BUSHMEN
TRANSITIONAL
Hottentots, }
including— } S. W.
Namaqua } Africa
Koranna }
TRIBES IN MADAGASCAR
MALAYO-INDONESIANS BANTU-NEGROIDS
Hova Sakalava, including—
Betsileo (slight Bantu admixture) Menabe
Milaka
HOVA-BANTU Ronandra
TRANSITIONAL Mahafali
&c.
Malagasy, including—
Bestimisaraka Antanosi
Antambahoaka Antsihanaka
Antaimoro Antanala
Antaifasina Antaisara
Antaisaka &c.
IV. HISTORY
The origin and meaning of the name of the continent are discussed
elsewhere (see AFRICA, ROMAN.) The word Africa was applied originally to
the country in the immediate neighbourhood of Carthage, that part of the
continent first known to the Romans, and it was subsequently extended with
their increasing knowledge, till it came at last to include all that they
knew of the continent. The Arabs still confine the name Ifrikia to the
territory of Tunisia.
Phoenician and Greek colonization.
The valley of the lower Nile was the home in remotest antiquity of a
civilized race. Egyptian culture had, however, remarkably little direct
influence on the rest of the continent, a result due in large measure to
the fact that Egypt is shut off landwards by immense deserts. If ancient
Egypt and Ethiopia (q.v.) be excluded, the story of Africa is largely a
record of the doings of its Asiatic and European conquerors and colonizers,
Abyssinia being the only state which throughout historic times has
maintained its independence. The countries bordering the Mediterranean were
first exploited by the Phoenicians, whose earliest settlements were made
before 1000 B.C. Carthage, founded about 800 B.C., speedily grew into a
city without rival in the Mediterranean, and the Phoenicians, subduing the
Berber tribes, who then as now formed the bulk of the population, became
masters of all the habitable region of North Africa west of the Great
Syrtis, and found in commerce a source of immense prosperity. Both
Egyptians and Carthaginians made attempts to reach the unknown parts of the
continent by sea. Herodotus relates that an expedition under Phoenician
navigators, employed by Necho, king of Egypt, c. 600 B.C., circumnavigated
Africa from the Red Sea to the Mediterranean, a voyage stated to have been
accomplished in three years. Apart from the reported circumnavigation of
the continent, the west coast was well known to the Phoenicians as far as
Cape Nun, and c. 520 B.C. Hanno, a Carthaginian, explored the coast as far,
perhaps, as the Bight of Benin, certainly as far as Sierra Leone. A vague
knowledge of the Niger regions was also possessed by the Phoenicians.
Meantime the first European colonists had planted themselves in Africa.
At the point where the continent approaches nearest the Greek islands,
Greeks founded the city of Cyrene (c. 631 B.C..) Cyrenaica became a
flourishing colony, though being hemmed in on all sides by absolute desert
it had little or no influence on inner Africa. The Greeks, however, exerted
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