Kisii people: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m Typo & format fix , typos fixed: incresingly → increasingly, Infact → In fact using AWB
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Ethnic group of Kenya}}
'''Kisii''' (also known as Gusii or Kosova<ref>[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9038576/Gusii Encyclopædia Britannica: Gusii]</ref>) is a [[Bantu]] [[tribe]] which inhabits [[Kisii District]] in [[Nyanza]], western [[Kenya]].
{{About|the Abagusii people of Kenya popularly known as The Kisii (Mkisii/Wakisii) in Swahili.||Kisii (disambiguation){{!}}Kisii}}
{{distinguish|Kissi people|Kisi people}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2021}}
{{Use British English|date=January 2023}}
{{infobox ethnic group|
| group = Abagusii (Aba-goosie)
| image = Abagusii people.png
| image_caption = Abagusii people singing and dancing while playing a native harp (aka [[Obokano]])
| population =2,703,235<ref name =Census2019>{{cite web|url=https://www.knbs.or.ke/?wpdmpro=2019-kenya-population-and-housing-census-volume-iv-distribution-of-population-by-socio-economic-characteristics&wpdmdl=5730&ind=7HRl6KateNzKXCJaxxaHSh1qe6C1M6VHznmVmKGBKgO5qIMXjby1XHM2u_swXdiR |title=2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census Volume IV: Distribution of Population by Socio-Economic Characteristics
|access-date=24 March 2020 |website=Kenya National Bureau of Statistics| df=dmy }}</ref>
| regions = {{flagcountry|Kenya}}
| languages = [[Gusii language|Ekegusii]]
| religions = [[Christianity]], [[African Traditional Religion|Traditional Beliefs]], [[Islam]]
| related = [[Kuria people|Abakuria]],<ref name=grammaticalisation>{{cite journal |last1=Gibson |first1=Hannah |title=The grammaticalisation of verb-auxiliary order in East African Bantu From information structure to tense-aspect |journal=Studies in Language|doi=10.1075/sl.17033.gib |date=2019 |volume=43 |issue=4 |pages=757–799|s2cid=204479937 |url=http://repository.essex.ac.uk/24761/1/Hannah%20Gibson_Grammaticalisation%20of%20verb-auxiliary%20order%20in%20East%20African%20Bantu_accepted.pdf }}</ref> [[Meru people|Ameru]],<ref name="Misri Legends">{{cite journal |last1=Ochieng |first1=W.R. |title='Misri' Legends in East and Central Africa|journal=East Africa Journal |date=1972 |url=https://journals.co.za/content/kenya/1/4/AJA02578301_348}}</ref> [[Embu people|Embu]],<ref name="Misri Legends"/> [[Kikuyu people|Kikuyu]],<ref name="Misri Legends"/> [[Mbeere people|Mbeere]],<ref name="Misri Legends"/> [[Kipsigis people|Kipsigis]],<ref name=Omwoyo>{{cite thesis |last=Omwoyo |first=Samson Moenga |title=The Agricultural Changes in the Kipsigis Land, c. 1894–1963: An Historical Inquiry |year=2000}}</ref> [[Maasai people|Maasai]]<ref name="Omwoyo"/> Linguistic-Relationship:[[Ngurimi]],<ref name=grammaticalisation/> [[Zanaki people|Zanaki]],<ref name="Misri Legends"/>[[Ikoma people|Ikoma]],<ref name="Misri Legends"/>[[Rangi people|Rangi]],<ref name=grammaticalisation/> [[Mbugwe people|Mbugwe]],<ref name=grammaticalisation/>[[Suba people (Tanzania)|Simbiti]].<ref name=grammaticalisation/> [[Maragoli tribe (Luhya)|Maragoli]]<ref name="Misri Legends"/> and [[Suba people (Kenya)]]<ref name="Misri Legends"/>
| native_name =
| native_name_lang =
}}
{{infobox Bantu name|Omogusii|Abagusii|Ekegusii|Gusii
|Gusii (Goosie)
}}
{{Culture of Kenya}}


The '''Abagusii''' (also known as '''Kisii''' ('''Mkisii'''/'''Wakisii''') in Swahili, or '''Gusii''' in Ekegusii) are a [[Bantu people|Bantu]] ethnic group and nation indigenous to [[Kisii County|Kisii]] and [[Nyamira County|Nyamira]] counties of former [[Nyanza Province|Nyanza]], as well as parts of [[Kericho County|Kericho]] and [[Bomet County|Bomet]] counties of the former [[Rift Valley Province|Rift Valley]] province of Kenya.
[[Kisii town]] is located in [[Nyanza Province]] to the south West of Kenya. It is home to the Gusii people who are a Bantu tribe. According to the 1979 census, Kisii District had a population of 588,000.
==Origins of the Kisii==
The Kisii People along with other Bantu speaking groups are believed to have originated from [[Zaire]] (presently known as the Democratic Republic of Congo). The migration is believed to have been due to overpopulation, food scarcity, inter-tribal conflicts and exhausted soil for farming. As these Bantu people migrated from Zaire, they split up into different groups with the Kisii ending up in Nyanza Province near [[Lake Victoria]]. (The Kikuyu, Kamba, and other Bantu tribes in Kenya continued the hunt for richer soil for farming and moved on eastwards across the Rift valley to their current locations. They later settled in the now-called [[Central Province (Kenya)|Central]] and [[Rift Valley Province|Rift Valley]] [[Provinces of Kenya]].)


The Abagusii traditionally inhabit Kisii and Nyamira counties, as well as sections of [[Kericho County|Kericho]] and [[Bomet County|Bomet]] counties, all of which were within the former [[Nyanza province|Nyanza]] and [[Rift Valley province|Rift Valley]] provinces of [[Kenya]]. Studies of East African [[Bantu languages|Bantu]] languages<ref name="grammaticalisation" /> and anthropological evidence suggests that the Abagusii, together with [[Kuria people|Kuria]], [[Ngurimi people|Ngurimi]], [[Rangi people|Rangi]], [[Mbugwe people|Mbugwe]], [[Suba people (Tanzania)|Simbiti]], [[Zanaki people|Zanaki]] and [[Ikoma people|Ikoma]], emerged from East African Neolithic [[Agropastoralism|agropastoralists]] and hunters/gatherers<ref name="The historical reconstruction of So">{{cite book|last1=Ehret|first1=C.|title=The historical reconstruction of Southern Cushitic phonology and vocabulary|series=Kölner Beiträge zur Afrikanistik|volume=5|publisher=Reimer|location=Berlin|isbn=9783496001041|year=1980}}</ref><ref name=Ambrose1982>{{cite book|last1=Ambrose|first1=S.H|chapter=Archaeological and linguistic reconstructions of history in East Africa|editor1-last=Ehert|editor1-first=C.|editor2-last=Posnansky|editor2-first=M.|title=The archaeological and linguistic reconstruction of African history|publisher=University of California Press|isbn=9780520045934|year=1982}}</ref><ref name=Ehret2002>{{cite book|last1=Ehret|first1=C.|title=The Civilizations of Africa: a History to 1800|publisher=University Press of Virginia|isbn=0-8139-2085-X|year=2002}}</ref> believed to have come from the North of [[Mt. Elgon]].<ref name="Misri Legends"/> It's also believed that there was heavy influence on the Abagusii from [[Bantu peoples|Bantu]] speakers [[Bantu expansion|migrating]] out of [[Central Africa]] and [[West Africa]]; certain groups of the Abagusii may have been assimilated from the [[Luhya people|Luhya]] and [[Suba language|Olusuba]] speaking [[Suba people (Kenya)|Suba]] people, which originated from west of [[Lake Victoria]].<ref name="Okello">{{cite book |last=Okello |first=Ayot |title=A History of the Luo-Abasuba of Western Kenya, from A.D. 1760–1940}}</ref> The majority of Abagusii are closely related to the [[Maasai people|Maasai]], [[Kipsigis people|Kipsigis]], [[Kuria people|Abakuria]], and [[Meru people|Ameru]] of Kenya.
The Kisii ended up in a geographical location unique among Bantu groups in that they were surrounded on all sides by hostile [[Nilotic]] communities of the [[Luo]], [[Kipsigis]], [[Nandi]], and [[Maasai]]. Constant sieges resulted in the development of a war-like culture to defend against cattle-raiding neighboring communities. To this day, they have a reputation of being tough, emotionally labile, resilient, and very industrious.


