Encyclopedia

Sandawe

Also found in: Wikipedia.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Sandawe

 

(Wassandaui), a people inhabiting the territory between the Bubu and Mponde rivers in Tanzania. They number more than 30,000 (1970, estimate). They speak Sandawe; many also speak Nyaturu (Wanyaturu), which belongs to the Bantu family. Most of the Sandawe have preserved their traditional forms of worship; some have adopted Christianity. The Sandawe engage in farming, livestock raising, hunting, and fishing.


Sandawe

 

the language of the Sandawe people; spoken in the Kondoa region of Tanzania by more than 30,000 persons (1970, estimate). Some scholars relate Sandawe to the Khoisan languages of southwestern Africa (see alsoHOTTENTOT LANGUAGES), although its morphology and vocabulary indicate that Sandawe diverged from these languages in the remote past.

The phonetic features of Sandawe include dental, palato-alveolar, and lateral clicks. Nouns are marked for masculine and feminine gender and for grammatical number. Personal and demonstrative pronouns and a system of verbal formants attest to a distant relationship between Sandawe and the Hottentot and Bushman languages of South Africa (some scholars relate Sandawe only to the Hottentot languages). Sandawe serves as evidence supporting the hypothesis that East Africa was settled in ancient times by Khoisan-speaking peoples.

REFERENCES

Westphal, E. O. J. “The Non-Bantu Languages of Southern Africa.” In A. N. Tucker and M. A. Bryan, The Non-Bantu Languages of North-Eastern Africa. London, 1956.
Greenberg, J. H. The Languages of Africa, 2nd ed. The Hague, 1966.

M. V. OKHOTINA

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
Mentioned in
References in periodicals archive
Indigenous groups include Gogo, Rangi, Sandawe, Nguru, Zigua, Kaguru, Wambulu, and Wasagara who make almost three quarters of the total population.
The phonotactic rules that result from the presence of [[??]], [!], [|], and [[??]] in the phonetic inventory of Khoekhoe, Sandawe, !Kung, and other Khoisan languages are bewilderingly unfamiliar to speakers of Indo-European languages.
The sample consists of seventeen different genealogical units (or lineages following the terminology by Nichols 1992), among which two isolates (Hadza and Sandawe).
These are: Dizoid (represented by Dizi), Hadza (isolate), Kxa (represented by Ju|'hoan), Kwa (represented by SElEE), Sandawe (isolate), South Omotic (represented by Dime), Tuu (represented by !Xoo).
The only non-Khoisan groups with a bit of Khoisan admixture were the Hadza and Sandawe, ancient Tanzanian click-speakers.
(4) Three isolates, Hadza, Kwadi and Sandawe are also included in the sample.
Tishkoff's group took DNA donated by 15 African hunter-gatherers--five Pygmies from Cameroon and five Hadza and five Sandawe from Tanzania--and compiled complete genetic blueprints for each person.
of people, landscapes, animals." Like the anonymous ancestors of the Sandawe people in central Tanzania, who painted or engraved images on rocks, Kambi depends entirely on color.
Copyright © 2003-2025 Farlex, Inc Disclaimer
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.