Tuareg
Tuareg
african indigenous people bamana
Africa, African Anthropology - General Resources. ... Nok Nuna Oron Owo Pende Pokot Punu
FWDP -- African Documents
...immigrants to Namibia trying to claim to be "Indigenous Peoples". ... TUAREG.TXT -
IPACC - Regional Information: West Africa
Burkina Faso has indicated that it will accept the findings of the African
NATIVE-L (June 1993): AFRICAN 'INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' TAKE STOCK
...of Indigenous Peoples of Africa'. A unique event, the conference brought together
Royalty.nu - Royalty in Africa - History, News, Books
...and Empire: Chieftaincy and Over-Rule in Asia, Africa, and the Pacific by Colin
Minorities At Risk (MAR)
...indigenous peoples. NIGER. TUAREG. 774. 0.0800. indigenous peoples. ... 3979. 0.0360.
Mythinglinks/AFRICA/Egypt & the Sahara: The Sahara
...looted; there's a page on the Berbers, another on the Tuareg, another on ... The next
UEA Saharan Studies Programme: publications
Keenan, J., 'Indigenous rights and a future politic amongst Algeria's Tuareg after
UEA Saharan Studies Programme: other related publications
Keenan, J., 2002 'The Situation of the Tuareg Peoples in North and West Africa'
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IT is supported by the Sengwer Indigenous Development Project (SIDP). TUNGHAT, Tuareg,
Ethnicity and Race by Countries
...and related Betsileo), Cotiers (mixed African, Malayo-Indonesian, and ... Malaysia, Malay
Adherents.com: By Location
..."; Pg. 433: "Most Tuareg are Muslim, adhering to Islam. ... ". African indigenous churches,
Gold Coast Africa:: FULANI BRASS ROPE BANGLE (Plated & Other Metal ...
Chic. African. Authentic Tuareg silver is capped with indigenous, semi-precious
LANGUAGES-ON-THE-WEB: BEST TUAREG LINKS
Tuareg Tamazgha, "a Collection of Resources on North ... Documents www.halcyon.com/FWDP/
African History for K-12 Classes
...two-story architecture, Islam and indigenous African cultures, Shawabtis ... Mali & Ghana,
Teaching Africa for K-12
...ssrg/africa/history/hisk12.html African Indigenous Knowledge Systems ... of Mali & Ghana,
The Berbers: Defending North Africa's Cultural Heritage
Vanishing Cultures," which listed indigenous cultures worldwide ... of East Africa, and
Encyclopedia of African History
...of Indigenous Trade and Markets in West Africa, Oxford: Oxford University Press,
Encyclopedia of African History
Rule Religion, History of Religion, Indigenous Beliefs: sub ... Transport Infrastructure
Map & Graph: Africa:Countries by People: Ethnic groups
Niger, Hausa 56%, Djerma 22%, Fula 8.5%, Tuareg 8%, Beri Beri (Kanouri) 4.3%, Arab,
Indigenous Affairs Index texts
S. Ole Matwi, p. 47 2/1993 Truly Indigenous: The Berbers of ... p. 14 2/1993 Pastoralism
Human rights in Morocco
...possible health risks of the Tuareg people caused ... Burkina-Faso TUNFA - Niger IPACC
Press Release: Amazigh Weekly News, Indigenous North African ...
...and issues which affect Imazighen, the indigenous people of North Africa also known
Takouba - Swords of the Saharan Tuareg
The Tuareg long dominated the central and west-central areas of the Sahara ... is that
Africa
...and Dagomba (the two major African languages in ... Nyanja, Tonga, and about 70 other
MavicaNET - History of Africa
Tuareg, Tuaregs culture and history "Tuareg" is an Arabic word ... Africa's Science and
History of Africa - MavicaNET
African Fractals-Modern Computing and Indigenous Design ... "Tuareg" is an Arabic word,
Ethnic groups. The World Factbook. 2003
...and related Betsileo), Cotiers (mixed African, Malayo-Indonesian ... Malaysia, Malay
Niger, country, Africa. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. ...
