Researchers
have identified many tribes, ancient cultures and flavors tossed into this salad we
call African-American. In recent
decades, geneticists, genealogists, anthropologists and historians have
discovered (and confirmed) what have been my suspicions about who we really
are.
This is the first of several installments of non-sequential posts I call “Rethinking Ourselves” wherein I’ll explore how the sciences and social sciences communities may be redefining what we know about ourselves.
This is the first of several installments of non-sequential posts I call “Rethinking Ourselves” wherein I’ll explore how the sciences and social sciences communities may be redefining what we know about ourselves.
Tribal Origins of African Americans
Fulani Woman |
One
thing I know: there’s no cookie-cutter Black person in this country … or
anywhere.
It’s not like living in Ghana, Benin, Togo or Nigeria where everyone’s pretty clear which tribe they belong to. There they live with as much certainty of their ancestry as, say, an Irishman knows he’s Celtic.
For us, four centuries of cultural suppression and identity assassination robbed us of what our African-born cousins take for granted. They see themselves according to tribes, not race.
Turns out, African Americans descend from 46 tribes, say Boston University Professors of History and African-American Studies, Linda Heywood and John Thornton, in an article published in The Root.[i]
Historians have compiled tribal lists over the years. Here’s their version:
It’s not like living in Ghana, Benin, Togo or Nigeria where everyone’s pretty clear which tribe they belong to. There they live with as much certainty of their ancestry as, say, an Irishman knows he’s Celtic.
For us, four centuries of cultural suppression and identity assassination robbed us of what our African-born cousins take for granted. They see themselves according to tribes, not race.
Turns out, African Americans descend from 46 tribes, say Boston University Professors of History and African-American Studies, Linda Heywood and John Thornton, in an article published in The Root.[i]
Historians have compiled tribal lists over the years. Here’s their version:
Country/Location
|
Tribe/Ethnic
Group
|
Angola/Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC)
Angola
Zambia/Angola
Benin
Cameroon
Gambia/Guinea
Ghana/Togo/Benin
Ghana
Ivory
Coast/Ghana
Guinea-Bissau
Liberia
Nigeria/Cameroon
Nigeria/Benin
Nigeria
Senegal
Senegal/Gambia
Senegal/Sierra
Leone, Guinea, Gambia, Ivory Coast, Niger, Liberia Guinea-Bissau
Senegal/Sierra
Leone, Guinea, Gambia, Ivory Coast, Niger, Liberia, Nigeria, Cameroon,
Guinea-Bissau
|
Yaka, Chokwe,
Lunda, Kongo, Luba
Mbundu,
Oyimbundu
Luchaze
Fon, Mahi,
Bariba
Duala, Tikar,
Bamun, Bamileke
Jola
Ewe
Ga, Gurma,
Dagomba
Akan, Asanti,
Fanti
Blanata,
Biafara, Temne
Kru, Kpele
Ibibio
Yoruba
Hausa, Ibo/Igbo,
Ijaw/(Ijo), Efik, Igala, Kalab ari, Itsekiri, Edo
Wolof
Serer
Mandinka
Fulbe/Fulani/Peulh/Fula
Sierra Leone:
Balanta, Falupo, Mende, Susu, Nalu, Bran[ii]
|
In his book, The Atlantic Slave Trade: A Census, the late, known expert and John’s Hopkins historian Philip D. Curtin figured 3.5 million Africans were exported to North America and the Caribbean between 1711 and 1810. (Importing Africans to the U.S. officially ended in 1808). Curtin arrived at that figure after investigating shipping records and port data, according to a New York Times obituary. He died in 2009 at 87.[iii]
Below is a table illustrating the regions Curtin said were probably the ancestral homes of African Americans:
Senegambia (Senegal-Gambia): 5.8%
Sierra Leone: 3.4%
Windward Coast (Ivory Coast): 12.1%
Gold Coast (Ghana): 14.4%
Bight of Benin (Nigeria): 14.5
Bight of Biafra (Nigeria): 25.1%
Central and Southeast Africa
(Cameroon-N. Angola): 24.7%[iv]
Here is another list of tribes in those regions that were likely affected. You’ll find some tribes here not included in Heywood and Thornton’s list.
Here is another list of tribes in those regions that were likely affected. You’ll find some tribes here not included in Heywood and Thornton’s list.
SENEGAMBIA: Wolof, Mandingo, Malinke, Bambara, Papel, Limba, Bola, Balante, Serer, Fula, Tucolor
SIERRA LEONE: Temne, Mende, Kisi,
Goree, Kru.
WINDWARD COAST (including Liberia):
Baoule, Vai, De, Gola (Gullah), Bassa, Grebo.
GOLD COAST: Ewe, Ga, Fante, Ashante,
Twi, Brong
BIGHT OF BENIN & BIGHT OF BIAFRA
combined: Yoruba, Nupe, Benin, Dahomean (Fon), Edo-Bini, Allada, Efik, Lbibio,
Ljaw, Lbani, Lgbo (Calabar)
CENTRAL & SOUTHEAST AFRICA:
BaKongo, MaLimbo, Ndungo, BaMbo, BaLimbe, BaDongo, Luba, Loanga, Ovimbundu,
Cabinda, Pembe, Imbangala, Mbundu, BaNdulunda
Other possible groups that maybe should
be included as a "Ancestral group" of African Americans:
Fulani, Tuareg, Dialonke, Massina,
Dogon, Songhay, Jekri, Jukun, Domaa, Tallensi, Mossi, Nzima, Akwamu, Egba,
Fang, and Ge.
[v]
[v]
Further Reading
The Atlantic Slave Trade: a Census, Philip D, Curtin, (1969), pg. 221.Madison, Wisconsin:
University of Wisconsin press.
“Gullah Culture in Danger of Fading Away,” Dahleen Glanton, Chicago Tribune
June
8, 2001
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2001/06/0607_wiregullah.html
[i] African Ethnicities and Their Origins
By: Linda Heywood
and John Thornton | Posted:
October 1, 2011 at 12:26 AM
[ii]
Ibid.
[iii]
New York Times, June 16, 2009, by
William Grimes. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/16/us/16curtin.html?_r=0