Send Money & airtime to Kenya

Nandi Hills Interlinks Logo

Secure, faster and reliable

The Matelong Family Home on the Web

The Semantics of Participant Types in Derived Verbs in Nandi

E-mail Print PDF

By Chet A Creider 

Abstract

The semantics of three valency-changing verbal derivational suffixes in Nandi (a Nilo-Saharan language spoken in East Africa) are investigated. Two cases of polysemy and one of homonymy are found and related to general case theory (DeLancey 2000, Jakobson 1936, 1990) as well as to the general theory of concept formation (Rosch and Mervis 1996).

 

Read more...
 

Warriors in heart of darkness: the Nandi resistance 1850-1897

E-mail Print PDF

PROLOGUE: THE ARAB TRADER WARS

Isolated from the outside world, one might only speculate at the wonder of the first Nandi warriors who discovered the Arab caravan in the 1850's. Those warriors might not have known of earlier Arab caravans, because this was the first notable one in Nandi oral tradition. It was the time when the Sawe sub-sets were warriors and by 1854, the name Marmar ("to ornament a dress") had been conveyed upon a sub-set. The significance of this title might be derived from the major Arab defeat at Kipsoboi, but may have been attributed to the very successful raiding of Arab caravans by the Nandi. These were good years for the Nandi.

Part of the reason for the Nandi success was the limited access. The easiest approach was from the north-east, but a caravan had to travel two or three days before reaching principal Nandi settlements. This evidently was not preferable as the Arab caravans diverted east to Kavirondo and Mumias where food and protection was located. Since direct trade contact was not possible, the caravans after the 1850's rarely entered or camped in Nandi, a strange "middle man" system evolved.

Due to the casualties to the caravans, trusted Sotik and Dorobo agents were employed to act as "middle men". These agents would trade ivory and other coastal goods for cattle to the Nandi for a large commission. Enterprising Arab traders hoping to circumvent this arrangement often fell victims to a Nandi ploy. A few old Nandi warriors would meet the armed caravan and tell them that a large supply of ivory was only two or three days journey from the caravan. However, the Nandi were only willing to entertain a small Arab party to negotiate a trade. Dutifully, a party of twenty men would be dispatched with cloth, wire, and other trade goods only to be ambushed by the Nandi and massacred. Another ruse used by the Nandi was to send a small party of warriors to lead the prospective caravan into the depths of Nandi by the wrong road and then conduct a night attack. The Arab traders even attempted a tactic that had worked with other tribes, blood brotherhood. This consisted of sitting opposite one another, cutting the back of each other's hand and sucking the blood from one another's hand. The Nandi held no credence to such a foreign ceremony, and it only became another ploy to easily acquire coastal goods.

 

Read more...
 

The extent of age-set coordination

E-mail Print PDF

By Robert E. Daniels

A paper presented at the 25th Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association, November 7, 1982, Washington, D.C.

 

Abstract

An earlier re-examination of the old controversy over Kipsigis and Nandi age-set transitions (Daniels 1976) raised issues of general significance concerning pre-colonial and current social processes among the Kalenjin. The list of colonial 'tribes' does not represent a series of equivalent, bounded polities; a critical question for determining larger Kalenjin social entities is the extent to which local groups coordinated their actions concerning the major institution of large-scale integration, the system of cyclical age-sets or ibinwek. The literature indicates that among the main groups four have retained eight age-sets while three have dropped one out to make a cycle of seven. Nonetheless the central groups were all reported to have initiated the same age-set in the first decade of this century while the outlying groups were one, or at most two, steps out of phase. Such synchronization suggests that most or all Kalenjin groups constituted not merely an ethnolinguistic category but a single information-sharing social system, obscured by the colonial categorizations which still hinder anthropological studies. Greater coordination among researchers is required, as well as greater comparability in future data collection.

 

Read more...
 

Lessons from the Jewish Phenomenon - By Cheison

E-mail Print PDF

Kaap Matelong, I have recently been building a home library to try and enrich my scope of the world. One such is a book that goes by the name The Jewish Phenomenon (seven keys to the enduring wealth of a people). It is written by Steven Silbiger and I will tell you in a synopsis what the book says. Steven Spielberg (Hollywood movies?) and Michael Dell (owner of the top computer franchise in the world by volumes of sales) arel Jewish. In 1997, these are the facts were true and they probably still are today:

  1. Jews make up 2% of the total US population, 45% of the top 40 of the Forbes 400 richest Americans are Jews.
  2. One third of all Americans multimillionaires are Jewish.
  3. 20% of the Professors at leading universities are Jewish.
  4. 40% of partners in leading New York and Washington D.C. law firms are Jewish.
  5. 25% of all American Nobel Prize winners are Jewish.

Read more...
 
Page 2 of 11

Who's Online

We have 2 guests online

Statistics

Members : 58
Content : 54
Web Links : 8
Content View Hits : 65580