...s official language is French, and several indigenous languages as ... until 1904 because
African Languages
African languages. The African continent differs from all others by the very large
Baobab Narratives
During the ninth century, Islamicized Berber and Tuareg merchants began to ... This constant
World Cultures
Habarino!) Rashaida Samburu San (Namibia) Tuareg (Sahara) Wodaabe ... African Studies
Africa
Genocide against the Nuba, Ogoni Nation, Tuareg people in ... Borders - African countries
Powersports New Releases
The vastness of Chad transcends to its people - From the Tuareg people of the Saharan
African Arts: The curator-conservator collaboration: remembering ...
...analysis to the complexities of indigenous surfaces, construction ... arose when the
Tuareg Army
...in preference to their shamanistic indigenous religion) are ... When travelling, the
Ethnic Groups of the World
...and related Betsileo), Cotiers (mixed African, Malayo-Indonesian ... Malaysia: Malay
WFU’S Museum of Anthropology opens two new exhibits on Mexico ...
...the daily lives of the Zulu, Nupe, Tuareg, Bamileke and Lobi ... reflect pre-Hispanic,
African Timelines Part II
...states, but scholars argue that indigenous slavery was ... also African Timelines Part
NPR : On the Edge of Timbuktu
...performed during a feast by Bamako's Tuareg people ... studies the use of local plants
Conference Of Non-Governmental Organizations in Consultative ...
Program indeed asked herself how Africa, representing only ... an essential means by
Press kit: Issues - Racism against Indigenous peoples - World ...
The Imazighen (Berbers) are the indigenous peoples of northern Africa and
Chame.com.br - Ethnic groups
...and related Betsileo), Cotiers (mixed African, Malayo-Indonesian ... Malaysia: Malay
Rock Paper Scissors - Tartit, Ichichila (Network) - Saharan Group ...
Related to North Africa’s indigenous Amazigh (or Berber) peoples, The Tuareg resisted
The Tuareg (sometimes spelled Touareg in French, or Twareg in English) are a Berber ethnic group or nation. Tuareg is a name that became applied to them by early explorers and historians, but they call themselves variously, Kel Tamasheq, Kel Tamajaq ("speakers of Tamasheq"), Imouhar, Imuhagh, Imazaghan, or Imashaghen ("the free"). The Tuareg people also identify themselves with the concept Tamust, 'The Nation'. The meaning of the word Tuareg has been long discussed. It may have come from a Libyan region known today as Fezzan, but once called Targa. The Arabic word "Targui", for Tuareg, may have derived from the Targa valley, the main city Ubari west of Sebha. Alternatively, Tuareg may have come from a Bedouin pronunciation of the Arabic Tawariq ("abandoned by God", singular Tarqi). The Tuareg today are found mostly in West Africa, but, like many in Northern Africa, were once nomads throughout the Sahara.
History
Descended from Berbers in the region that is now Libya, the Tuareg are descendants of ancient Saharan peoples described by Herodotus, who mentions the ancient Libyan people, the Garamantes. Archaeological testimony is the ruins of Germa, the modern Tuareg descended from the Garamantes. Later, they expanded southward, into the Sahel.
For over two millennia, the Tuareg operated the trans-Saharan caravan trade connecting the great cities on the southern edge of the Sahara via five desert trade routes to the northern (Mediterranean) coast of Africa.
