Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/African Lore/Answer Key"

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{{ethnic group|
+
{{Infobox Ethnic group
|group=Amhara
+
|group   = Xhosa
|image=[[Image:Tewodros_Head.JPG|200px|]]
+
|image   = [[Image:Nelson_Mandela.jpg]]
|poptime=25,176,300
+
|caption  = [[Nelson Mandela]] is a famous Xhosa-speaker.
|popplace= [[Ethiopia]]:<br/>24,909,000<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census]"</ref> <br/> [[Eritrea]]:<br/>26,000<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census]"</ref><br/>    [[Egypt]]:<br/>5,200<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census]"</ref><br/>  [[Germany]]:<br/>5,700<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census] "</ref> <br/>   [[Israel]]:<br/>53,000<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census]"</ref><br/>   [[Canada]]:<br/>16,000<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census]"</ref><br/>   [[Yemen]]:<br/>8,600<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census]"</ref><br/>   [[Sudan]]:<br/>74,000<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census]"</ref><br/>   [[Djibouti]]:<br/>2,800<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census]"</ref> <br/> [[Somalia]]:<br/>76,000<ref>Joshua Library "[http://www.joshuaproject.net/peoples.php?rop3=100293 Ethiopian census]"</ref> <br/>  
+
|poptime  = 7.9 million (2001 estimate)<sup>[[#References|1]]</sup>
 
+
|popplace =  
|rels=[[Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church|Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity]], [[Islam]]
+
[[Eastern Cape Province|Eastern Cape]]: 5.4 million<br/>
|langs=[[Amharic language|Amharic]]
+
[[Western Cape Province|Western Cape]]: 1.1 million<br/>
|related=[[Tigray-Tigrinya people|Tigray]], [[Tigre people|Tigre]], [[Gurage]], [[Argobba language|Argobba]], [[Agaw]], [[Somali people|Somali]], [[Beta Israel]], [[Oromo]]
+
[[Gauteng Province|Gauteng]]: 0.7 million<br/>
 +
[[Free State Province|Free State]]: 0.25 million<br/>
 +
[[Kwazulu-Natal Province|Kwazulu-Natal]]: 0.22 million<br/>
 +
(2001 estimates<sup>[[#References|1]]</sup>)
 +
|langs    = [[Xhosa language|Xhosa]] (many also speak [[English language|English]] or [[Afrikaans language|Afrikaans]])
 +
|rels    = [[Animist]], [[Christian]]
 +
|related  = [[Bantu]], [[Nguni]], [[Basotho]], [[Zulu]], [[Khoisan]]
 
}}
 
}}
  
'''Amhara''' (አማራ) is an ethnic group in the central highlands of [[Ethiopia]], numbering about 23 million, making up 30.2% of the country's population according to the most recent 1994 census.<ref>[http://bxabeg.people.wm.edu/Ethiopia.Census%20Portrait.pdf Ethiopia: A Model Nation of Minorities] (accessed 26 March 2006)</ref> They speak [[Amharic language|Amharic]], the official language of Ethiopia, and dominate the country's political and economic life.
+
The '''Xhosa''' ([[International Phonetic Alphabet|IPA]] {{IPA|[ˈkǁʰoːsa]}}) people are a group of peoples of [[Bantu]] origins living in south-east [[South Africa]], and in the last two centuries throughout the southern and central southern parts of the country.  
  
==Etymology==
+
==History==
 +
The Xhosa are part of the southern [[Nguni]] migration which slowly moved south from the region around the [[African Great Lakes|Great Lakes]]; based on linguistic and archeological evidence, the ancestors of the Xhosa are likely to have arrived in South Africa around 1500 years ago.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
  