The Abagusii also have a close linguistic relationship with the [[Ngurimi people|Ngurimi]], [[Rangi people|Rangi]], [[Mbugwe people|Mbugwe]], [[Suba people (Tanzania)|Simbiti]],<ref name="grammaticalisation" /> [[Zanaki people|Zanaki]], [[Ikoma people|Ikoma]] and [[Maragoli tribe (Luhya)|Maragoli]] people. They speak the [[Gusii language|Ekegusii language]] which is classified with the [[Great Lakes Bantu languages]]. However, the inclusion of Abagusii in the [[Bantu languages|Bantu]] language group is a subject of debate, given that studies on East African [[Bantu languages|Bantu]] languages have found [[Gusii language|Ekegusii]], together with the [[Kuria language|Kuria]], [[Suba-Simbiti language|Simbiti]], [[Ngoreme language|Ngurimi]], [[Rangi language|Rangi]] and [[Mbugwe language|Mbugwe]] languages to be rather distinct from other [[Bantu languages]] in terms of structure and tense.<ref name="grammaticalisation" />
==The Kisii People Today==
The Kisii are regarded as one of the most economically active communities in Kenya, blessed with rolling tea estates, coffee, and banana groves. However, Kisii district has a very high population density. It is one of the most densely populated areas in Kenya (after the two cities of Nairobi and Mombasa), and the most densely populated rural area. It also has one of the highest fertility and population growth rates in Kenya (as evidenced by successive sensus and demographic surveys). In fact the fertility rate of Kisii ranks among the highest in the world, (see ''Kenyan Conundrum: A Regional Analysis of Population Growth and Primary Education (Paperback) by '''Juha I. Uitto [Author]''')''. These factors have ensured the Kisii to be among the most widely geographically spread communities in East Africa. A proportionately large number of Kisiis have gone abroad in search of education. It is noteworthy that, all things considered, Kisii schools are not uniquely better performers than other communities in Kenya in national examinations, yet the Kisii are some of the most heavily represented Kenyans in foreign (usually Indian and Amreican) universities.


==Etymology==


The term ''Kisii'' is Swahili and originates from the colonial British administration, who used it in colonial Kenya to refer to the Abagusii people, as it was much easier to pronounce.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii">{{cite encyclopedia |title=Gusii |url=http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/anthro/faculty/fiske/135b/gusii.htm |first=N. Thomas |last=Hakansson |encyclopedia=The Encyclopedia of World Cultures CD-ROM |via=sscnet.ucla.edu}}{{dead link|date=February 2023|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> The term Kisii, however, has no meaning in the Ekegusii language.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/> In the Swahili language, the singular form is Mkisii and the plural form is Wakisii; the Swahili name for the Ekegusii language is Kikisii. The term is now popularly used in Kenya to refer to Abagusii people.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/>
Their lands are currently overpopulated despite their rolling fertile hills, spurring immigration to other cities in Kenya and a substantial representation in the [[United States]], especially in major hub cities like [[Houston]], [[Atlanta]], [[Jersey City]], [[Dallas]] and [[Minneapolis-Saint Paul]]. The hard cash that flows from the diaspora has spawned significant economic prosperity in a locale lacking in politically motivated 'hand-me downs'.


Among the Abagusii, the name Kisii does not refer to the people, but to a town — [[Kisii, Kenya|Kisii]], also called Bosongo or Getembe<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ekegusiiencyclopedia.com/towns-urban-centres|title=Urban centres in Gusii}}</ref> by the locals, is the major native urban centre of the Abagusii people. The name Bosongo is believed to have originated from Abasongo, which means "the whites" or "the place where white people settle(d))", referring to settlers living in the town during the colonial era.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Authoritative Ekegusii-English Dictionary|last=Bosire|first=Kennedy|publisher=Ekegusii Encyclopedia Project|year=2013|location=Nairobi}}</ref>
Names like Bogonko, Osebe, Bosire, Moseti, Moraa, Onchiri, Isaboke, Nyaboke, Mogaka and others are common family names just like Smith and Johnson in the Anglo-Saxon cultures.


The other name used by the British in reference to Abagusii were Kosova/Kossowa<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /> which is derivative of the [[Gusii language|Ekegusii]] expression "Inka Sobo", meaning their home. The endonym is Abagusii (plural), and Omogusii (singular); the language spoken by the people is Ekegusii. The term "Gusii" supposedly comes from Mogusii, the founder of the community.
==Agriculture and Biodiversity in Kisii==
In the past, Kisii was a heavily forested area, with old indigenous broadleaf rainforest trees. It was part of the old Congo Basin forests. The only remnant of this old forest in Kenya is the Kakamega Forest, which is the westernmost tip of the Equatorial rainforest. The two ancient forest areas were linked through nandi and kericho, before the Nandi and Kericho areas were cleared for tea farming ano settlement. Now most of the tree life in Kisii consists of ''Eucalyptus saligna'' (blue gum/eucalyptus) and ''Cupressus lusitanica'' (cypress). Other plant life forms are cultivated tea, bananas, maize, coffee and napier grass, with very lettle remaining of indeginous biodiversity.


==History==
It has been theorized that in future Kisii will increasingly be 'colonized' by the above few species of plants, as there is little awareness or even desire to re-plant the slow-growing and less economically valuable indigenous plant forms. This is aggravated by land shortage and reduced need for traditional herbal medicine, that has now been surpassed by modern hospitals.
[[File:A Gusii woman in native attire.png|thumb|Gusii woman in native attire ca. 1905–1907]]
[[File:A Gusii woman in native ornaments.png|thumb|Gusii woman in native ornaments ca. 1905–1907]]
[[File:Three Kisii women walking.jpg|thumb|Three Gusii women walking ca. 1916–1938.]]


{{Main|History of Kenya|Loikop people|Sirikwa culture|Misri legend|South Cushitic languages|Savanna Pastoral Neolithic|Bantu expansion|}}
==Language==
They speak the [[Gusii language|language of Kisii]] or as commonly known as ''ekegusii'' among the native speakers. However, some older texts refer to this community as ''Kosova''. This language and other [[Bantu languages]] are very similar. Most of their phrases are similar or had been derived or acquired in the same manner. The only difference between these languages is that some words have been altered or differently pronounced and given new meanings. The Meru in Eastern province are closely related to the Kisii or Gusii people in language and culture.


===Origins===
==List of some famous Kisii people==
Based on linguistic<ref name="grammaticalisation" /> and anthropological evidence, the Abagusii originated from the neolithic [[Agropastoralism|agropastoralist]] inhabitants of present-day Kenya, particularly from the former [[Nyanza province|Nyanza]] and [[Rift Valley Province|Rift Valley]] provinces.<ref name="The historical reconstruction of So"/><ref name=Ambrose1982/><ref>{{cite book|last1=Ehret |first1=C. |title=The Civilizations of Africa: a History to 1800 |publisher=University Press of Virginia|isbn=0-8139-2085-X|year=2002}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|isbn=9783871187605 |last1=Ambrose |first1=S.H. |title=Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika |volume=7|page=11|publisher=Helmut Buske |date=1986|issue=2 }}</ref> The competing theory by some scholars that the Abagusii migrated from [[Uganda]] is lacking, as there's no historical evidence the Abagusii settled in Uganda and have been known to only settle on the eastern slopes of the Kenyan side of Mt. Elgon.<ref name="Misri Legends"/>