The Tuareg adopted camel nomadism along with its distinctive form of social organization from camel-herding Arabs about two thousand years ago, when the camel was introduced to the Sahara from Saudi Arabia. Like numerous African and other groups in pre-modern times, the Tuareg once took captives, either for trade or for domestic purposes; those who were not sold became assimilated into the Tuareg community. Captive servants and herdsmen formed a component of the division of labor in camel nomadism. Among Tuareg, the work of pastoralism was specialized according to social class: warrior-aristocrats who organized group defense, livestock raids, and the long-distance caravan trade; vassal-herdsmen who pastured and tended most of the confederation's livestock; and blacksmith-clients who fabricated and repaired the saddles, tools, household equipment and other material needs of the community. After the adoption of Islam, a separate class of religious clerics also became integral to Tuareg social structure.
In the early nineteenth century, the Tuareg resisted the French invasion of their Central Saharan homelands for the purpose of colonization. Tuareg broadswords were no match for the cannons and automatic rifles of French squadrons, and after numerous massacres, the Tuareg were subdued and required to sign treaties in Mali 1905 and Niger 1917. In southern Algeria, the French met some of the strongest resistance from the Ahaggar Tuareg. Their Amenokal, traditional chief Moussa ag Amastan, fought numerous battles in defense of the region. Finally, Tuareg territories were taken under French governance and their confederations were largely dismantled and re-organized. Before French colonization, the Tuareg were organized into loose confederations, each consisting of a dozen or so tribes. Each of the main groups had a traditional leader called Amenokal, along with an assembly of tribal chiefs: Imgharan, singular Amghar. The groups were: Kel-Ahaggar, Ajjer, Kel-Ayr, Adrar N'Fughas, Iwellemidan, and Kel Gres. Following the independence of African countries in 1960s, Tuareg territory was artificially divided into modern nations: Niger, Mali, Algeria, Libya, and Burkina Faso.
Areas where significant numbers of Tuaregs liveLong-standing competition for resources in the Sahel has impacted Tuareg conflicts with neighboring African groups, especially after political disruption and economic constraints following French colonization, tight restrictions placed on nomadization, and desertification exacerbated by global warming and the increased firewood needs of growing cities. Today, some Tuareg are experimenting with farming; some have been forced to abandon herding, and seek jobs in towns and cities.
In Mali, a Tuareg uprising re-surfaced in the Adrar N'Fughas mountains in the 1960s, following Mali's independence. In May 1990, in the aftermath of a clash between government soldiers and Tuareg outside a prison in Tchin-Tabaraden, Niger, Tuaregs in both Mali and Niger claimed autonomy for their traditional homeland: (Tenere, capital Agadez, in Niger and the Azawad and Kidal regions of Mali). Deadly clashes between Tuareg freedom-fighters and the military of both countries followed, with deaths numbering well into the thousands. Negotiations initiated by France and Algeria led to peace agreements (January 11, 1992 in Mali and 1995 in Niger). Both agreements called for decentralization of national power and guaranteed the integration of Tuareg resistance fighters into the countries' respective national armies.
Major fighting between the Tuareg resistance and government security forces ended after the 1995 and 1996 agreements, but in 2004, sporadic fighting continued in Niger between government forces and groups struggling to obtain Tuareg independence.
Tuareg territory
The Tuareg people inhabit a large area covering almost all the middle and western Sahara and the north-central Sahel. In Tuareg terms, the Sahara is not one desert, but many. Thus they call it Tinariwen, meaning "the deserts". Among the many deserts in north-west Africa there is the true desert Tenere. Then we can cite numerous deserts more and less arid, flat and mountainous: Adrar, Tagant, Tawat (Touat) Tanezruft, Adghagh N'Fughas, Tamasna, Azawagh, Adar, Damargu, Tagama, Manga, Ayr, Tarramit (Termit), Kawar, Jado, Tadmait, Admer, Igharghar, Ahaggar, Tassili N'Ajjer, Tadrart, Idhan, Tanghart, Fezzan, Tibesti. Kalansho, Libyan Desert, etc.
Tuareg confederations, political centers, and leaders
At the turn of the 19th century the Tuareg country was organized into confederations, each ruled by a supreme Chief (Amenokal), along with a counsel of senior tribesmen elected to assist the chief.