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Fulani
(redirected from Fula)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.
Fulani (flä`nē), people of W Africa, numbering approximately 14 million. They are of mixed sub-Saharan African and Berber origin. First recorded as living in the Senegambia region, they are now scattered throughout the area of the Sudan from Senegal to Cameroon. Both as a sedentary and as a nomadic people, they have played an important part in the history of W Africa. A number of African states, including ancient Ghana and Senegal, had Fulani rulers. The Fulani became zealous Muslims (11th cent.), and from 1750 to 1900 they engaged in many holy wars in the name of Islam. During the first part of the 19th cent. the Fulani carved out two important empires. One, based on Massina, for a time controlled Timbuktu; the other, centered at Sokoto Sokoto (sōkō`tō, sō`kətō), city (1987 est. pop. 164,000), NW Nigeria, on the Sokoto River.
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, included the Hausa States and parts of Bornu Bornu (bôr`n
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 and W Cameroon. The Fulani emir of Sokoto continued to rule over part of N Nigeria until the British conquest in 1903. The Fulani of Massina were conquered (1861) by Hajj Omar Hajj Omar (häj ō`mär), 1797–1864, Muslim religious and military leader in W Africa.
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, but their resistance ultimately resulted in his death.

Bibliography

See D. J. Stenning, Savannah Nomads (1959, repr. 1964); H. A. S. Johnston, The Fulani Empire of Sokoto (1967).


Fulani

Enlarge picture
Fulani chieftain riding up to salute the emir of Katsina at the end of the Muslim festival of …
(credit: Ken Heyman—Rapho/Photo Researchers)
Primarily Muslim people, numbering about 18 million, found in many parts of West Africa, from Lake Chad west to the Atlantic coast. Their language is Fula, an Atlantic language of the Niger-Congo family. Originally they were herders, but interaction with other groups produced marked cultural changes. In the 1790s the Fulani priest Usman dan Fodio led a holy war (jihad) that created a large empire. Its decay in the 19th century aided the establishment of British rule over northern Nigeria. Many Fulani of northern Nigeria have adopted the Hausa language and culture and established themselves as an urban aristocracy.



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French colonial ethnography linked the name "Bambara" and the peoples of the Segou kingdom, who included Bamana, because of their opposition to the Fula Islamic state of Massina (1818-62) and to the holy war waged by al Hajj Umar Tal between 1852 and 1862.
Other festival highlights include choreographer/director David Gordon in his innovative take on Eugene Ionesco's The Chairs, the return of the exuberant dancers of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, one-man shows by Australian actor Brian Lipson (A Large Attendance in the Antechamber) and playwright Carlyle Brown (The Fula from America: An African Journey), Susan J.
 
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