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  2. Hadza people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadza_people

    Hadza people traditionally live in bands or 'camps' of around 20-30 people, and their social structures are egalitarian and non-hierarchical. Traditionally, they primarily forage for food, eating mostly honey, tubers, fruit, and, especially in the dry season, meat. As of 2015, there are between 1,200 and 1,300 Hadza people living in Tanzania. [7]

  3. Hadza language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadza_language

    Hadza is a language isolate spoken along the shores of Lake Eyasi in Tanzania by around 1,000 Hadza people, who include in their number the last full-time hunter-gatherers in Africa. It is one of only three languages in East Africa with click consonants .

  4. Isanzu people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isanzu_people

    The book is a collection of Hadza myths about giants, also some myths about culture heroes, and anecdotical tales. Kohl-Larsen was an adventurer, amateur ethnographer and archaeologist. He travelled through (then) Tanganyika in the 1930s, and very much hoped that the former German colony would soon be returned, which never happened.

  5. Category:Treaties of Tanzania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Treaties_of_Tanzania

    Treaties concluded or ratified by Tanzania. Where appropriate, articles should be placed in the subcategories. Where appropriate, articles should be placed in the subcategories. This category may contain articles about treaties concluded or ratified by Tanzania since 26 April 1964 , which is the date on which Tanganyika and Zanzibar united to ...

  6. Hadza - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadza

    Hadza people, or Hadzabe, a hunter-gatherer people of Tanzania Hadza language , the isolate language spoken by the Hadza people Topics referred to by the same term

  7. Culture of Tanzania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Tanzania

    Tanzania's literary culture is primarily oral. Major oral literary forms include folktales, poems, riddles, proverbs, and songs. [8]: page 69 The greatest part of Tanzania's recorded oral literature is in Swahili, even though each of the country's languages has its own oral tradition. The country's oral literature has been declining because of ...

  8. Category:Culture of Tanzania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Culture_of_Tanzania

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  9. Akie people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akie_people

    Hadza, Sandawe, Ogiek - who like their relatives in Tanzania are one of the perls of originally khoisan-speaking hunter-gatherer cultures. The Akie (sometimes called Mósiro , which is an Akie clan name, or Akiek , which is also used for the Okiek ) [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] are a Tanzanian ethnic and linguistic people living in south western Simanjiro ...