The derivation of the name ''"Amhara"'' is debated; according to some it comes from the word ''amari'', meaning "pleasing, agreeable, beautiful and gracious" (also ''mehare'', "gracious", containing the same ''m-h-r'' root as the verb to learn), while some Ethiopian historians such as Getachew Mekonnen Hasen say it is an ethnic name connected with [[Himyarite]]s.<ref>Getachew Mekonnen Hasen, ''Wollo, Yager Dibab'' (Addis Ababa: Nigd Matemiya Bet, 1992), p. 11.</ref> Still others say that it derives from Ge'ez, meaning "free people" (i.e. from [[Ge'ez language|Ge'ez]] ዓም "''ʿam''" meaning "people," and ሓራ "''h.ara''" , meaning "free" or "soldier"), though others, such as [[Donald Levine]], have dismissed this as a folk etymology.<ref>Herausgegeben von Uhlig, Siegbert, Encyclopaedia Aethiopica: A-C. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2003. pp. 230.</ref> Ultimately, however, the name for the language and ethnic group come from the medieval province of [[Amhara province|Amhara]], located in central Ethiopia in modern [[Amhara Region]] and the pre-1995 province of [[Wollo]].
+
The name Xhosa refers to a specific tribal leader, called uXhosa, from whom the Xhosa clan descend. They refer to themselves as the '''amaXhosa''' and  their language as [[Xhosa language|isiXhosa]], a [[Bantu]] language. Xhosa society was historically viewed as an 'open' society, because of its readiness to learn from, trade and interact with other societies. This included the incorporation or absorption of entire [[Khoi]] and [[Griqua]] cultural groups into Xhosa communities, often through marriage, and the wholesale adoption of [[Khoisan]] [[loanwords]] into Xhosa vocabulary.  
  
==Agriculture==
+
The Xhosa people split in the eighteenth century as the result of a succession dispute between chiefs. The two branches of the group are known as the Gcaleka and the Rharhabe or Ngqika. The name Xhosa is also often used to refer to anyone from a number of different Xhosa-speaking ethnic groups that includes the [[Pondo]] and Thembu, neighbours of the Xhosa people, and the Mfengu people, who are descendants of scattered clans who were displaced during the [[mfecane]] (an enormous upheaval of southern African peoples in the early nineteenth century, resulting in an internal [[diaspora]]).  
About 90% of the Amhara are rural and make their living through farming, mostly in the Ethiopian highlands. Prior to the 1974 revolution, absentee landlords maintained strict control over their sharecropping tenants, often allowing them to accumulate crippling debts. After 1974, the landlords were replaced by local government officials, who play a similar role.
 
  
Barley, corn, millet, wheat, sorghum and [[teff]], along with beans, peppers, chick-peas and other vegetables are the most important crops; in the highlands one crop per year is normal, while in the lowlands two are possible.  Cattle, sheep, and goats are also raised.
+
Although presently at least 8 million Xhosa people are distributed across the country, the population is concentrated in the [[Eastern Cape]] province of South Africa.  The pre-1994 South African system of [[bantustan]]s attempted to confine Xhosa people to the nominally self-governing 'homelands' of [[Transkei]] or [[Ciskei]], now both a part of the Eastern Cape Province.  
  
==Religion==
+
The Xhosa and white settlers first encountered one another around [[Somerset East]] in the early 1700s. In the late 1700s [[Afrikaner]] [[trekboer]]s migrating outwards from Cape Town came into conflict with Xhosa pastoralists around the [[Great Fish River]] region of the [[Eastern Cape]]. Following [[Cape Frontier Wars|more than 20 years of intermittent conflict]], in 1811 to 1812 the Xhosas were forced east by [[British Empire|British]] colonial forces in the [[Third Frontier War]].  
Their predominant religion for centuries has been [[Christianity]], with the [[Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church|Ethiopian Orthodox Church]] playing a central role in the culture of the country and of the Amharic ethnic group. According to the 1994 census, 81.5% of the [[Amhara Region]] of [[Subdivisions of Ethiopia|Ethiopia]] (which is 91.2% Amhara) were [[Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church|Ethiopian Orthodox]], with 18.1% being [[Muslim]], and 0.1% being [[P'ent'ay|Protestant]].<ref>[http://www.ethiopar.net/English/basinfo/infoamra.htm FDRE States: Basic Information - Amhara], Population (accessed 26 March 2006)</ref> The Ethiopian Orthodox Church maintains close links with the [[Coptic Christianity|Egyptian Coptic Church]]. [[Easter]] and [[Epiphany (Christian)|Epiphany]] are the most important celebrations, marked with services, feasting and dancing.  There are also many "fast" days throughout the year, when only vegetables or fish may be eaten.
 