The oral tradition of the Abagusii holds that their ancestors migrated from a place called Misiri, north of Mt. Elgon, possibly in present-day [[Egypt]].<ref name="Misri Legends"/> These ancestors were the founders of the six major Gusii clans: the Abagetutu, Abanyaribari, Abagirango, Abanchari, Abamachoge, and Ababasi. This original group later absorbed a group of settlers from west of [[Lake Victoria]], what is now present day [[Buganda]] and [[Busoga]]; these settlers may have been assimilated from the [[Luhya people|Luhya]] and [[Suba language|Olusuba]]-speaking [[Suba people (Kenya)|Suba]] people.<ref name="Okello" />
[[Proffessor Ratemo Michieka]]


===Settlement in Gusiiland===
[[Andrew Omanga]]


Present-day Gusiiland, along with [[Kenya]] and [[East Africa]] at large, has been inhabited since the Neolithic period. As a result, its settlers have diverse origins. The first settlers were likely hunter/gathers similar to the [[Khoisan]] and [[Okiek people|Ogiek]], which were followed by the Nyanza/Rift Cushites who replaced these hunters-gatherers, assimilating them, and settled during the [[Savanna Pastoral Neolithic]] period (ca.3200–1300 BC)<ref name=Ehret2002/><ref name="The historical reconstruction of So"/> The next group of settlers were [[Nilotic]] pastoralists from present-day [[South Sudan]] that settled in the area circa. 500 BC.<ref name=Ambrose1982/><ref>{{cite book|last1=Ehret|first1=C.|year=1983|title=Culture History in the Southern Sudan|editor1-first=J.|editor1-last=Mack|editor2-first=P.|editor2-last=Robertshaw|publisher=British Institute in Eastern Africa|location=Nairobi|pages=19–48|isbn=1-872566-04-9}}</ref> The last group to settle in the area are [[Bantu languages|Bantu]] speakers, whose [[Bantu expansion|migration]] to the area began in 1 AD.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Ehret|first1=C.|year=1998|title=An African Classical Age : Eastern and Southern Africa in World History, 1000 B.C. to A.D. 400|publisher=University Press of Virginia|location=Charlottesville|pages=xvii, 354|isbn=0-8139-2057-4}}</ref> Several [[Nilotic|southern Nilotics]] and [[South Cushitic|southern Cushitics]] were assimilated into the Abagusii, whom are likely responsible for the Gusii practice of circumcision and other practices due to cultural diffusion.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Niane|first1=Djibril Tamsir|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HwV2a-lPB70C&q=gusii|title=Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century|last2=Joseph|first2=Ki-Zerbo|publisher=University of California Press|year=1998|isbn=9780520066991|series=UNESCO General History of Africa|volume=IV|location=Berkeley, United States|pages=193|language=English}}</ref>
[[Simeon Nyachae]]


=== Colonial era ===
[[James Nyamweya]]
[[File:A Kisii native warrior Otenyo Nyamaterere British East Africa.png|thumb|[[Warrior_Otenyo|Otenyo Nyamaterere]], a Gusii warrior, ca. 1905–1907.]]


The Abagusii were seen as warlike and fierce fighters by other ethnic groups, along with the Ameru, [[Kuria people|Abakuria]] and [[Maasai people|Maasai]]; the Abagetutu specifically were seen as the most martial of all Abagusii Clans.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/> This perception is evident in excerpts from the East African Protectorate Commissioner Sir [[Charles Eliot (diplomat)|Charles Eliot]] in early 1900s expeditions of Gusiiland and surrounding areas:
[[Justice Samuel Bosire]]


{{Blockquote|To the north of the (Uganda) railway the Lake shore rises up into the Nandi country and Uasin Gishu plateau. To the south is a little-known region lying between the Mau range and the Lake, various parts of which bear the name Ugaya, Kossova and Lumbwa. Ugaya is the part nearest to the Lake, thickly inhabited by the Kavirondo and rich in cattle. Kossova or Kisii is a hilly district behind Ugaya, and is one of the least known parts of the Protectorate. The inhabitants appear to be Bantu-speaking, and have a bad reputation for ferocity, but this may merely mean that they have a hereditary feud with their neighbours, who are not Bantu, and does not necessarily imply that they will be hostile to Europeans...}}
[[George Anyona]]


Their warlike nature was deemed as a threat to British rule, especially the cattle camps the warriors frequented, and the British enacted punitive expeditions that raided cattle and crushed the warriors. This slowly brought an end to the pastoral and war-based lifestyle of most Abagusii.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/>
[[Professor Sam Ongeri]]


The British introduced new immigrants to [[Kisii County]] and other parts of [[Kenya]] in the 1930s to work as soldiers, porters and farmers. These were the [[Ganda people|Baganda]],<ref>{{cite web|title=How the Baganda came to Kisiiland|url=https://www.theeastafrican.co.ke/tea/magazine/how-the-baganda-came-to-kisiiland-1299794|website=The East African|date=6 July 2020 }}</ref> the [[Maragoli tribe (Luhya)|Maragoli]], the [[Nubians (Uganda)|Nubi]],<ref name="Multilingualism"/> and the [[Suba language|Olusuba]]-speaking [[Suba people (Kenya)]] from [[Rusinga Island]], [[Mfangano Island]], and sections of [[Homa Bay County]]. The Nubians were settled by the British in present-day [[Kisii town]] and worked as soldiers for the British government, while the Bantu speaking Maragoli, Baganda, and Suba people were settled in Kisii town as porters and labourers on white farms and tea plantations. Some of the new immigrants introduced to Kisii town by the British have been largely assimilated into the Gusii society, but others, particularly the Nubi, never assimilated and still maintain their original settlement in Kisii town.<ref name="Multilingualism">{{cite journal |last1=Mose |first1=Peter N. |title=Multilingualism and First Language Maintenance: Nubian Language Speakers in Western Kenya |journal=Journal of Pan African Studies |date=2018 |volume=12| issue = 4 |pages=248+}}</ref>
[[Dr Zachary Onyonka]]


=== Post-colonial ===
[[Isabella Ochichi]]
In the post-colonial age, the Abagusii have expanded out of their traditional range, settling in the major towns of the [[Luo people|Luo-Nyanza]] counties, like [[Homa Bay County|Homa Bay]], [[Migori County|Migori]], [[Kisumu County|Kisumu]] and [[Siaya County|Siaya]] as well as other Kenyan towns and cities. There is also a significant [[diaspora]] population in the United States (particularly [[Minnesota]]), the United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Kenyan Diaspora in the United States. |url=https://www.migrationpolicy.org/sites/default/files/publications/RAD-KenyaII.pdf |access-date=8 November 2021}}</ref>


== Relationship with other peoples ==
== References ==

{{Reflist}}
===Relationship with Nilotic speakers===
{{Main|History of Kenya|Sirikwa culture|Loikop people|South Cushitic languages|Savanna Pastoral Neolithic|Bantu expansion|}}

The relationship between the Abagusii and their neighbouring Nilotic speaking communities (such as [[Maasai people|Maasai]], [[Nandi people|Nandi]], [[Kipsigis people|Kipsigis]], [[Luo people|Luo]]) is often painted negatively on social media. The colonial perceptions of Nilotics as more hostile and warlike have continued to persist in wider Kenyan discourse as evidenced by works of scholars and researchers such as Ochieng and Ogot among others. These scholars have exploited such colonial stereotypes and largely stereotyped the Nilotic speaking communities in their works. Despite these stereotypes, the Abagusii have often maintained positive relationships with their Nilotic neighbours in the pre- and post-colonial era. Prior to colonization, the Abagusii engaged in barter trade with these communities, especially the [[Luo people]], and at times, worked together to defeat cattle raiders.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/><ref name="Omwoyo" /> The co-existence between the Abagusii and the neighbouring [[Nilotic]] communities was largely peaceful, despite these communities and Abagusii occasionally clashing in sometimes violent cattle rustles and grazing land conflicts.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/><ref name="Omwoyo" />

===Relationship with East African Bantu speakers===
{{Main|Bantu expansion|}}
During the pre-colonial period, the Abagusii mostly had contact with their immediate, Nilotic-speaking neighbours.<ref name=Omwoyo/> As a result, there was limited contact between the Abagusii and Bantu-speaking communities, as indicated by Ekegusii having features not found in other Bantu languages.<ref name=grammaticalisation/> However, not all Bantu-speaking groups were cut off from the Abagusii. The Bantu-speaking groups in contact with the Abagusii in pre-colonial Kenya include the [[Kuria people|Kuria]], [[Zanaki people|Zanaki]], [[Ikoma people|Ikoma]], [[Rangi people|Rangi]], [[Mbugwe people|Mbugwe]], [[Ngurimi people|Ngurimi]], [[Suba people (Tanzania)|Simbiti]], some [[Suba people (Kenya)|Suba]] clans, and the [[Maragoli tribe (Luhya)|Maragoli]].<ref name="Omwoyo" /><ref name=grammaticalisation/> In the post-colonial period, however, contact with other Bantu speaking communities both inside and outside of Kenya has dramatically increased, both from British population relocations and the advent of modern transportation.

