Fulani

Fulani
/fooh"lah nee, foo lah"-/, n., pl. Fulanis, (esp. collectively) Fulani for 1.
1. Also, Fulah. a member of a pastoral and nomadic people of mixed African and Mediterranean ancestry, scattered through W Africa from Senegal to Cameroon.
2. the language of the Fulani, a Niger-Congo language closely related to Wolof.
Also, Ful, Fula, Peul.

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Primarily Muslim people, numbering about 18 million, found in many parts of West Africa, from Lake Chad west to the Atlantic coast.

Their language is Fula, an Atlantic language of the Niger-Congo family. Originally they were herders, but interaction with other groups produced marked cultural changes. In the 1790s the Fulani priest Usman dan Fodio led a holy war (jihad) that created a large empire. Its decay in the 19th century aided the establishment of British rule over northern Nigeria. Many Fulani of northern Nigeria have adopted the Hausa language and culture and established themselves as an urban aristocracy.

Fulani chieftain riding up to salute the emir of Katsina at the end of the Muslim festival of ...

Ken Heyman
Rapho/Photo Researchers

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people
also called  Peul  or  Fulbe  
 a primarily Muslim people scattered throughout many parts of West Africa, from Lake Chad, in the east, to the Atlantic coast. They are concentrated principally in Nigeria, Mali, Guinea, Cameroon, Senegal, and Niger. The Fulani language, known as Fula, is classified within the Atlantic (Atlantic languages) branch of the Niger-Congo language family.

      Interaction of the widely dispersed Fulani with disparate other groups has produced a variety of socioeconomic patterns. The Fulani were originally a pastoral people, and their lives and organization were dominated by the needs of their herds. The pastoral Fulani today enjoy greater prestige than town and sedentary agricultural Fulani as the most truly representative of Fulani culture. Interaction with other groups has sometimes resulted in a considerable degree of cultural absorption. This is most notably the case in northern Nigeria, where perhaps half of the Fulani have adopted the Hausa language and culture and where, as a result of a series of holy wars (1804–10) purporting to purify Islam (Islāmic world), they established an empire, instituting themselves as a ruling aristocracy. The urban Fulani are the most ardently Muslim; pastoral Fulani are frequently lax and sometimes even nonpracticing. The pastoralists also exhibit a much greater variation of physical traits. They wander in nomadic groups, making temporary camps of portable huts. Some of their dairy products are exchanged at markets for cereal foods; cattle are rarely killed for meat. Many sedentary Fulani, who frequently have become sedentary as a result of the depletion of their herds, also own cattle, but they rely principally on cultivation.

      The social structure of the pastoral Fulani is egalitarian, in marked contrast to that of other Muslim groups, such as the Hausa, and to most sedentary Fulani. The influence of Islam on kinship patterns is evident in the general preference for cousin and other intralineage marriages. Most men are polygynous, the typical household unit comprising the family head, his wives, and his unmarried children.

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Universalium. 2010.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Fulani — Fu la*ni n. The language of the Fulani people, a member of the Niger Congo family of languages. RHUD [PJC] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Fulani — may refer to:*Fula people *Lenora Fulani …   Wikipedia

  • Fulani — [fo͞o′lä nē, fo͞o′lənē; fo͞o lä′nē] n. 1. pl. Fulanis or Fulani a member of a people living chiefly in Nigeria, Mali, Guinea, Cameroon, and Niger 2. FULA adj. of the Fulanis or their language or culture …   English World dictionary

  • Fulani — Los fulani (también llamados fula, peul, fulbe) son el pueblo nómada más grande del mundo, cuyo origen es desconocido. Viven en África occidental, la mayoría en el Sahel, donde, junto con los hausa, suman alrededor de 30 millones. También se… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Fulani — Peuls  Pour la langue, voir Peul.  Peuls …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Fulani — Fulahs Fu lahs , Foolahs Foo lahs , Fulani Fu la*ni, n. pl.; sing. {Fulah}, {Foolah}. (Ethnol.) A peculiar African race of uncertain origin, but distinct from the negro tribes, inhabiting an extensive region of Western Soudan. Their color is… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Fulani — Peul Frau in Mali Die Fulbe, im deutschen Sprachbereich auch unter ihrem englischen Namen Fula oder Fulani und ihrem französischen Namen Massina, Peul oder Peulh bekannt, sind ein ursprünglich nomadisierendes Volk, welches heute aber größtenteils …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • fulani — o fulbé Pueblo principalmente musulmán, con una población de alrededor de 18 millones de personas, que habitan en muchas partes de África occidental, desde el lago Chad hasta la costa atlántica. Hablan fula, una de las lenguas atlánticas de la… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Fulani — n. pastoral group that inhabits western Africa; Niger Congo language of the Fulani people n. member of the Fulani people of western Africa …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Fulani — Fu•la•ni [[t]ˈfu lɑ ni, fʊˈlɑ [/t]] n. pl. nis, (esp. collectively) ni. 1) peo a member of a traditionally pastoral African people living in communities between the Sahara and the forest zone from Senegal and Mauritania E to Cameroon and Chad 2)… …   From formal English to slang

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