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  2. List of active separatist movements in Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_active_separatist...

    Ethnic group: Hausa people, Kanuri people. Proposed State or Autonomous Area: Arewa Republic; Political organisations Arewa Consultative Forum; Rivers State. Ethnic group: Ogoni people. Proposed autonomous region: Ogoniland [89] Advocacy group: Movement for the Survival of the Ogoni People; Kingdom of Benin. ethnic group: Edo people, Yoruba ...

  3. Hausa animism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hausa_animism

    Musicians with guembris and krakebs, one masquerading as Bu-Sadiya, a bogey. Photos of musicians affiliated with the Yan Bori. Hausa animism, Maguzanci or Bori is a pre-Islamic traditional religion of the Hausa people of West Africa that involves magic and spirit possession.

  4. Zazzau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zazzau

    This source also makes it one of the seven Hausa Bakwai states. Zazzau's most famous early ruler was Queen (or princess) Amina, who ruled either in the mid-15th or mid-16th centuries, and was held by Muhammed Bello, an early 19th-century Hausa historian and the second Sultan of Sokoto, to have been the first to establish a kingdom among the ...

  5. Boko alphabet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boko_alphabet

    Boko (or bookoo) is a Latin-script alphabet used to write the Hausa language. The first boko alphabet was devised by Europeans in the early 19th century, [1] and developed in the early 20th century by the British and French colonial authorities. It was made the official Hausa alphabet in 1930. [2]

  6. Sub-Saharan African music traditions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sub-Saharan_African_music...

    The Hausa people are one of the largest ethnic groups in Nigeria, Niger, Sudan and many West and Central African countries. They speak a Chadic language. There are two broad categories of traditional Hausa music; rural folk music and urban court music developed in the Hausa Kingdoms before the Fulani War.

  7. West Chadic languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Chadic_languages

    Main Chadic-speaking peoples in Nigeria Hausa-speaking areas in Nigeria and Niger Roger Blench's (2020) classification of West Chadic B. The West Chadic languages of the Afro-Asiatic family are spoken principally in Niger and Nigeria. They include Hausa, the most populous Chadic language and a major language of West Africa.

  8. Hausa people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hausa_people

    The Hausa (autonyms for singular: Bahaushe , Bahaushiya ; plural: Hausawa and general: Hausa; [13] exonyms: Ausa; Ajami: مُتَنٜىٰنْ هَوْسَا / هَوْسَاوَا) are a native ethnic group in West Africa. [14] [15] They speak the Hausa language, which is the second most spoken language after Arabic in the Afro-Asiatic language ...

  9. Gates of Hausa kingdoms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gates_of_Hausa_kingdoms

    Gates of Hausa kingdoms are gates (Hausa: kofa) or walls (ganuwa) that formerly enclosed Hausa kingdoms. [1] In ancient times, each kingdom was enclosed with a wall that contained various gates. During battles, the gates were closed as a war strategy. Each gate has a name and a gatekeeper (Sarkin Kofa, lit. "King of the Gate").