Nut120a-f01 READING 5 LEADERS IN NUTRITIONAL ANTHROPOLOGY Her classic monograph of the bemba of Northern Rhodesia since 1977 have remained onindigenous foods and the nutritional status of native peoples, fooduse http://teaching.ucdavis.edu/nut120a/0010.htm
BANTU-L List Archive: FWD: "Tribe" Background Paper, 2 While there are many indigenous Zambian words which were warlike although theBemba were considered and culturally distinct Hutu and Tutsi peoples. http://www.hum.gu.se/arkiv/BANTU-L/old.2/0077.html
LANGUAGES-ON-THE-WEB: BEST XHOSA LINKS the Xhosa, agricultural and pastoral peoples native to the Tribes Two groups of indigenouspeople were Azerbaijani Bakundu Basque* Beja bemba Bengali Broadcast http://www.languages-on-the-web.com/links/link-xhosa.htm
Extractions: www.saol.co.za/xhosa/welcome.htm The Heritage Virtual Resource Network is the holding Organisation[Network] which steers and oversee all the networks within this domain.It is in this regard that The Heritage Virtual Resource Network announces the soon to be launching networks in its domain. These include the current Xhosa Network, the Sotho Network, the Afrikan Network and the Zulu Network will follow later after that.
Tosh On Oral Tradition it was hailed as a truly indigenous source the to the traditions of neighbouringpeoples confirms that Andrew Roberts, A History of the bemba, Longman, 1973 http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~sprague/tosh3.htm
Extractions: IV 17. Oral history and oral tradition are considered together in a fruitful way, however, in B. Bernardi, C. Poni and A. Triulzi (eds.) Orali: Antropologia e Storia , Franco Angeli, 1978: some of the major contributions are in English. [end of page 217] material to very good effect.[18] But the greatest challenge to historians has been to equip Africa with a more extended past - to demonstrate that modern Africa, like all other societies, is the outcome of historical processes whose roots lie deep in the past. Given the almost complete ignorance which prevailed only thirty years ago, this has been a formidable undertaking, in which the development of a scholarly approach to oral tradition has featured prominently. 18. John Iliffe (ed.) Modern Tanzanians , East African Publishing House, 1973, includes a number of recorded life-histories. Oral evidence is skilfully woven into Charles Perrings, Black Mineworkers in Central Africa , Heinemann, 1979.