SFB 268
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La notion de plantes sacrées, de bois sacré est liée à la culture d'une société donnée. Le bois sacré est souvent un lieu de culte ou de fétichisme. Une espèce végétale peut faire partie de ce bois mais elle n'est pas considéré comme sacrée. Une plante ou espèce est sacrée parce qu'elle est liée à un rite coutumier bien précis, à une mythologie bien déterminée. Nous présentons dans ce qui suit quelques espèces végétales considérées comme sacrées par les Bobo. Nos informations proviennent de Kotedougou de son vrai nom Kokana. Le village est situé au nord de Bobo-Dioulasso à 25 km de la ville, localisé dans la zone phytogéographique Sud Soudanienne du Burkina Faso. Nous avons restreint nos données ethnobotaniques sur huit espèces les plus connues et qui de par leur usage abusif dans la pharmacopée tendent à disparaître dans la zone présentée ici. Par ailleurs les variations climatiques, particulièrement la baisse de la pluviométrie ont entraîné une grande modification de la flore et de la végétation autour du village de Kokana et à travers tout le Burkina.
Yerwa is the last of the Borno capitals. Although established in the first decade of colonial administration, it cannot be compared with the many other towns like Fort Lamy, Jos, Kaduna, Niamey et al. which all developed about the same time. Colonial interference with the development of Yerwa appears restricted, mainly, to insistence upon wider roads than a Borno town otherwise would have featured and resettlement schemes, e.g. Mafoni, Ari Askeri. The following is based on the premise that as the town - despite time and political circumstances of its emergence - is a distinctive Borno town, also occupational diversification and structure are distinctively related to urban Borno culture.
Le phénomène du cuirassement reste une "curiosité" et une énigme pour le pays de la zone intertropicale. A cause de ses caractéristiques lithologiques et structurales assez particulières de ses roches (roches riches en éléments ferromagnésiens), le Burkina Faso est une véritable zone de prédilection des cuirasses. Malgré l'effort des chercheurs pour élucider le phénomène du cuirassement, force est de reconnaître que de nos jours, certains points d'ombre subsistent toujours; ce qui invite à une analyse plus poussée ... Loin de négliger les problèmes liés à la reconstitution de la génèse de la cuirasse, nous proposons ici une analyse assez originale des cuirasses sur la base des connaissances déjà acquises et de nos multiples observations sur le terrain burkinabé.
Nos travaux dans les villages mosi de la région de Tenkodogo, au centreest du Burkina Faso, portent directement sur le thème central du Projet de Recherche de l'Université de Francfort: Les relations mutuelles entre la culture d'une population et son milieu naturel. Sur la base d'une étude approfondie de l'environnement naturel, on devrait répondre à la question suivante: comment les Hommes conçoivent et estimentils ce milieu, quelles valeurs lui attribueton; en outre, sur la base de quels principes et d'après quels critères de préférence utilisentils leurs sols en tant que cultivateurs; quelles raisons déterminent-elles l'expansion des Mosi méridionaux dans cette aire géographique, la fondation des villages ainsi que leur dévéloppement démographique. Enfin quel est l'impact de tout cela sur l'environnement naturel, c'est-à-dire quelles sont les conséquences écologiques des conceptions et comportements susmentionnés. Nos recherches sur le terrain débutèrent en 1991 sous la forme d'une collaboration interdisciplinaire étroite entre l'ethnologie, la géographie physique et la botanique. L'objectif à long terme est une comparaison entre les Mosi méridionaux, leurs voisins bisa, les Gulmance et enfin un groupe mosi du nord.
The account of Borno's war with Mandara thus recounted above, at least from the point of view of the Mandara Chronicler, and all the other accounts I have given above clearly portray to us the essence of the Mune in that oppression and/or a war of caprice is not enjoined. And the war against Mandara was clearly a war of caprice, as Mandara had clearly recanted on its recalcitrance, when threatened. The essence of the Chronicle itself, however, is that we are here seeing, from accounts of an eye-witness, the portrayal of a polity whose language principles and practice of diplomacy, in war and in peace, are not less developed than any we have seen in the states of Euro-Germanic experience, of comparable times. The basis of this well ordered art is essentially the Mune, even though in its universalist form we may wish to assign it to the Book and the Sunna of Islam. Why not then, should we not regard the Mune as the constitution of the pre-colonial Borno State? Munen - ba (not in the Mune), for the Sayfawa ruler is certainly more binding than most modern constitutions had been binding on leaders of present-day African States!
