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  2. Maasai people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maasai_people

    The Maasai people stood against slavery and never condoned the traffic of human beings, and outsiders looking for people to enslave avoided the Maasai. [24] Essentially there are twenty-two geographic sectors or sub-tribes of the Maasai community, each one having its customs, appearance, leadership and dialects.

  3. Uasin Gishu people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uasin_Gishu_people

    According to Maasai tradition, the Uasin Gishu front conquered a group of people who occupied the Uasin Gishu plateau, this community is remembered as Senguer. [2] Other Maasai traditions concur with this assertion, noting that the Loosekelai (i.e Sigerai/Siger) were attacked by an alliance of the Uasin Gishu and Siria communities.

  4. Loikop people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loikop_people

    The Loikop people, also known as Wakuafi, Kor, Mu-Oko, Muoko/Ma-Uoko and Mwoko, [1] were a tribal confederacy who inhabited present-day Kenya in the regions north and west of Mount Kenya and east and south of Lake Turkana. The area is roughly conterminous with Samburu and Laikipia Counties and portions of Baringo, Turkana and (possibly) Meru ...

  5. Iloikop wars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iloikop_wars

    The Iloikop wars were a series of wars between the Maasai and a community referred to as Kwavi and later between Maasai and alliance of reformed Kwavi communities. These were pastoral communities that occupied large tracts of East Africa's savannas during the late 18th and 19th centuries.

  6. Laikipiak people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laikipiak_people

    The Laikipiak people were a community that inhabited the plateau located on the eastern escarpment of the Rift Valley in Kenya that today bears their name. [1] [2] They are said to have arisen from the scattering of the Kwavi by the Maasai in the 1830s.They were one of two significant sections of that community that stayed together.

  7. Samburu people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samburu_people

    Samburu extras were used to portray members of the closely related, but better known, Maasai ethnic group as in the film The Ghost and the Darkness, starring Michael Douglas and Val Kilmer. [20] The 2005 film The White Masai — about a Swiss woman falling in love with a Samburu man— similarly conflates the two ethnic groups, mainly because ...

  8. Kilgoris - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilgoris

    The Maasai Mara is one of the world's most famous game reserves, known for the Great Migration of wildebeest and other wildlife. Being near such a significant tourist attraction can influence the local economy and way of life. Cultural Richness: Kilgoris is situated in the Maasai region, making it a hub for Maasai culture and traditions.

  9. Anglo-Maasai Treaty (1904) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Maasai_Treaty_(1904)

    The Masai Agreement of 1904 was a treaty signed between the British East Africa Protectorate government and leaders of the Maasai tribe between 10 and 15 August 1904. It is often wrongly called the Anglo-Maasai Agreement, but that was not its proper name.