Peoples of Africa Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Acholi, ethnolinguistic group of northern Uganda and South Sudan. Numbering more than one million at the turn of......
Adangme, people occupying the coastal area of Ghana from Kpone to Ada, on the Volta River, and inland along the......
Afar, a people of the Horn of Africa who speak Afar (also known as ’Afar Af), a language of the Eastern Cushitic......
Afrikaner, a South African of European descent whose native language is Afrikaans. They are descendants of the......
Agau, an ancient people who settled in the northern and central Ethiopian Plateau and are associated with the development......
Akan, ethnolinguistic grouping of peoples of the Guinea Coast who speak Akan languages (of the Kwa branch of the......
Ambo, ethnolinguistic group located in the dry grassland country of northern Namibia and southern Angola. They......
Amhara, people of the Ethiopian central highlands. The Amhara are one of the two largest ethnolinguistic groups......
Antaimoro, a Malagasy people living on and near the southeastern coast of Madagascar. Numbering about 350,000 in......
Antandroy, a Malagasy people living in southernmost Madagascar. Numbering about 500,000 in the late 20th century,......
Anyi, African people who inhabit the tropical forest of eastern Côte d’Ivoire and Ghana and speak a language of......
Anywa, a Luo-speaking riverine people, two-thirds of whom live in eastern South Sudan and the remainder in Ethiopia.......
Asante, people of south-central Ghana and adjacent areas of Togo and Côte d’Ivoire. Most of the Asante live in......
Baga, people who inhabit the swampy coastal region between Cape Verga and the city of Conakry in Guinea. They speak......
Bagirmi, people living on the southern fringe of the Sahara, close to the region of Bornu in Chad and Nigeria.......
Bambara, ethnolinguistic group of the upper Niger region of Mali whose language, Bambara (Bamana), belongs to the......
Bambuti, a group of Pygmies of the Ituri Forest of eastern Congo (Kinshasa). They are the shortest group of Pygmies......
Bamileke, any of about 90 West African peoples in the Bamileke region of Cameroon. They speak a language of the......
Bamum, a West African people speaking a language that is often used as a lingua franca and belongs to the Benue-Congo......
Banda, a people of the Central African Republic, some of whom also live in the Democratic Republic of the Congo......
Bantu peoples, the approximately 85 million speakers of the more than 500 distinct languages of the Bantu subgroup......
Baqqārah, (Arabic: “Cattlemen”), nomadic people of Arab and African ancestry who live in a part of Africa that......
Bara, Malagasy people who live in south-central Madagascar and speak a dialect of Malagasy, a West Austronesian......
Bari, people living near Juba in South Sudan. They speak an Eastern Sudanic language of the Nilo-Saharan language......
Baster, (from Afrikaans baster, “bastard,” or “half-breed”), member of an ethnically mixed group in Namibia and......
Baule, an African people inhabiting Côte d’Ivoire between the Comoé and Bandama rivers. The Baule are an Akan group,......
Beja, nomadic people grouped into tribes and occupying mountain country between the Red Sea and the Nile and Atbara......
Bemba, Bantu-speaking people inhabiting the northeastern plateau of Zambia and neighbouring areas of Congo (Kinshasa)......
Berber, any of the descendants of the pre-Arab inhabitants of North Africa. The Berbers live in scattered communities......
Bergdama, a seminomadic people of mountainous central Namibia. They speak a Khoisan (click) language, but culturally......
Betsileo, a Malagasy people living in the central highlands of south-central Madagascar. They speak a dialect of......
Betsimisaraka, a Malagasy people living along the east-central and northeastern coast of Madagascar. The Betsimisaraka......
Bobo, people of Burkina Faso (formerly Upper Volta), who speak a language of the Gur branch of the Niger-Congo......
Boer, (Dutch: “husbandman,” or “farmer”), a South African of Dutch, German, or Huguenot descent, especially one......
Bongo, a people once extensive in the western area of present-day South Sudan, now found in small, scattered settlements......
Bulu, one of a number of related peoples inhabiting the hilly, forested, south-central area of Cameroon as well......
Chaga, Bantu-speaking people living on the fertile southern slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro in northern Tanzania. They......
Chewa, Bantu-speaking people living in the extreme eastern zone of Zambia, northwestern Zimbabwe, Malawi, and Mozambique.......
Chokwe, Bantu-speaking people who inhabit the southern part of Congo (Kinshasa) from the Kwango River to the Lualaba;......
Coloured, a person of mixed European (“white”) and African (“Black”) or Asian ancestry, as officially defined by......
Dagomba, the dominant ethnic group in the chiefdom of Dagbon in the northern region of Ghana; they speak Dagbani......
Dan, an ethnolinguistic grouping of people inhabiting the mountainous west-central Côte d’Ivoire and adjacent areas......
Dinka, people who live in the savanna country surrounding the central swamps of the Nile basin primarily in South......
Dogon, ethnic group of the central plateau region of Mali that spreads across the border into Burkina Faso. There......
Duala, Bantu-speaking people of the forest region of southern Cameroon living on the estuary of the Wouri River.......
Dyula, people of western Africa who speak a Mande language of the Niger-Congo language family. Most are Muslims,......
Edo, people of southern Nigeria who speak a language of the Benue-Congo branch of the Niger-Congo language family.......
Efik, people inhabiting the lower Cross River in Cross River state, Nigeria. Their language is the main dialect......
Ekoi, group of peoples situated in extreme southeastern Nigeria and extending eastward into neighbouring Cameroon.......
Ewe, peoples living in southeastern Ghana, southern Benin, and the southern half of Togo who speak various dialects......