It is one of the paradoxes of the history of the states of the Central Sudan that Borno, the state with the longest tradition of Islamic literacy should have such an illestablished chronology - especially for the nineteenth century - when compared with its neighbours. No kinglist has been published, no list with regnal years, such as is known from other states. Our problems are compounded by the fact that every known list is presented in the Christian solar calendar and there is no way in which we can be certain that the original material has been correctly converted from the Muslim lunar calendar. In the paper that follows I have attempted to establish a chronology based primarily upon Arabic sources and upon the Muslim calendar. These sources include state seals which usually are engraved with the date of the year of accession; mahrams, charters, or grants of privilege, or rather renewal of such grants by newly appointed leaders. It was the practice for owners of such documents to have them renewed at the beginning of a new reign. When attempting to date events connected with the eclipse of the al-Kanimiyyin and the advent of Rabih I have also made use of evidence relating to the seasons and to various meteorological conditions.
The land use in the Tangale-Waja area is analysed according to the two basic categories of geography: Firstly the manifold interaction between men and environment which form the spatial characteristics of an area, and secondly the decrease of influence with increasing distance. The importance of these two elementary factors is described by indicators as accessibility for the period from the precolonial situation until the time after World War II, when new roads were constructed through the mountainous area. Living in a hilly environment the self contained population (formerly called "hill pagans") had developed special agricultural techniques which can be considered ecologically well adapted. The opening up of the area after the pacification, Christianity and education, led to a considerable increase in population, the expansion of land under cultivation, and the change of settlement structure by down-hill population movement. This resulted in overuse of the fragile natural resources. The size of farm steads became too small for the family unit and the still low accessibility of the hinterland of the main interregional roads as well as inappropriate techniques of agricultural production are shortcomings causing heavy damage to the physical environment and decreasing living standards of the local population.
We wish to emphasize the fact that so far our investigations have concentrated on documenting large bodies of data covering a number of linguistic units in an area which - as we hope to have demonstrated - displays a highly complex linguistic and ethnic structure. Our aim in the above remarks is essentially to throw out a challenge. In order to be able to interpret this situation in terms of the historic development of this zone of compression, further investigations are required, particularly regarding linguistic interference between Chadic and Niger-Congo languages in the south, as well as between Chadic and Nilo-Saharan languages, particularly Kanuri in the north-east and Songhay in the north-west. Ultimately, questions like the following are at stake: To what extent did the numerous Chadic languages preserve their original Hamitosemitic heritage? What is the impact of the Niger-Congo and Nilo-Saharan languages on individual Chadic languages in the respective border areas? In this context, detailed comparative studies between Chadic and Adamawa on the one hand, Chadic and Jukunoid and Chadic and Jarawan Bantu on the other hand as well as Chadic internal research, are urgently required.
Studies on land use in Africa have usually been carried out by ethnologists or human geographers and were rarely concerned with data on the physical conditions of soil. There is hardly any issue, however, where interdependencies between natural and cultural factors are as evident as in the topic of land use. For this project the approach of three ethnologists, Braukämper, Kirscht and Platte, was therefore combined with the analysis of Thiemeyer as physical geographer. The area of research is the Local Government Area of Marte in the Nigerian State of Borno. As part of the Chad Basin this region is mainly characterised by clay sediments which are commonly labelled firgi by its inhabitants. Beside this general term, however, the local peasants clearly distinguish five types of soil (Kanuri: katti), to which different physical conditions and qualities with respect to their cultivation are attributed. The question arose how far can this popular knowledge, accumulated by agricultural experiences over generations, be correlated with scientific data. That is why samples of the mentioned types of soil were collected by the members of our team and analysed in the laboratory of the Frankfurt Institute of Physical Geography. The detailed presentation of this analysis has to be preceded by the classification of the respective soil types in the terminology of the indigenous farmers.