====Etymology of Bantu and relevance to Abagusii====

The modern usage of the term "Bantu" was only developed in the 19th century with the advent of European colonization; prior to colonization, no such division existed in Africa.<ref name="Bleek">{{cite journal|last=Bleek|first=Wilhelm|year=1855|title=On the Languages of Western and Southern Africa|url=https://zenodo.org/record/1998228|journal=Transactions of the Philological Society|volume=2|pages=40–50|doi=10.1111/j.1467-968X.1855.tb00791.x|number=4}}</ref><ref name="Greenberg Niger-Congo">{{cite journal|last=Greenberg|first=Joseph|year=1949|title=Studies in African Linguistic Classification: I. The Niger-Congo Family|journal=Southwestern Journal of Anthropology|volume=5|pages=79–100|doi=10.1086/soutjanth.5.2.3628626|number=2|s2cid=149333938}}</ref> This categorization of Africa's people into distinct, internally homogeneous groups is seen as generalizing at best, and inaccurate at worst.<ref name="Bleek" /> In the context of the Abagusii together with [[Kuria people|Kuria]], [[Zanaki people|Zanaki]], [[Ikoma people|Ikoma]], [[Rangi people|Rangi]], [[Mbugwe people|Mbugwe]], [[Ngurimi people|Ngurimi]], and [[Suba people (Tanzania)|Simbiti]], some linguistic and cultural evidence indicate that they may be more influenced by Nilotic and Cushitic communities than other Bantu groups.<ref name=grammaticalisation/>

==Economic activities==
[[File:Kisii woman grinding grain while other natives look on (1).jpg|thumb|Gusii women grinding millet while other natives watch ca. 1916–1938]]
[[File:Kisii women thrashing corn with children surrounding.jpg|thumb|Gusii women thrashing corn with children watching ca. 1916–1938.]]
[[File:Kisii women grinding grain.jpg|thumb|Gusii women grinding millet ca. 1916–1938]]

=== Agriculture and herding ===
During the pre-colonial era, the Abagusii cultivated finger millet, sorgum, barley, pumpkin, and other native crops; ox-drawn plows and iron hoes were used for cultivating crops. However, the Abagusii were mainly pastoralists and hunter-gatherers who primarily relied on their cattle, goats, sheep, and to a lesser extent, poultry for food.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Grain">{{cite journal|last=Hakansson|first=Thomas|title=Grain, Cattle, and Power: The Social Processes of Intensive Cultivation and Exchange in Precolonial Western Kenya|journal=Journal of Anthropological Research|pages=249–276|number=50}}</ref> In the 19th century, Europeans introduced tea, coffee, bananas/plantains, and most importantly, maize. By the 1920s, maize quickly replaced finger millet and sorghum as a staple and cash crop. By the 1930s, tea and coffee had become major cash crops.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Grain" />

Today, the Abagusii still continue to keep livestock and poultry alongside farming, along with old agricultural practices; some crops they cultivate today include: cassava, potatoes, tomatoes, bananas, beans, onions, tropical fruits, and peas among others. Farming remains a dominant activity in Gusiiland due to high population density.

===Industrial activities===

During the pre-colonial period, Abagusii produced iron tools, weapons, decorations, wooden implements, pottery, and baskets.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/><ref name="Hakansson Grain"/> The Abagusii also imported pottery from the neighbouring Luo community.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/><ref name="Hakansson Grain"/> Blacksmiths and other occupations that worked with iron and iron ore were highly respected and influential members of Abagusii society, despite not forming a distinct societal caste; smithing was largely carried out by men.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/><ref name="Hakansson Grain"/>

===Trade===

The primary form of trade carried out in pre-colonial times was barter, and mostly took place within homesteads, as well as with neighbouring communities, especially the Luo; tools, weapons, crafts, livestock, and agricultural products were commonly exchanged.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Grain" /> Cattle were an important form of currency, and goats served a lower valued currency.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/><ref name="Hakansson Grain"/> Barter trade between the Abagusii and the Luo took place at border markets and Abagusii farms, and was mainly carried out by women.

In the modern age, the Abagusii have established shopping centers, shops, and markets, further connecting them to the rest of Kenya, as opposed to their comparatively isolated pre-colonial economies.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Grain" />

===Division of labor===

Traditionally, Abagusii society divided labor between men and women. Women were expected to cook, brew, clean, cultivate and process crops, and fetch water and firewood; men were expected to herd, build houses and fences, clear crop fields, among other duties.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/><ref name="Hakansson Contradiction">{{cite book |last1=Hakansson |first1=N. Thomas |last2=LeVine |first2=Robert |chapter=Contradiction and Change: Gender and Divergent Life-Course Strategies among the Gusii |title=In African Families and the Crisis of Social Change |editor1-first=Thomas |editor1-last=Weisner |editor2-first=Candice |editor2-last=Bradley |editor3-first=Philip |editor3-last=Kilbride |location=New York |publisher=Greenwood Press |year=1995}}</ref> Men were less involved in crop cultivation compared to women. Herding was primarily carried out by boys and unmarried men, and girls and unmarried women helped with crop cultivation.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/><ref name="Hakansson Contradiction"/> This division of labor has broken down over time, and women have gradually taken over many of the men's traditional duties.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/>

==Culture==
[[File:Kisii woman with baby and a load of wood on her head.jpg|thumb|Gusii woman with a baby and a load of firewood ca.1916–1938]]
[[File:Kisii native sitting in front of hut.jpg|thumb|Gusii woman sitting in front of a hut ca.1916–1938]]

=== Coming-of-age rituals ===
Among the Abagusii, circumcising boys without anesthesia around 10 is an important rite of passage; girls also have a similar rite of passage, undergoing [[female genital mutilation]] at an earlier age.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/> Traditionally, the Abagusii did not marry into tribes that did not practice circumcision, though this practice has declined in recent generations.<ref name="Hakansson Bridewealth">{{cite journal |last=Hakansson |first=Thomas |title=Bridewealth, Women, and Land: Social Change among the Gusii of Kenya |journal=Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology |number=9 |location=Stockholm |publisher=Almkvist & Wiksell International |year=1988}}</ref> The ritual typically takes place every year in the months of November and December, followed by a period of seclusion where boys are led in different activities by older boys, and girls are led by older girls. During this period, only older circumcised boys and girls are allowed to visit the initiates. It is considered taboo for anyone else to visit during this time. In this period of isolation, the male initiates are taught their roles as young men in the community, and the code of conduct of a circumcised man. Initiated boys and girls were also taught the rules of shame ("c''hinsoni''") and respect ("o''gosika''").<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/><ref name="Hakansson Bridewealth"/> This is a time of celebration for families and the community at large. Family, friends, and neighbours are invited days in advance by the candidates to join the family in celebration.

=== Music ===
The Abagusii traditionally play a large bass [[lyre]] called ''[[obokano]],'' alongside drums and flutes. Some of the notable musicians from the Abagusii community include: Nyashinski, Rajiv Okemwa Raj, Ringtone, Mwalimu Arisi O'sababu, Christopher Monyoncho, Sungusia, Sagero, Riakimai '91 Jazz, Bonyakoni Kirwanda junior band, Mr Ong'eng'o, Grandmaster Masese, Deepac Braxx (The Heavyweight Mc), Jiggy, Mr. Bloom, Virusi, Babu Gee,Vickyoung Ensanako, Brax Rnb, Sabby Okengo, Machoge One Jazz,Dela among others.

