Kabbabish: Difference between revisions
Appearance
Content deleted Content added
→In context: rm pointless blockquote |
redirect to more updated (ie not based on EB1911) article Tag: New redirect |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
#redirect [[Kababish tribe]] |
|||
{{Orphan|date=January 2013}} |
|||
'''Kabbabish''' ("goatherds": [[James Bruce]] derives the name from ''Kabsh'', [[sheep]], Arabic : كبش ), a tribe of [[Ethnic groups of Africa|African]] [[nomad]]s of [[Semitic people|Semitic]] origin. It is perhaps the largest "Arab" tribe in the Anglo-Egyptian [[Sudan]], and its many clans are scattered over the country extending SW from the province of [[Dongola]] to the confines of [[Darfur]]. The Kabbabish speak [[Arabic language|Arabic]], but their pronunciation differs much from that of the true Arabs. The Kabbabish have a tradition that they came from [[Tunisia]] and are of [[Maghrebi]] or [[Westerners|Western]] descent; but while the chiefs look like Arabs, the tribesmen resemble the [[Beja people|Beja]] family. They themselves declare that one of their clans, [[Kawahla]], is not of Kabbabish blood, but was affiliated to them long ago. Kawahla is a name of Arab formation, and [[J. L. Burckhardt]] spoke of the clan as a distinct one living about [[Abu Haraz]] and on the [[Atbara]]. The Kabbabish probably received Arab rulers, as did the [[Ababda]]. They are chiefly employed in cattle, camel and sheep breeding, and before the [[Mahdist War|Sudan wars of 1883-1899]] they had a monopoly of all transport from the [[Nile]], north of [[Abu Gussi]], to [[Kordofan]]. They also cultivate the lowlands which border the Nile, where they have permanent villages. They are of fine physique, dark with black wiry hair, carefully arranged in tightly rolled curls which cling to the head, with regular features and rather thick [[aquiline noses]]. Some of the tribes wear large hats like those of the [[Kabyles]] of [[Algeria]] and Tunisia.<ref name=EB1911>{{EB1911 |wstitle=Kabbabish |volume=15 |pages=619–620 |inline=1}}</ref> |
|||
See James Bruce, ''Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile'' (1790); [[Augustus Henry Keane]], ''Ethnology of Egyptian Sudan'' (1884); ''Anglo-Egyptian Sudan'' (edited by [[Lord Edward Gleichen|Count Gleichen]], 1905).<ref name=EB1911/> |
|||
==References== |
|||
{{Reflist}} |
|||
[[Category:Ethnic groups in Sudan]] |
|||
[[Category:Semitic-speaking peoples]] |
|||
[[Category:African nomads]] |
Latest revision as of 23:44, 31 October 2018
Redirect to: