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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2009
The results of cultural anthropological study among the people of the Sudan and Sahara do not always yield definite and conclusive results with regard to ethnic groupings and cultural contacts in the past. On the other hand the Sudanese migrations and contacts of the past as portrayed in the bizarre, and often allegorical stories told by the Sudanese people themselves with regard to their origins and antecedents, often seem so much open to doubt in European eyes, that an enquirer is apt to think that the ethnographical record of most of the northern half of Africa is so blurred with contradictions, and so confused by inaccuracy, as to be undecipherable.
page 542 note 1 Reign of Mai Idris Alooma, and Sudanese Memoirs, vols. 1, 2, and 3. Government Press, Nigeria.Google Scholar
page 555 note 1 i.e. the equivalent of the Hausa word “ kofa ”, a “ gate ” or person who was the means of approach to an Emir or King.
page 556 note 1 Sudanese Memoirs, vol. 3, p. 49.Google Scholar
page 557 note 1 Sudanese Memoirs, vol. 3, pp. 106 and 121.Google Scholar
page 558 note 1 Sudanese Memoirs, vol. 3, p. 103.Google Scholar
page 559 note 1 Cf. Man, 11, 1928, p. 138.Google Scholar
page 560 note 1 Probably the Garambal of Manuscript (B).