=== Art ===
The Abagusii are also known for their world-famous [[soapstone]] sculptures, called "''chigware''", which are mostly concentrated in the southern parts of Kisii County, around Tabaka town.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/>

===Religion===
[[File:Christian native flanked by Kisii tribesmen.jpg|thumb|A Christian Gusii man accompanied with other Gusii tribesmen ca. 1916–1938]]
[[File:Kisii native students at the Adventist school.jpg|thumb|Gusii native students at the Adventist school ca. 1916–1938]]

Prior to the introduction of Christianity and Islam to Africa, the Abagusii were monotheistic, believing in a supreme God called '<nowiki/>''Engoro''<nowiki/>'; this God is also popularly called '<nowiki/>''Nyasae''<nowiki/>', a loanword from [[Dholuo dialect|Dholuo]] language, among Abagusii. The Abagusii believe that Engoro created the Universe, and was the source of all life. The sun ('''Risase''<nowiki/>') and stars are both important in the Abagusii religion. Death, disease, and destruction of crops and livestock were considered unnatural events brought on by evil spirits, bad luck, witchcraft, or the displeasure of ancestor spirits.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref>{{cite journal|last=LeVine|first=Robert A.|year=1982|title=Gusii Funerals: Meanings of Life and Death in an African Community|journal=Ethos|pages=26–65| volume=10| doi=10.1525/eth.1982.10.1.02a00030|doi-access=free|number=10}}</ref> The Abagusii also revered medicine men and practiced [[Veneration of the dead|ancestor worship]], calling the ancestor spirits "''Ebirecha''."

Today, most Abagusii practice Christianity, with the four major denominations being [[Catholicism]], the [[Seventh-day Adventist Church]], [[Church of Sweden|Swedish Lutheranism]], and Pentecostal [[Assemblies of God]]. A minority of Abagusii still adhere to their traditional religion, and others observe a syncretic form of their traditional religion and Christianity. Many still go to visit a diviner ('''omoragori''<nowiki/>') who can point out displeased spirits of the dead and prescribe solutions on placating them.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/>

===Marriage===

Traditionally, marriage was arranged by the parents, who used intermediaries called "''chisigani''"; these intermediaries acted as referees for the future bride and groom. After the parents negotiated the dowry, the wedding would be organized. The wedding ceremony involved a mentor, called an "''omoimari''", who could provide continuing support to the newly married couple. Marriage between members of the same clan was traditionally forbidden. Marriage was officially established through the payment of dowry in the form of cattle to the wife's family.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Bridewealth" /> Afterwards, the man and woman are officially considered husband and wife. Divorce is customarily not allowed among Abagusii, as marriage is considered a permanent union that is only disrupted by death.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Bridewealth" /> Currently, civil and Christian marriages are recognized among the Abagusii.

===Household===

The typical Gusii family unit is composed of a man, his wives, and their children, living on the same land. This was divided into two components: the homestead ("''Omochie''") and the cattle camps ("''Ebisarate''").<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Detachable">{{cite journal|last=Hakansson|first=Thomas|year=1994|title=Detachable Women: Gender and Kinship in Process of Socioeconomic Change among the Gusii of Kenya|journal=American Ethnologist|pages=516–538|doi=10.1525/ae.1994.21.3.02a00040|number=21}}</ref> The married man, his wives, and their unmarried daughters and uncircumcised boys lived in the ''omochie''. The ''ebisarate'', situated in the grazing fields, was protected by the male warriors to defend theft by cattle rustlers and raiders.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Detachable" />

=== Architecture ===
A typical Gusii house has conical grass thatched roofs, and is typically round, though sometimes rectangular, in shape. Today, Gusii houses are still similar, though corrugated iron sheets and stone is sometimes used for the roofs and walls.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Detachable" />

The traditional Gusii compound had elevated [[Granary|granaries]] for storing crops, such as millet and other crops. The Abagusii customarily built fortified walls and dug trenches around their homesteads and villages to protect against cattle rustling and raids by neighbouring communities. However, in 1913, the cattle camps were abolished by the British, forcing Abagusii to live in dispersed homesteads.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Detachable" />

=== Cuisine ===
The original diet of Abagusii prior to colonization consisted of meat, milk, and blood from livestock, cereals from [[millet]] and [[sorghum]], as well as fruits, vegetables, birds, [[Insects as food|edible insects]] ("''chintuga''"), and wild meat obtained through hunting and gathering. The post-colonial diet of Abagusii and other African tribes has been transformed and influenced by interactions with the European colonists that introduced new crops and farming methods to Gusiiland and Africa.

The staple meal is ''obokima'', which is a dish of millet flour or sorghum flour cooked with water to a hardened dough-like consistency. It is often served with ''rinagu, chinsaga, rikuneni, enderema, emboga, omotere, risosa, egesare,'' among other local green leaves consumed as vegetables. It's served with milk, particularly sour milk from livestock;<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Grain" /> it can also be served with any other stew. The Ekegusii word for "having a meal" ''('ragera')'' usually connotes a meal involving ''obokima'' at the centre. By 1920s, maize was introduced to Gusiiland and had overtaken finger millet and sorghum as staple crops and cash crops.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii" /><ref name="Hakansson Grain" /> As a result, maize is now largely used to prepare ''obokima''. ''Ritoke'' (plural: "''amatoke''"), a dish of cooked and flavoured bananas, is a popular snack, but is considered a supplemental food, and not a proper meal.[[File:Five Kisii tribesmen with shields and spears.jpg|thumb|Gusii spearmen with shields and spears, ca. 1916–1938]]

=== Social organization ===
The social organization of Abagusii is clan-based and decentralized in nature. The Abagusii society is less based on social/caste stratifications compared to other societies, and there was little hierarchical strata based on caste or social status.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/> For instance, certain professions like iron smiths ("''oboturi''") and warriors ("''oborwani''"/"''chinkororo''") were generally respected, but did not form a distinct caste.

==Political organization==
[[File:Kisii native parliament.jpg|thumb|Traditional Gusii leaders ca. 1916–1938.]]

The Abagusii had a decentralized and clan-based form of government. Each clan had their own independent government and leader; the clan leader (''"omorwoti/omogambi''") was the highest leadership rank for all clans and was equivalent to a king/chief role.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/> It is common for the Abagusii men refer to their peers within the community as '<nowiki/>''erwoti''<nowiki/>' or '''omogambi''<nowiki/>' when talking. There were also lower leadership ranks unique to individual clans. Warriors held an important role as the defenders of the community and their shared wealth in the form of cows.<ref name="Hakansson Gusii"/>

==Notable Abagusii people==

* [[David Kenani Maraga]], former president of the [[Supreme Court of Kenya]]
* [[Zachary Onyonka]], Minister of Education, then of Foreign Affairs
* [[Sam Ongeri]], former Senator for Kisii County
* [[Fred Matiang'i]], former Cabinet Secretary for the Ministry of Interior and Coordination of National Security
* [[Simeon Nyachae]], former Cabinet Minister
* [[James Ongwae]], former governor of Kisii County
* [[John Nyagarama]], former governor of Nyamira County
* [[George Anyona]], Member of Parliament for Kitutu East/Masaba.

==References==
{{reflist}}

==Further reading==
* Greenberg, J., 1963. : Contributions to the History of Bantu Linguistics: Papers Contributed 1935–1960 . C. M. Doke, D. T. Cole. American Anthropologist, 65(5), pp.&nbsp;1193–1194.
* LeVine, Robert A., Sarah LeVine, P. Herbert Leiberman, T. Betty Brazelton, Suzanne Dixon, Amy Richman, and Constance H. Keefer (1994). ''Child Care and Culture: Lessons from Africa''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
* LeVine, Robert A. (1959). "Gusii Sex Offenses: A Study in Social Control". ''American Anthropologist'' 61:965–990.
* LeVine, Robert A., and Barbara B. LeVine (1966). ''Nyansongo: A Gusii Community in Kenya. Six Cultures Series'', vol. 2. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
* LeVine, Sarah (1979). ''Mothers and Wives: Gusii Women of East Africa''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
* LeVine, Sarah, and Robert A. LeVine (forthcoming). ''Stability and Stress: The Psychosocial History of an African Community''.
* Mayer, Philip (1950). "Gusii Bridewealth Law and Custom". ''The Rhodes-Livingstone Papers'', no. 18. London: Oxford University Press.
* Mayer, Philip (1949). "The Lineage Principle in Gusii Society". ''International African Institute Memorandum'' no. 24. London: Oxford University Press.


