Page:Africa by Élisée Reclus, Volume 1.djvu/566

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462
APPENDIX II.
Janghey
Lower Sobat Basin.
Jibba
Bonjak
Balok
Fallanj
Niuak
Koma
Suro
Amam
Bari Both sides Bahr-el-Jebel, 4° — 5° N., limited northward by the Shir territory.
Monbuttu About headwaters of the river Welle, beyond the Egyptian frontier.
Zandeh From south-west frontier Egyptian Sud&n for unknown distance westwards; are the Niam-Niam of the Nilotic tribes.
Mittu (Maltu)
A-Madi
Moro district north of Monbuttuland. The Mittu call their country Moro, which is not an ethnical but a geographical name (Schwein-furth, "Heart of Africa," i. p. 403).
Madi-Kaya
Abbkah
Luba
Bongo (Dor) Upper Course Tondy and Jnr rivers, thence to Zandeh frontier.
Shir Bahr-el-Jebel 6° — 6' N., between the Diuka and Bari territories.
Rol.
Tribes of uncertain affinity along Rol river, east of the Bongo and Mittu.
Agar
Sofi
Lehsi
Nuer
Byor
Along lower course Bahr-el-Jebel, 7°—9° N.
Ror
Dinka Abuyo, Agar, Ajak, Aliab, Arol, Atwot, Awan, Bor, Donjol, Jur, Gok, Rish, Along Bahr-el-Jebel, and right bank White Nile, 6°—12° N. Largest of all the Nilotic Negro tribes (Beltrame).
Shilhik Kwati, Dyakin, Dyok, Roah Left bank Bahr-el-Jebel and White Nile, 9°— 12' N.
Dwuïr
Unclassed tribes south of the Dinkas, north-east of the Bongos, 7°— 8' N., between Molmul and Rual rivers; probably akin to the Bongos.
Ayurr
Mok
Tondy
Bot
Ayell
Tukruri Gallibat district, Abyssinian frontier, originally from Dar-Fur (James's " Wild Tribes of the Sudan," p. 30).
Funj The dominant race in Senaar, supposed to be of Shilluk stock, but now largely mixed with the Arabs of that region.
Krej About headwaters of the Bahr-el-Arab, beyond Egyptian frontier.
Fertit

III. NUBA GROUP.

The Nobatoo of Diocletian are commonly assumed to be the modem Nubians. But, although not yet recognised in British official reports, the Nubian race and name have even a more venerable antiquity than this statement would imply. In a passage quoted in note 22 we find mention already made by Strabo of the Νοῦβαι; and in another passage the same writer, who flourished three hundred years before the time of Diocletian, describes these Nubæ as "a great nation" dwelling in Libya, that is, Africa, along the left bank of the Nile from Meroe to the bends of the river.[1] The word itself has even been identified by some writers with the land of Nub or Nob, that is, "Gold," the region about Mount Elbeh on the Red Sea coast over against Jiddah, where the Egyptians worked the precious metal from the remotest times.

But this identification must be rejected since the discovery that the cradle of the

  1. Ἐξ άριστερῶν δὲ ρὕσεως τοῦ Νειλου Νοῦβαι κατοικοῦσιν εν τῆ Λιβύη, μἐγα ἔθνος, &c. (Book 17, p. 1117, Oxford ed., 1807.)