  
Marriages are often arranged, with men marrying in their late teens or early twenties. Traditionally, girls were married as young as 14, but in the 20th century, the minimum age was raised to 18, and this was enforced by the Imperial government. Civil marriages are common, although some marry in churches. After a church wedding, divorce is not considered possible. Each family hosts a separate wedding feast after the wedding.
+
In the years following, many Xhosa-speaking clans were pushed west by expansion of the [[Zulu]]s, as the northern [[Nguni]] put pressure on the southern Nguni as part of the historical process known as the [[mfecane]], or "scattering". Xhosa unity and ability to resist colonial expansion was further weakened by the [[famine]]s and political divisions that followed the [[History of Cape Colony from 1806 to 1870#The Great amaXhosa Famine|cattle-killing movement of 1856]]. Historians now view this movement as a [[Millenialism|millenialist]] response both directly to a lung disease spreading among Xhosa cattle at the time, and less directly to the stress to Xhosa society caused by the continuing loss of their territory and autonomy. At least one historian has also suggested that it can be seen as a rebellion against the upper classes of Xhosa society, which used cattle as a means of consolidating wealth and political power, and which had lost respect as they failed to hold back white expansion.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
  
Upon childbirth, a priest will visit the family to bless the infant, and circumcise him if he is a boy {{Dubious}}. The mother and child remain in the house, for forty days after birth of a boy, eighty for a girl, before going to the church for [[baptism]].
+
Some historians argue that this early absorption into the wage economy is the ultimate origin of the long history of trade union membership and political leadership among Xhosa people. That history manifests itself today in high degrees of Xhosa representation in the leadership of the [[African National Congress]], South Africa's ruling political party.
  
==Art==
+
==Local environment==
Amharic art is typified by religious paintings. One of the most notable features of these is the large eyes of the subjects, who are usually biblical figures.
+
The Xhosa settled on mountain slopes of the Amatola and the Winterberg Mountains. Many streams drain into great rivers of this Xhosa territory including the Kei and Fish River. Rich soils and plentiful rainfall make the river basins good for farming and grazing making cattle important and the basis of wealth. Traditional foods include [[sorghum]], [[maize]], [[milk]], [[pumpkins]], [[beans]], [[vegetables]], and ''umphokoqo'', or dry maize porridge. [[Tobacco]] is an important crop in this area.
  
==History==
+
==Language==
Certain [[Semitic languages|Semitic-speaking]] tribes, notably the [[Agazyan]], built the [[Kingdom of Aksum]] around two millennia ago, and this expanded to contain what is now  Eritrea and northern Ethiopia, and at times, portions of Yemen and Sudan. The Amhara inherit their religion and monarchical tradition from Axum, as do [[Tigray-Tigrinya people|Tigrayans]].
+
{{main|Xhosa language}}
 +
In [[South Africa]], the Xhosa-speaking people form the second largest language group (after [[Zulu]], to which the Xhosa language is very closed related). Among a wide variety of common speech sounds, the Xhosa language famously contains a variety of consonantal 'click' sounds, which have been borrowed from now extinct [[Khoisan]] languages of the region.
  
The region now known as "Amhara" in the feudal era was composed of several provinces with greater or less autonomy, including [[Begemder]], [[Gojjam]], [[Qwara]] and [[Lasta]].
+
Xhosa has three basic click consonants: a dental (front) click, written with the letter 'c', e.g. ''icici'' 'earring' (very similar to the English tut-tut sound of disapproval); a palatal (top click), written with the letter 'q', e.g. ''iqaqa'' 'skunk' (similar to the imitation of a bottle being decorked); and a lateral (side) click, written with the letter 'x', e.g. ''xoxa'' 'discuss'. Each click can be used in up to six contrastive forms (each one is a completely separate consonant in Xhosa), e.g. c (plain), ch (aspirated), gc (voiced), nc (nasalised), ngc (nasalised voiced), nkc (nasalised, velarised). By contrast, Xhosa has five straightforward Spanish-type vowels (a, e, i, o, u).
  