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.gusii.com The Gusii blog]
* [http://www.cam.ac.uk/societies/kenyap/gusii.html Gusii people]
* [http://www.cam.ac.uk/societies/kenyap/gusii.html Gusii people]
* [http://www.ekegusii.org/ Kisii-English English-Kisii Language Dictionary]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20070510231620/http://www.ekegusii.org/ Kisii-English English-Kisii Language Dictionary]
* [http://guz.kasahorow.org/app/d Gusii language dictionary]

{{Ethnic groups in Kenya}}

{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Ethnic groups in Kenya]]
[[Category:Kisii| ]]

Latest revision as of 02:08, 18 April 2024

Abagusii (Aba-goosie)
Abagusii people singing and dancing while playing a native harp (aka Obokano)
Total population
2,703,235[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Kenya
Languages
Ekegusii
Religion
Christianity, Traditional Beliefs, Islam
Related ethnic groups
Abakuria,[2] Ameru,[3] Embu,[3] Kikuyu,[3] Mbeere,[3] Kipsigis,[4] Maasai[4] Linguistic-Relationship:Ngurimi,[2] Zanaki,[3]Ikoma,[3]Rangi,[2] Mbugwe,[2]Simbiti.[2] Maragoli[3] and Suba people (Kenya)[3]
Gusii (Goosie)
PersonOmogusii
PeopleAbagusii
LanguageEkegusii
CountryGusii

The Abagusii (also known as Kisii (Mkisii/Wakisii) in Swahili, or Gusii in Ekegusii) are a Bantu ethnic group and nation indigenous to Kisii and Nyamira counties of former Nyanza, as well as parts of Kericho and Bomet counties of the former Rift Valley province of Kenya.

The Abagusii traditionally inhabit Kisii and Nyamira counties, as well as sections of Kericho and Bomet counties, all of which were within the former Nyanza and Rift Valley provinces of Kenya. Studies of East African Bantu languages[2] and anthropological evidence suggests that the Abagusii, together with Kuria, Ngurimi, Rangi, Mbugwe, Simbiti, Zanaki and Ikoma, emerged from East African Neolithic agropastoralists and hunters/gatherers[5][6][7] believed to have come from the North of Mt. Elgon.[3] It's also believed that there was heavy influence on the Abagusii from Bantu speakers migrating out of Central Africa and West Africa; certain groups of the Abagusii may have been assimilated from the Luhya and Olusuba speaking Suba people, which originated from west of Lake Victoria.[8] The majority of Abagusii are closely related to the Maasai, Kipsigis, Abakuria, and Ameru of Kenya.

The Abagusii also have a close linguistic relationship with the Ngurimi, Rangi, Mbugwe, Simbiti,[2] Zanaki, Ikoma and Maragoli people. They speak the Ekegusii language which is classified with the Great Lakes Bantu languages. However, the inclusion of Abagusii in the Bantu language group is a subject of debate, given that studies on East African Bantu languages have found Ekegusii, together with the Kuria, Simbiti, Ngurimi, Rangi and Mbugwe languages to be rather distinct from other Bantu languages in terms of structure and tense.[2]

Etymology[edit]

The term Kisii is Swahili and originates from the colonial British administration, who used it in colonial Kenya to refer to the Abagusii people, as it was much easier to pronounce.[9] The term Kisii, however, has no meaning in the Ekegusii language.[9] In the Swahili language, the singular form is Mkisii and the plural form is Wakisii; the Swahili name for the Ekegusii language is Kikisii. The term is now popularly used in Kenya to refer to Abagusii people.[9]

Among the Abagusii, the name Kisii does not refer to the people, but to a town — Kisii, also called Bosongo or Getembe[10] by the locals, is the major native urban centre of the Abagusii people. The name Bosongo is believed to have originated from Abasongo, which means "the whites" or "the place where white people settle(d))", referring to settlers living in the town during the colonial era.[11]

The other name used by the British in reference to Abagusii were Kosova/Kossowa[9] which is derivative of the Ekegusii expression "Inka Sobo", meaning their home. The endonym is Abagusii (plural), and Omogusii (singular); the language spoken by the people is Ekegusii. The term "Gusii" supposedly comes from Mogusii, the founder of the community.

History[edit]

Gusii woman in native attire ca. 1905–1907
Gusii woman in native ornaments ca. 1905–1907
Three Gusii women walking ca. 1916–1938.

Origins[edit]

Based on linguistic[2] and anthropological evidence, the Abagusii originated from the neolithic agropastoralist inhabitants of present-day Kenya, particularly from the former Nyanza and Rift Valley provinces.[5][6][12][13] The competing theory by some scholars that the Abagusii migrated from Uganda is lacking, as there's no historical evidence the Abagusii settled in Uganda and have been known to only settle on the eastern slopes of the Kenyan side of Mt. Elgon.[3]

The oral tradition of the Abagusii holds that their ancestors migrated from a place called Misiri, north of Mt. Elgon, possibly in present-day Egypt.[3] These ancestors were the founders of the six major Gusii clans: the Abagetutu, Abanyaribari, Abagirango, Abanchari, Abamachoge, and Ababasi. This original group later absorbed a group of settlers from west of Lake Victoria, what is now present day Buganda and Busoga; these settlers may have been assimilated from the Luhya and Olusuba-speaking Suba people.[8]

Settlement in Gusiiland[edit]

Present-day Gusiiland, along with Kenya and East Africa at large, has been inhabited since the Neolithic period. As a result, its settlers have diverse origins. The first settlers were likely hunter/gathers similar to the Khoisan and Ogiek, which were followed by the Nyanza/Rift Cushites who replaced these hunters-gatherers, assimilating them, and settled during the Savanna Pastoral Neolithic period (ca.3200–1300 BC)[7][5] The next group of settlers were Nilotic pastoralists from present-day South Sudan that settled in the area circa. 500 BC.[6][14] The last group to settle in the area are Bantu speakers, whose migration to the area began in 1 AD.[15] Several southern Nilotics and southern Cushitics were assimilated into the Abagusii, whom are likely responsible for the Gusii practice of circumcision and other practices due to cultural diffusion.[16]

Colonial era[edit]

Otenyo Nyamaterere, a Gusii warrior, ca. 1905–1907.

The Abagusii were seen as warlike and fierce fighters by other ethnic groups, along with the Ameru, Abakuria and Maasai; the Abagetutu specifically were seen as the most martial of all Abagusii Clans.[9] This perception is evident in excerpts from the East African Protectorate Commissioner Sir Charles Eliot in early 1900s expeditions of Gusiiland and surrounding areas:

To the north of the (Uganda) railway the Lake shore rises up into the Nandi country and Uasin Gishu plateau. To the south is a little-known region lying between the Mau range and the Lake, various parts of which bear the name Ugaya, Kossova and Lumbwa. Ugaya is the part nearest to the Lake, thickly inhabited by the Kavirondo and rich in cattle. Kossova or Kisii is a hilly district behind Ugaya, and is one of the least known parts of the Protectorate. The inhabitants appear to be Bantu-speaking, and have a bad reputation for ferocity, but this may merely mean that they have a hereditary feud with their neighbours, who are not Bantu, and does not necessarily imply that they will be hostile to Europeans...