Fali, a people who inhabit the rocky plateaus ringed by the northernmost peaks of the Adamawa mountains of northern......
Fang, Bantu-speaking peoples occupying the southernmost districts of Cameroon south of the Sanaga River, mainland......
Fante, people of the southern coast of Ghana between Accra and Sekondi-Takoradi. They speak a dialect of Akan,......
Fipa, a Bantu-speaking people linguistically related to Lungu, Pimbwe, and Mambwe who inhabit the Ufipa plateau......
Fon, people living in the south of Benin (called Dahomey until 1975) and adjacent parts of Togo. Their language,......
Fulani, a primarily Muslim people scattered throughout many parts of Africa, mostly in West Africa from Lake Chad......
Fur, people after whom the westernmost province of Sudan, Darfur, is named. The Fur inhabit the mountainous area......
Ga, people of the southeast coast of Ghana, speaking a dialect of the Kwa branch of Niger-Congo languages. The......
Ganda, people inhabiting the area north and northwest of Lake Victoria in south-central Uganda. They speak a Bantu......
Gbaya, a people of southwestern Central African Republic, east-central Cameroon, northern Congo (Brazzaville),......
Gogo, a Bantu-speaking people inhabiting central Tanzania. They live in a portion of the East African Rift System.......
Griqua, 19th-century people, of mixed Khoekhoe and European ancestry, who occupied the region of central South......
Grusi, ethnolinguistic group among the inhabitants of northern Ghana and adjacent areas of Burkina Faso (formerly......
Guang, a people of northern Ghana who speak a variety of Kwa languages of the Niger-Congo language family. They......
Gurage, ethnolinguistic group of the fertile and semi-mountainous region some 150 miles (240 kilometres) south......
Gurma, an ethnic group that is chiefly centred on the town of Fada N’Gourma in eastern Burkina Faso, although smaller......
Guro, people of the Côte d’Ivoire (Ivory Coast), in the valley regions of the Bandama River; they speak a language......
Gusii, a Bantu-speaking people who inhabit hills of western Kenya in an area between Lake Victoria and the Tanzanian......
Ha, a Bantu-speaking people belonging to the Interlacustrine Bantu ethnolinguistic family who live in western Tanzania......
Haratin, inhabitants of oases in the Sahara, especially in southern Morocco and Mauritania, who constitute a socially......
Hausa, people found chiefly in northwestern Nigeria and adjacent southern Niger. They constitute the largest ethnic......
Haya, East African people who speak a Bantu language (also called Haya) and inhabit the northwestern corner of......
Hehe, Bantu-speaking agricultural people occupying the Iringa region of southern Tanzania. Numbering about 192,000......
Herero, a group of closely related Bantu-speaking peoples of southwestern Africa. The Herero proper and a segment......
Hutu, Bantu-speaking people of Rwanda and Burundi. Numbering about 9,500,000 in the late 20th century, the Hutu......
Ibibio, people of southeastern Nigeria, mainly in the Cross River state. They speak dialects of Efik-Ibibio, a......
Idoma, inhabitants of the region east of the confluence of the Niger and Benue rivers in southern Nigeria. A number......
Igala, a largely Muslim people of Nigeria, living on the left bank of the Niger River below its junction with the......
Igbira, inhabitants of the areas northeast and southwest of the confluence of the Niger and Benue rivers in central......
Igbo, people living chiefly in southeastern Nigeria who speak Igbo, a language of the Benue-Congo branch of the......
Ijo, people of the forests of the Niger River delta in Nigeria comprising a large number of formerly autonomous......
Ila, a Bantu-speaking people inhabiting an area west of Lusaka, the national capital of Zambia. The Ila-Tonga cluster......
Imbangala, a warrior group of central Angola that emerged in the late 16th century. In older sources, the Imbangala......
Isoko, people of the northwestern part of the Niger delta in Nigeria, speaking a language of the Kwa branch of......
Issa, a branch of the Somali (q.v.) people living in the Republic of Djibouti (formerly the French Territory of......
Itsekiri, ethnic group inhabiting the westernmost part of the Niger River delta of extreme southern Nigeria. The......
Jukun, a people living on the upper Benue River in Nigeria, commonly believed to be descendants of the people of......
Kabyle, Berber people of Algeria inhabiting a partially mountainous region stretching from the Mediterranean Sea......
Kabābīsh, nomadic people of the desert scrub of northern Kordofan region, Sudan, numbering about 70,000. Of mixed......
Kalenjin, any member of the Kipsikis (Kipsigis), Nandi, Pokot, or other related peoples of west-central Kenya,......
Kamba, Bantu-speaking people of Kenya. They are closely related to the neighbouring Kikuyu. Though primarily agriculturists,......
Kanuri, African people, the dominant element of the population of Bornu state in northeastern Nigeria and also......
Kaonde, a Bantu-speaking people the vast majority of whom inhabit the northwestern region of Zambia. A numerically......
Karimojong, eastern Nilotic pastoral people of northeastern Uganda. The Karimojong are the largest of a cluster......
Khoekhoe, any member of a people of Southern Africa whom the first European explorers found in areas of the hinterland......
Kikuyu, Bantu-speaking people who live in the highland area of south-central Kenya, near Mount Kenya. In the late......
Kipsikis, largest ethnic group of the Southern Nilotic (Kalenjin) language group. They occupy the highlands around......
Kisi, group of some 120,000 people inhabiting a belt of hills covered by wooded savannas where Guinea, Sierra Leone,......
Kongo, group of Bantu-speaking peoples related through language and culture and dwelling along the Atlantic coast......
Konso, ethnolinguistic group located in the arid highlands of southwestern Ethiopia. Their sharply delimited traditional......