Some time in the late middle ages, the [[Amharic language|Amharic]] and [[Tigrinya language|Tigrinya]] languages began to be differentiated. Amhara warlords often competed for dominance of the realm with Tigrayan warlords. While many branches of the Imperial dynasty were from the Amharic speaking area, a substantial amount were from [[Tigray province|Tigray]]. The Amharas seemed to gain the upper hand with the accession of the so-called [[Gondar]] line of the Imperial dynasty in the beginning of the 17th century. However, it soon lapsed into the semi-anarchic era of [[Zemene Mesafint]] ("Era of the Princes"), in which rivalling warlords fought for power and the [[Yejju Oromo]] [[inderase]]s (or regents) had effective control, while [[Emperor of Ethiopia|emperors]] were just as figureheads. The Tigrayans only made a brief return to the throne in the person of [[Yohannes IV]], whose death in 1889 allowed the base to return to the Amharic speaking province of [[Shewa]].
+
==Religion==
 +
Traditional Xhosa culture includes [[diviners]], who serve as herbalists, prophets, and healers for the community. This job is mostly taken by women, who spend five years as an apprentice. Many Xhosa people are [[Christian]], particularly within the African Initiated Churches such as the [[Zion Christian Church]].
  
Historians generally consider the Amhara to have been Ethiopia's ruling elite for centuries, represented by the line of Emperors ending in [[Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia|Haile Selassie]]. Many commentators, including Marcos Lemma, however, dispute the accuracy of such a statement, arguing that other ethnic groups have always been active in the country's politics.
+
==Oral tradition==
 +
The key figure in the Xhosa oral tradition is the ''imbongi'' (plural: ''iimbongi'') or praise singer. ''Iimbongi'' traditionally live close to the chief’s 'great place' (the cultural and political focus of his activity); they accompany the chief on important occasions - the ''imbongi'' Zolani Mkiva preceded [[Nelson Mandela]] at his Presidential inauguration in 1994. Iimbongi's poetry praises the chief’s actions and best features, and may also criticise the chief if aspects of his reign or government are unpopular.
  
One possible source of confusion for this stems from the mislabeling of all [[Amharic language|Amharic-speakers]] as "Amhara", and the fact that many people from other ethnic groups have Amharic [[Onomastics|names]].  Another is the fact that most Ethiopians can trace their ancestry to multiple ethnic groups. In fact, the last Emperor, [[Haile Selassie]] I, often counted himself a member of the [[Gurage]] tribe on account of his ancestry, and his Empress, Itege [[Menen Asfaw]] of [[Ambassel]], was in large part of [[Oromo]] descent. The expanded use of Amharic language results mostly from its being the language of the court, and was gradually adopted out of usefulness by many unrelated groups, who then became known as "Amhara" no matter what their ethnic origin.
+
==Notables==
 +
[[Nelson Mandela]] is a Xhosa-speaking member of the Thembu people.
  
==Validity of ethnic group status==
+
Other famous Xhosa speakers include:
Up until the last quarter of the 20th century, "Amhara" was only used (in the form ''amariñña'') to refer to [[Amharic language|Amharic]], the language, or [[Amhara province|the medieval province]] located in [[Wollo]] (modern [[Amhara Region]]). Still today, most people labeled by outsiders as "Amhara," refer to themselves simply as "Ethiopian," or to their province (e.g. Gojjamé from the province [[Gojjam]]). According to Ethiopian ethnographer Donald Levine, "Amharic-speaking [[Shewa]]ns consider themselves closer to non-Amharic-speaking Shewans than to Amharic-speakers from distant regions like [[Begemder|Gonder]]."<ref name="Levine">Donald N. Levine "Amhara," in von Uhlig, Siegbert, ed., Encyclopaedia Aethiopica:A-C, 2003, p.231.</ref> Amharic-speakers tend to be a "supra-ethnic group" comprised of "fused stock."<ref name="Takk">Takkele Taddese "Do the Amhara Exist as a Distinct Ethnic Group?" in Marcus, Harold G., ed., Papers of the 12th International Conference of Ethiopian Studies, 1994, pp.168-186.</ref> Takkele Taddese describes the Amhara,
+
[[Amampondo]]{{·}} [[Stephen Biko]]{{·}} [[Fats Bookulane]]{{·}} [[Brenda Fassie]]{{·}} [[Ken Gampu]]{{·}} [[Chris Hani]]{{·}} [[General Bantu Holomisa]]{{·}} [[Archibald Campbell Jordan]]{{·}} [[John Kani]]{{·}} [[Winnie Madikizela-Mandela]]{{·}} [[Miriam Makeba]]{{·}} [[Govan Mbeki]]{{·}} [[Thabo Mbeki]]{{·}} [[S.E.K. Mqhayi]]{{·}} [[Victoria Mxenge]]{{·}} [[Bongani Ndodana]]{{·}} [[Bulelani Ngcuka]]{{·}} [[Makhaya Ntini]]{{·}} [[Winston Ntshona]]{{·}} [[Percy Qoboza]]{{·}} [[Walter Sisulu]]{{·}} [[Robert Sobukwe]]{{·}} [[Enoch Sontonga]]{{·}} [[Oliver Tambo]]{{·}} [[Zwelithini Tunyiswa]]{{·}} [[Desmond Tutu]]{{·}} [[Ashley Buti]]{{·}} [[St John Page Yako]]{{·}} Dr. George Clark
  
:''The Amhara can thus be said to exist in the sense of being a fused stock, a supra-ethnically conscious ethnic Ethiopian serving as the pot in which all the other ethnic groups are supposed to melt. The language, Amharic, serves as the center of this melting process in spite of the fact that it is difficult to conceive of a language without the existence of a corresponding distinct ethnic group speaking it as a mother tongue. The Amhara does not exist, however, in the sense of being a distinct ethnic group promoting its own interests and advancing the [[Herrenvolk]] philosophy and ideology as has been presented by the elite politicians. The basic principle of those who affirm the existence of the Amhara as a distinct ethnic group, therefore, is that the Amhara should be dislodged from the position of supremacy and each ethnic group should be freed from Amhara domination to have equal status with everybody else. This sense of Amhara existence can be viewed as a myth.''<ref name="Takk" />
+
==Xhosa in popular culture==
 
+
The [http://memory-alpha.org/en/wiki/Xhosa ''Xhosa''], named for the Xhosa people, is the name of the freighter commanded by [[Kasidy Yates]] in the science fiction television series ''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine]]''.
==References==
 
<div class="references-small">
 
<references/>
 
</div>
 
  
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
*[[Habesha]]
+
*Reverend [[Henry Hare Dugmore]], the first translator of the [[Christian]] [[bible]] and [[psalms]] into Xhosa
*[[History of Ethiopia]]
+
*[[Partners Across The Ocean]]
*[[Solomonic dynasty]]
 
  
==Bibliography==
+
==References==
* [[Wolf Leslau]] and Thomas L. Kane (collected and edited), ''Amharic Cultural Reader''. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz 2001. ISBN 3-447-04496-9.
+
* [http://www.southafrica.info/ess_info/sa_glance/demographics/census-main.htm Results of the 2001 South African census]
 +
::Note that the figure mentioned on this page is based upon the number of people speaking [[Xhosa language|Xhosa]] as their home language, which may be greater or less than the total number of people claiming Xhosa descent. In addition, several million people in the Johannesburg-Soweto region speak Xhosa or [[Zulu]] as a second or third language. For a majority of these, the two languages become difficult to distinguish (unsurprising given the extreme closeness of their linguistic relationship).
 +
* Reader, J., 1997. ''[[Africa]]: A Biography of the Continent'', Vintage Books, [[New York]], NY, United States of America.jkadfgl;uh;lpuylaerpgh
 +
* Kaschula, Russell ''[[The Heritage Library of African People]]: Xhosa,'' New York:  The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc., 1997.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* Lemma, Marcos (MD, PhD). {{cite web | title=Who ruled Ethiopia? The myth of 'Amara domination' | work=Ethiomedia.com | url=http://www.ethiomedia.com/newpress/the_amara_myth.html | accessmonthday=February 28 | accessyear=2005}}
+
{{interwiki|code=xh}}
 +
*[http://www.statssa.gov.za/census2001/digiAtlas/index.html 2001 Digital Census Atlas]
 +
* [http://www.sacred-texts.com/afr/xft/ Xhosa Folklore] - a collection of Xhosa folklore collected in 1886.
 +
* [http://www.google.com/intl/xh/ Xhosa Google] - Google interface in Xhosa
 +
 
 +
<br/>{{Ethnic groups in South Africa}}
  
[[Category:Ethnic groups in Ethiopia]]
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<!--Categories-->
[[Category:Cultures in the standard cross cultural sample]]
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[[Category:Xhosa| ]]
 +
[[Category:Ethnic groups in South Africa]]
  
[[ast:Amhara]]
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<!--Other languages-->
[[de:Amharen]]
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[[da:Xhosa-folket]]
[[es:Amhara]]
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[[de:Xhosa (Volk)]]
[[ko:암하라족]]
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[[es:Xhosa]]
[[nl:Amharen]]
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[[gl:Xhosa]]
[[pl:Amharowie]]
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[[it:Xhosa]]
[[sh:Amhara (narod)]]
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[[nl:Xhosa (volk)]]
[[fi:Amharat]]
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[[pt:Xhosa]]
[[uk:Амхарці]]
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[[sh:Xhosa]]
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[[fi:Xhosat]]

Revision as of 21:16, 12 February 2007

Template:Infobox Ethnic group

The Xhosa (IPA [ˈkǁʰoːsa]) people are a group of peoples of Bantu origins living in south-east South Africa, and in the last two centuries throughout the southern and central southern parts of the country.

History

The Xhosa are part of the southern Nguni migration which slowly moved south from the region around the Great Lakes; based on linguistic and archeological evidence, the ancestors of the Xhosa are likely to have arrived in South Africa around 1500 years ago.Template:Fact

The name Xhosa refers to a specific tribal leader, called uXhosa, from whom the Xhosa clan descend. They refer to themselves as the amaXhosa and their language as isiXhosa, a Bantu language. Xhosa society was historically viewed as an 'open' society, because of its readiness to learn from, trade and interact with other societies. This included the incorporation or absorption of entire Khoi and Griqua cultural groups into Xhosa communities, often through marriage, and the wholesale adoption of Khoisan loanwords into Xhosa vocabulary.

The Xhosa people split in the eighteenth century as the result of a succession dispute between chiefs. The two branches of the group are known as the Gcaleka and the Rharhabe or Ngqika. The name Xhosa is also often used to refer to anyone from a number of different Xhosa-speaking ethnic groups that includes the Pondo and Thembu, neighbours of the Xhosa people, and the Mfengu people, who are descendants of scattered clans who were displaced during the mfecane (an enormous upheaval of southern African peoples in the early nineteenth century, resulting in an internal diaspora).

Although presently at least 8 million Xhosa people are distributed across the country, the population is concentrated in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. The pre-1994 South African system of bantustans attempted to confine Xhosa people to the nominally self-governing 'homelands' of Transkei or Ciskei, now both a part of the Eastern Cape Province.

The Xhosa and white settlers first encountered one another around Somerset East in the early 1700s. In the late 1700s Afrikaner trekboers migrating outwards from Cape Town came into conflict with Xhosa pastoralists around the Great Fish River region of the Eastern Cape. Following more than 20 years of intermittent conflict, in 1811 to 1812 the Xhosas were forced east by British colonial forces in the Third Frontier War.

In the years following, many Xhosa-speaking clans were pushed west by expansion of the Zulus, as the northern Nguni put pressure on the southern Nguni as part of the historical process known as the mfecane, or "scattering". Xhosa unity and ability to resist colonial expansion was further weakened by the famines and political divisions that followed the cattle-killing movement of 1856. Historians now view this movement as a millenialist response both directly to a lung disease spreading among Xhosa cattle at the time, and less directly to the stress to Xhosa society caused by the continuing loss of their territory and autonomy. At least one historian has also suggested that it can be seen as a rebellion against the upper classes of Xhosa society, which used cattle as a means of consolidating wealth and political power, and which had lost respect as they failed to hold back white expansion.Template:Fact

Some historians argue that this early absorption into the wage economy is the ultimate origin of the long history of trade union membership and political leadership among Xhosa people. That history manifests itself today in high degrees of Xhosa representation in the leadership of the African National Congress, South Africa's ruling political party.