Their warlike nature was deemed as a threat to British rule, especially the cattle camps the warriors frequented, and the British enacted punitive expeditions that raided cattle and crushed the warriors. This slowly brought an end to the pastoral and war-based lifestyle of most Abagusii.[9]

The British introduced new immigrants to Kisii County and other parts of Kenya in the 1930s to work as soldiers, porters and farmers. These were the Baganda,[17] the Maragoli, the Nubi,[18] and the Olusuba-speaking Suba people (Kenya) from Rusinga Island, Mfangano Island, and sections of Homa Bay County. The Nubians were settled by the British in present-day Kisii town and worked as soldiers for the British government, while the Bantu speaking Maragoli, Baganda, and Suba people were settled in Kisii town as porters and labourers on white farms and tea plantations. Some of the new immigrants introduced to Kisii town by the British have been largely assimilated into the Gusii society, but others, particularly the Nubi, never assimilated and still maintain their original settlement in Kisii town.[18]

Post-colonial[edit]

In the post-colonial age, the Abagusii have expanded out of their traditional range, settling in the major towns of the Luo-Nyanza counties, like Homa Bay, Migori, Kisumu and Siaya as well as other Kenyan towns and cities. There is also a significant diaspora population in the United States (particularly Minnesota), the United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa.[19]

Relationship with other peoples[edit]

Relationship with Nilotic speakers[edit]

The relationship between the Abagusii and their neighbouring Nilotic speaking communities (such as Maasai, Nandi, Kipsigis, Luo) is often painted negatively on social media. The colonial perceptions of Nilotics as more hostile and warlike have continued to persist in wider Kenyan discourse as evidenced by works of scholars and researchers such as Ochieng and Ogot among others. These scholars have exploited such colonial stereotypes and largely stereotyped the Nilotic speaking communities in their works. Despite these stereotypes, the Abagusii have often maintained positive relationships with their Nilotic neighbours in the pre- and post-colonial era. Prior to colonization, the Abagusii engaged in barter trade with these communities, especially the Luo people, and at times, worked together to defeat cattle raiders.[9][4] The co-existence between the Abagusii and the neighbouring Nilotic communities was largely peaceful, despite these communities and Abagusii occasionally clashing in sometimes violent cattle rustles and grazing land conflicts.[9][4]

Relationship with East African Bantu speakers[edit]

During the pre-colonial period, the Abagusii mostly had contact with their immediate, Nilotic-speaking neighbours.[4] As a result, there was limited contact between the Abagusii and Bantu-speaking communities, as indicated by Ekegusii having features not found in other Bantu languages.[2] However, not all Bantu-speaking groups were cut off from the Abagusii. The Bantu-speaking groups in contact with the Abagusii in pre-colonial Kenya include the Kuria, Zanaki, Ikoma, Rangi, Mbugwe, Ngurimi, Simbiti, some Suba clans, and the Maragoli.[4][2] In the post-colonial period, however, contact with other Bantu speaking communities both inside and outside of Kenya has dramatically increased, both from British population relocations and the advent of modern transportation.

Etymology of Bantu and relevance to Abagusii[edit]

The modern usage of the term "Bantu" was only developed in the 19th century with the advent of European colonization; prior to colonization, no such division existed in Africa.[20][21] This categorization of Africa's people into distinct, internally homogeneous groups is seen as generalizing at best, and inaccurate at worst.[20] In the context of the Abagusii together with Kuria, Zanaki, Ikoma, Rangi, Mbugwe, Ngurimi, and Simbiti, some linguistic and cultural evidence indicate that they may be more influenced by Nilotic and Cushitic communities than other Bantu groups.[2]

Economic activities[edit]

Gusii women grinding millet while other natives watch ca. 1916–1938
Gusii women thrashing corn with children watching ca. 1916–1938.
Gusii women grinding millet ca. 1916–1938

Agriculture and herding[edit]

During the pre-colonial era, the Abagusii cultivated finger millet, sorgum, barley, pumpkin, and other native crops; ox-drawn plows and iron hoes were used for cultivating crops. However, the Abagusii were mainly pastoralists and hunter-gatherers who primarily relied on their cattle, goats, sheep, and to a lesser extent, poultry for food.[9][22] In the 19th century, Europeans introduced tea, coffee, bananas/plantains, and most importantly, maize. By the 1920s, maize quickly replaced finger millet and sorghum as a staple and cash crop. By the 1930s, tea and coffee had become major cash crops.[9][22]

Today, the Abagusii still continue to keep livestock and poultry alongside farming, along with old agricultural practices; some crops they cultivate today include: cassava, potatoes, tomatoes, bananas, beans, onions, tropical fruits, and peas among others. Farming remains a dominant activity in Gusiiland due to high population density.

Industrial activities[edit]

During the pre-colonial period, Abagusii produced iron tools, weapons, decorations, wooden implements, pottery, and baskets.[9][22] The Abagusii also imported pottery from the neighbouring Luo community.[9][22] Blacksmiths and other occupations that worked with iron and iron ore were highly respected and influential members of Abagusii society, despite not forming a distinct societal caste; smithing was largely carried out by men.[9][22]

Trade[edit]

The primary form of trade carried out in pre-colonial times was barter, and mostly took place within homesteads, as well as with neighbouring communities, especially the Luo; tools, weapons, crafts, livestock, and agricultural products were commonly exchanged.[9][22] Cattle were an important form of currency, and goats served a lower valued currency.[9][22] Barter trade between the Abagusii and the Luo took place at border markets and Abagusii farms, and was mainly carried out by women.

In the modern age, the Abagusii have established shopping centers, shops, and markets, further connecting them to the rest of Kenya, as opposed to their comparatively isolated pre-colonial economies.[9][22]

Division of labor[edit]

Traditionally, Abagusii society divided labor between men and women. Women were expected to cook, brew, clean, cultivate and process crops, and fetch water and firewood; men were expected to herd, build houses and fences, clear crop fields, among other duties.[9][23] Men were less involved in crop cultivation compared to women. Herding was primarily carried out by boys and unmarried men, and girls and unmarried women helped with crop cultivation.[9][23] This division of labor has broken down over time, and women have gradually taken over many of the men's traditional duties.[9]

Culture[edit]

Gusii woman with a baby and a load of firewood ca.1916–1938
Gusii woman sitting in front of a hut ca.1916–1938

Coming-of-age rituals[edit]

Among the Abagusii, circumcising boys without anesthesia around 10 is an important rite of passage; girls also have a similar rite of passage, undergoing female genital mutilation at an earlier age.[9] Traditionally, the Abagusii did not marry into tribes that did not practice circumcision, though this practice has declined in recent generations.[24] The ritual typically takes place every year in the months of November and December, followed by a period of seclusion where boys are led in different activities by older boys, and girls are led by older girls. During this period, only older circumcised boys and girls are allowed to visit the initiates. It is considered taboo for anyone else to visit during this time. In this period of isolation, the male initiates are taught their roles as young men in the community, and the code of conduct of a circumcised man. Initiated boys and girls were also taught the rules of shame ("chinsoni") and respect ("ogosika").[9][24] This is a time of celebration for families and the community at large. Family, friends, and neighbours are invited days in advance by the candidates to join the family in celebration.

Music[edit]

The Abagusii traditionally play a large bass lyre called obokano, alongside drums and flutes. Some of the notable musicians from the Abagusii community include: Nyashinski, Rajiv Okemwa Raj, Ringtone, Mwalimu Arisi O'sababu, Christopher Monyoncho, Sungusia, Sagero, Riakimai '91 Jazz, Bonyakoni Kirwanda junior band, Mr Ong'eng'o, Grandmaster Masese, Deepac Braxx (The Heavyweight Mc), Jiggy, Mr. Bloom, Virusi, Babu Gee,Vickyoung Ensanako, Brax Rnb, Sabby Okengo, Machoge One Jazz,Dela among others.

Art[edit]

The Abagusii are also known for their world-famous soapstone sculptures, called "chigware", which are mostly concentrated in the southern parts of Kisii County, around Tabaka town.[9]

Religion[edit]

A Christian Gusii man accompanied with other Gusii tribesmen ca. 1916–1938
Gusii native students at the Adventist school ca. 1916–1938

Prior to the introduction of Christianity and Islam to Africa, the Abagusii were monotheistic, believing in a supreme God called 'Engoro'; this God is also popularly called 'Nyasae', a loanword from Dholuo language, among Abagusii. The Abagusii believe that Engoro created the Universe, and was the source of all life. The sun ('Risase') and stars are both important in the Abagusii religion. Death, disease, and destruction of crops and livestock were considered unnatural events brought on by evil spirits, bad luck, witchcraft, or the displeasure of ancestor spirits.[9][25] The Abagusii also revered medicine men and practiced ancestor worship, calling the ancestor spirits "Ebirecha."

