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Soninke
Soninke The Soninke (also called Sarakole, Seraculeh, or 'Serahuli) are ... from the north around 1066 CE, the Soninke nobles embraced Islam, being the earliest sub ... centered around the Niger Delta. Today the Soninke number around 2 million and are linguistically ...
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Soninke (translated from German)
Soninke Soninke, also Sarakole, Seraculeh or Serahuli mentioned, belongs ... at the Atlantic coast Mauritania live. The Soninke is the founders of the old Rich ...
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Soninké (translated from French)
Soninké So certain characters of this article are posted badly (square vacuums, question marks...), consult the page Unicode . soninké (also called sarakolé) is a language of Niger-Congo family and of the mandé sub-group, spoken by approximately a million about people who belong to community soninké. Its zone of ...
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soninké - 7k - Cached (French) - Wikipedia (French) - Similar pages
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Soninké (translated from Spanish)
Soninké Soninké - also called serahulle or sarakhollé by their neighbors mandingas- is an ethnic group that lives in dispersed groups between Senegal , Mauritania and Malí , as well as in the east of Gambia and the Casamance Discharge, in Senegal . One calculates that nowadays they can exceed a population of 750.000 ...
http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soninké - 4k - Cached (Spanish) - Wikipedia (Spanish) - Similar pages
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Soninke Wangara
Soninke Wangara The Wangara (also known as Wakore) were Soninke clans specialized in trade, Islamic scholarship and ... Massing, Andreas W. The Wangara, an Old Soninke Diaspora in West Africa?, Cahiers d'Études ...
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Soninke language
Soninke language The Soninke language (Soninke: Soninkanxaane) is a Mande language spoken by the Soninke people of West Africa. The language has ...
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Soudans (translated from German)
Soudans This article requires a revision. Details are on that Discussion side indicated. Help please, it too improve and remove afterwards this marking. 'Soudans ' call the Arabs the black African and therefore come the designation of these groups of peoples of Mauritania. Table of contents Introduction There are five Black African ...
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soudans - 11k - Cached (German) - Wikipedia (German) - Similar pages
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Soninkés (translated from French)
... bond Soninkara site of the Soninké community Soninke Culture Soninkra: Soninké company Mali Gate - Reach ...
http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soninkés - 2k - Cached (French) - Wikipedia (French) - Similar pages
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Songhay languages
... this" (Manding o, wo) and no "there" (Soninke no, other Mande na), the negative na ... Bambara -li process nouns), -ncè (ethnonymic, cf. Soninke -nke, Mandinka -nka), -anta (ordinal, cf. Soninke -ndi, Mandinka -njaŋ...), -anta (resultative participle, cf. Soninke -nte), -endi (causative, cf. Soninke, Mandinka -ndi), and the postposition ra " ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Songhay_languages - 13k - Cached - Similar pages
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Mauritania
... day Mauritania and the ancestors of the Soninke. The Bafours were primarily agriculturalist, among the ... grown into a very large and wealthy Soninke empire - Ghana, which stretched from Mauritania into ... without power, having been conquered by the Soninke. In 1076, Islamic warrior monks (Almoravid or ... larger numbers of the indigenous peoples (Haalpulaar, Soninke, and Wolof) entered Mauritania, moving into the ...
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