Local environment

The Xhosa settled on mountain slopes of the Amatola and the Winterberg Mountains. Many streams drain into great rivers of this Xhosa territory including the Kei and Fish River. Rich soils and plentiful rainfall make the river basins good for farming and grazing making cattle important and the basis of wealth. Traditional foods include sorghum, maize, milk, pumpkins, beans, vegetables, and umphokoqo, or dry maize porridge. Tobacco is an important crop in this area.

Language

Template:Main In South Africa, the Xhosa-speaking people form the second largest language group (after Zulu, to which the Xhosa language is very closed related). Among a wide variety of common speech sounds, the Xhosa language famously contains a variety of consonantal 'click' sounds, which have been borrowed from now extinct Khoisan languages of the region.

Xhosa has three basic click consonants: a dental (front) click, written with the letter 'c', e.g. icici 'earring' (very similar to the English tut-tut sound of disapproval); a palatal (top click), written with the letter 'q', e.g. iqaqa 'skunk' (similar to the imitation of a bottle being decorked); and a lateral (side) click, written with the letter 'x', e.g. xoxa 'discuss'. Each click can be used in up to six contrastive forms (each one is a completely separate consonant in Xhosa), e.g. c (plain), ch (aspirated), gc (voiced), nc (nasalised), ngc (nasalised voiced), nkc (nasalised, velarised). By contrast, Xhosa has five straightforward Spanish-type vowels (a, e, i, o, u).

Religion

Traditional Xhosa culture includes diviners, who serve as herbalists, prophets, and healers for the community. This job is mostly taken by women, who spend five years as an apprentice. Many Xhosa people are Christian, particularly within the African Initiated Churches such as the Zion Christian Church.

Oral tradition

The key figure in the Xhosa oral tradition is the imbongi (plural: iimbongi) or praise singer. Iimbongi traditionally live close to the chief’s 'great place' (the cultural and political focus of his activity); they accompany the chief on important occasions - the imbongi Zolani Mkiva preceded Nelson Mandela at his Presidential inauguration in 1994. Iimbongi's poetry praises the chief’s actions and best features, and may also criticise the chief if aspects of his reign or government are unpopular.

Notables

Nelson Mandela is a Xhosa-speaking member of the Thembu people.

Other famous Xhosa speakers include: AmampondoTemplate:· Stephen BikoTemplate:· Fats BookulaneTemplate:· Brenda FassieTemplate:· Ken GampuTemplate:· Chris HaniTemplate:· General Bantu HolomisaTemplate:· Archibald Campbell JordanTemplate:· John KaniTemplate:· Winnie Madikizela-MandelaTemplate:· Miriam MakebaTemplate:· Govan MbekiTemplate:· Thabo MbekiTemplate:· S.E.K. MqhayiTemplate:· Victoria MxengeTemplate:· Bongani NdodanaTemplate:· Bulelani NgcukaTemplate:· Makhaya NtiniTemplate:· Winston NtshonaTemplate:· Percy QobozaTemplate:· Walter SisuluTemplate:· Robert SobukweTemplate:· Enoch SontongaTemplate:· Oliver TamboTemplate:· Zwelithini TunyiswaTemplate:· Desmond TutuTemplate:· Ashley ButiTemplate:· St John Page YakoTemplate:· Dr. George Clark

Xhosa in popular culture

The Xhosa, named for the Xhosa people, is the name of the freighter commanded by Kasidy Yates in the science fiction television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.

See also

References

Note that the figure mentioned on this page is based upon the number of people speaking Xhosa as their home language, which may be greater or less than the total number of people claiming Xhosa descent. In addition, several million people in the Johannesburg-Soweto region speak Xhosa or Zulu as a second or third language. For a majority of these, the two languages become difficult to distinguish (unsurprising given the extreme closeness of their linguistic relationship).

External links

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Template:Ethnic groups in South Africa

da:Xhosa-folket de:Xhosa (Volk) es:Xhosa gl:Xhosa it:Xhosa nl:Xhosa (volk) pt:Xhosa sh:Xhosa fi:Xhosat