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The mountains of the Tangale-Waja Uplands are inhabited by a number of small ethnic groups. They speak different languages which belong to two unrelated linguistic stocks. The Afroasiatic stock is represented by Chadic languages, especially Tangale, but also Pero and Kushi (further to the south along the slopes of the Muri Mountains) of the Bole-Tangale Group. But the majority of the languages belong to the Adamawa branch of the Niger-Congo stock. The study of the vocabulary, technical terms and expressions relating to farming in general and 'farming on terraces' in particular constitutes another important aspect of our multidisciplinary research project providing us with valuable information about the history of the settlements and cultures of the entire region. In this communication we will restrict ourselves to a few general observations which are mainly based on the comparison of selected items of the farming vocabularies of those communities which used to farm the slopes of the mountains in our research area. We want to focus on the various designations for "terraced farms" and "terraces" including any arrangement or setting of stones on farms to enhance and support the production of the staple food: guinea corn (sorghum) and/or millet (pennisetum).
Traditional land rights in Dagara and Sisala societies in Burkina Faso and Ghana which were stateless in pre-colonial times are closely connected with the concept of earth-shrine parishes under the protection of a local land god and ideally under the control of the “first-comers” to the area. The earth priests perform regular sacrifices at the shrine and allocate land to later immigrants as well as the right to build houses and to bury their dead, often in exchange for gifts. The international border between Ghana and Burkina Faso, which was drawn up in 1898 and runs along the 11th parallel, often cuts across earth-shrine parishes. Particularly since the border demarcation exercise in the 1970s, the spatial separation of the Sisala earth priests on one side of the border from the Dagara immigrants on the other side has given rise to intricate conflicts over land rights. The paper will present the history of one such conflict and look at the various landrelated discourses – traditionalist, nationalist, and Christian – which the adversaries put forward in order to substantiate their claims.
The area around the Lake Chad is characterized as an example for a region where ethnic changes abundantly took place and still do. For example some Kanuri districts, or the leaders of those districts, are (unofficially) named after other ethnic names (e.g. Margi, Shuwa) or Kanuri clan names are identical with ethnic names of other groups, eg. Tera, Bade. Both people speak a Chadic language and live in the south and west of the Kanuri respectively. These are indications that the Kanuri formerly absorbed and integrated these peoples. These processes are not only a phenomenon of the past. In the case of the neighbouring Gamergu people an ongoing process of ethnic change towards a Kanuri identity is observed until present. The research projects1 have revealed that the concept of "ethnic units" is far from being static which the term may suggest. This especially applies to the German Stamm, which implies a static concept of ethnicity. However, in Borno the dynamics of ethnic and linguistic change are prevailing. Therefore Ronald Cohen rejected the term "ethnic unit", or even "tribe" for the Kanuri and preferred "nation" instead. Umara Bulakarima argued along the same line but used "ethnic group" for Kanuri subunits, e.g. Manga, Mowar, Suwurti. There is no doubt that the Kanuri played a dominant part in the history of the Lake Chad area during the past centuries. Therefore the "Kanurization" process may not surprise. However, in the following it will be revealed that the processes of contact and resulting adaptations and delimitations are not necessarily unidirectional from Kanuri to other groups. At least in some cases they may go into the opposite direction, e.g. from Gamergu to Kanuri.
Einmal im Jahr, einundzwanzig Tage nach dem für Ahnen und Jenseitsmächte zelebrierten Erntedank, würdigen König und Hofstaat mit einem gesonderten Fest, Bugum Yaoge~, den Vorfahren, von dem sich die Tenkodogo-Dynastie in direkter Linie herleitet: Naaba Bugum. Naaba Bugum selbst hat seinen Fuß wahrscheinlich nie nach Ye~le~yan gesetzt, wie Tenkodogo - in Anlehnung an einen nahen Regenzeitfluß - damals noch hieß. Naaba Sigri leitete den Beginn einer Expansion ein, die etwa hundert Jahre später, unter einem seiner Nachfolger, Naaba Bãogo, zur Unterwerfung der südlichen Bisa von Loanga und Bane und damit zur größten territorialen Ausdehnung vor Einzug der französischen Kolonialmacht führen sollte.
In a recent article dealing with the Tangale Peak or Kilang, as it is called in the local Tangale language, Herrmann JUNGRAITHMAYR presents an account narrated by a Tangale elder about the attempted ascent of that characteristic mountain by a British colonial officer and his subsequent death.1 Kilang mountain is a basaltic cone approximately 1300 m high, about 8 km southwest of Kaltungo, one of the principal settlements of the Tangale people, in southern Bauchi State, northeastern Nigeria. During a research stay at the National Archives in Kaduna in November 1993 I was able to consult a file containing various documents relating to this incident in detail.2 In the following note I present an outline of the events based on the evidence in the colonial records. By doing this I not only intend to shed more light on a tragic event from the very early years of the colonial era. The picture of the circumstances emerging from the investigations of the colonial authorities may serve as a background to the narrative by the Tangale elder presented in JUNGRAITHMAYR's publication.
Notre communication porte sur le thème suivant: "Anthropisation du couvert végétal dans la province de Namentenga et ses conséquences socioéconomiques: cas de la région de Tougouri, en zone subsahélienne" (centre-nord du Burkina Faso). A travers cette étude de cas, nous voulons attirer l'attention sur les problèmes environnementaux du Burkina Faso. En effet, les déficits pluviométriques cumulés, depuis quelques décennies, sont à l'origine de la dégradation des écosystèmes. La surexploitation des terres entraîne également l'épuisement des sols et la diminution des ressources végétales. Un telle situation n'est pas sans conséquence sur les activités socioéconomiques des populations. Le plan de notre communication sera donc comme suit: 1. Présentation du degré-carré de Tougouri, sur le plan physique 2. Dynamique du couvert végétal sous l'action anthropique, et les conséquences socioéconomiques 3. Perspectives d'avenir
L’Afrique, de par la diversité de ses écosystèmes, de la richesse de ses ressources et de par la confrontation de deux conceptions d’aménagement, l’une africaine l’autre externe, offre à la télédétection satellitaire l’un des meilleurs champs d’application. Cependant, une conscience claire des besoins spécifiques en informations par rapport aux objectifs à atteindre manque. Ceci est dû à l’insuffisance d’une politique de développement cohérent, dont la dimension spatiale n’est rien d’autre que l’aménagement du territoire. Tel est le sens de ce travail qui offre deux études de cas: Compiéna dans le département de Pama, province du Gourma et Leo dans le département de Léo province de la Sissili. L’exploitation des données satellitaires concernant les zones d’étude Compiéna et de Léo s’est faite en l’absence ou insuffisance de certaines données de base nécessaires. Cependant, elle complète ces dernières ou pallie en partie à ces défauts, permettant ainsi une bonne connaissance de la réalité spatiale du terrain. Ceci a conduit à l’objectif recherché, consistant à évaluer les besoins en informations pour l’aménagement de Compiéna et de Léo.
Numerous ecologists postulate that West African savannas are mostly the result of degradation of formerly closed forests. This hypothesis can only be tested by palaeoecological investigations. The palynological results summarised in this paper document the history of the Sudanian and Sahelian savanna of NE-Nigeria during the last 11.500 years (uncal. BP). Both sites investigated provide evidence for the persistence of savanna throughout the entire Holocene. Patches of closed dry forest may have occurred, but never completely displaced the savanna vegetation. Humid conditions during the early and mid Holocene (from 10.000 BP onwards) caused a rapid spread of Guinean and Sudanian taxa into the northern vegetation zones. A slow return to drier climatic conditions between ca. 6800 BP and ca. 5500 BP can be recorded at both sites. Finally, between 3800 BP and 3300 BP a strong aridification resulted in the establishment of the modern vegetation zones. In both the Sahelian and Sudanian zone the vegetational changes appear to have been primarily controlled by climatic changes, whereas the effects of human activities remain palynologically silent even for the late Holocene.
Bilder der Anderen : die Digitalisierung des ethnographischen Bildarchivs des Frobenius-Instituts
(2006)
Im SW Burkina Fasos (sechs Monate Regenzeit und durchschnittlich über 1000 mm Niederschlag) wurden mehrere Trockenwälder auf ihr Artenspektrum und die Bodenverhältnisse hin untersucht. Die Waldformationen fallen durch die Dichte der Gehölzbedeckung, ihren Lianenreichtum und das fast vollständige Fehlen von Gräsern auf. Typische Gehölzarten sind Anogeissus leiocarpus, Diospyros mespiliformis und die Liane Saba senegalensis. Der dichte Strauchunterwuchs und die fehlende Grasschicht verhindern das regelmäßige Eindringen von Buschfeuern. Wegen der Dichte und des Alters der Bäume belegen diese Waldformationen, daß an den Standorten, zumindest für einen sehr langen Zeitraum, kein Feldbau betrieben wurde. Daher konnten sich, auch auf eher als ungünstig zu bewertenden Böden, Trockenwälder ausbilden, die zumindest in ihrer Physiognomie der potentiellen natürlichen Vegetation entsprechen. Jedoch finden sich in den Wäldern oft Spuren menschlicher Aktivitäten aus der Vergangenheit, so z.B. Steinsetzungen, Siedlungshügel und Gruben. Außerdem lassen sich vielfach Anzeichen einer rezenten Nutzung beobachten, so z.B. für die Entnahme von Werkholz, das Schneiteln mancher Baumarten zur Viehfuttergewinnung, gelegentliche Beweidung und das Sammeln von Wildpflanzen.