Today, most Abagusii practice Christianity, with the four major denominations being Catholicism, the Seventh-day Adventist Church, Swedish Lutheranism, and Pentecostal Assemblies of God. A minority of Abagusii still adhere to their traditional religion, and others observe a syncretic form of their traditional religion and Christianity. Many still go to visit a diviner ('omoragori') who can point out displeased spirits of the dead and prescribe solutions on placating them.[9]

Marriage[edit]

Traditionally, marriage was arranged by the parents, who used intermediaries called "chisigani"; these intermediaries acted as referees for the future bride and groom. After the parents negotiated the dowry, the wedding would be organized. The wedding ceremony involved a mentor, called an "omoimari", who could provide continuing support to the newly married couple. Marriage between members of the same clan was traditionally forbidden. Marriage was officially established through the payment of dowry in the form of cattle to the wife's family.[9][24] Afterwards, the man and woman are officially considered husband and wife. Divorce is customarily not allowed among Abagusii, as marriage is considered a permanent union that is only disrupted by death.[9][24] Currently, civil and Christian marriages are recognized among the Abagusii.

Household[edit]

The typical Gusii family unit is composed of a man, his wives, and their children, living on the same land. This was divided into two components: the homestead ("Omochie") and the cattle camps ("Ebisarate").[9][26] The married man, his wives, and their unmarried daughters and uncircumcised boys lived in the omochie. The ebisarate, situated in the grazing fields, was protected by the male warriors to defend theft by cattle rustlers and raiders.[9][26]

Architecture[edit]

A typical Gusii house has conical grass thatched roofs, and is typically round, though sometimes rectangular, in shape. Today, Gusii houses are still similar, though corrugated iron sheets and stone is sometimes used for the roofs and walls.[9][26]

The traditional Gusii compound had elevated granaries for storing crops, such as millet and other crops. The Abagusii customarily built fortified walls and dug trenches around their homesteads and villages to protect against cattle rustling and raids by neighbouring communities. However, in 1913, the cattle camps were abolished by the British, forcing Abagusii to live in dispersed homesteads.[9][26]

Cuisine[edit]

The original diet of Abagusii prior to colonization consisted of meat, milk, and blood from livestock, cereals from millet and sorghum, as well as fruits, vegetables, birds, edible insects ("chintuga"), and wild meat obtained through hunting and gathering. The post-colonial diet of Abagusii and other African tribes has been transformed and influenced by interactions with the European colonists that introduced new crops and farming methods to Gusiiland and Africa.

The staple meal is obokima, which is a dish of millet flour or sorghum flour cooked with water to a hardened dough-like consistency. It is often served with rinagu, chinsaga, rikuneni, enderema, emboga, omotere, risosa, egesare, among other local green leaves consumed as vegetables. It's served with milk, particularly sour milk from livestock;[9][22] it can also be served with any other stew. The Ekegusii word for "having a meal" ('ragera') usually connotes a meal involving obokima at the centre. By 1920s, maize was introduced to Gusiiland and had overtaken finger millet and sorghum as staple crops and cash crops.[9][22] As a result, maize is now largely used to prepare obokima. Ritoke (plural: "amatoke"), a dish of cooked and flavoured bananas, is a popular snack, but is considered a supplemental food, and not a proper meal.

Gusii spearmen with shields and spears, ca. 1916–1938

Social organization[edit]

The social organization of Abagusii is clan-based and decentralized in nature. The Abagusii society is less based on social/caste stratifications compared to other societies, and there was little hierarchical strata based on caste or social status.[9] For instance, certain professions like iron smiths ("oboturi") and warriors ("oborwani"/"chinkororo") were generally respected, but did not form a distinct caste.

Political organization[edit]

Traditional Gusii leaders ca. 1916–1938.

The Abagusii had a decentralized and clan-based form of government. Each clan had their own independent government and leader; the clan leader ("omorwoti/omogambi") was the highest leadership rank for all clans and was equivalent to a king/chief role.[9] It is common for the Abagusii men refer to their peers within the community as 'erwoti' or 'omogambi' when talking. There were also lower leadership ranks unique to individual clans. Warriors held an important role as the defenders of the community and their shared wealth in the form of cows.[9]

Notable Abagusii people[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census Volume IV: Distribution of Population by Socio-Economic Characteristics". Kenya National Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 24 March 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Gibson, Hannah (2019). "The grammaticalisation of verb-auxiliary order in East African Bantu From information structure to tense-aspect" (PDF). Studies in Language. 43 (4): 757–799. doi:10.1075/sl.17033.gib. S2CID 204479937.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Ochieng, W.R. (1972). "'Misri' Legends in East and Central Africa". East Africa Journal.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Omwoyo, Samson Moenga (2000). The Agricultural Changes in the Kipsigis Land, c. 1894–1963: An Historical Inquiry (Thesis).
  5. ^ a b c Ehret, C. (1980). The historical reconstruction of Southern Cushitic phonology and vocabulary. Kölner Beiträge zur Afrikanistik. Vol. 5. Berlin: Reimer. ISBN 9783496001041.
  6. ^ a b c Ambrose, S.H (1982). "Archaeological and linguistic reconstructions of history in East Africa". In Ehert, C.; Posnansky, M. (eds.). The archaeological and linguistic reconstruction of African history. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520045934.
  7. ^ a b Ehret, C. (2002). The Civilizations of Africa: a History to 1800. University Press of Virginia. ISBN 0-8139-2085-X.
  8. ^ a b Okello, Ayot. A History of the Luo-Abasuba of Western Kenya, from A.D. 1760–1940.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Hakansson, N. Thomas. "Gusii". The Encyclopedia of World Cultures CD-ROM – via sscnet.ucla.edu.[dead link]
  10. ^ "Urban centres in Gusii".
  11. ^ Bosire, Kennedy (2013). Authoritative Ekegusii-English Dictionary. Nairobi: Ekegusii Encyclopedia Project.
  12. ^ Ehret, C. (2002). The Civilizations of Africa: a History to 1800. University Press of Virginia. ISBN 0-8139-2085-X.
  13. ^ Ambrose, S.H. (1986). Sprache und Geschichte in Afrika. Vol. 7. Helmut Buske. p. 11. ISBN 9783871187605.
  14. ^ Ehret, C. (1983). Mack, J.; Robertshaw, P. (eds.). Culture History in the Southern Sudan. Nairobi: British Institute in Eastern Africa. pp. 19–48. ISBN 1-872566-04-9.
  15. ^ Ehret, C. (1998). An African Classical Age : Eastern and Southern Africa in World History, 1000 B.C. to A.D. 400. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia. pp. xvii, 354. ISBN 0-8139-2057-4.
  16. ^ Niane, Djibril Tamsir; Joseph, Ki-Zerbo (1998). Africa from the Twelfth to the Sixteenth Century. UNESCO General History of Africa. Vol. IV. Berkeley, United States: University of California Press. p. 193. ISBN 9780520066991.
  17. ^ "How the Baganda came to Kisiiland". The East African. 6 July 2020.
  18. ^ a b Mose, Peter N. (2018). "Multilingualism and First Language Maintenance: Nubian Language Speakers in Western Kenya". Journal of Pan African Studies. 12 (4): 248+.
  19. ^ "The Kenyan Diaspora in the United States" (PDF). Retrieved 8 November 2021.
  20. ^ a b Bleek, Wilhelm (1855). "On the Languages of Western and Southern Africa". Transactions of the Philological Society. 2 (4): 40–50. doi:10.1111/j.1467-968X.1855.tb00791.x.
  21. ^ Greenberg, Joseph (1949). "Studies in African Linguistic Classification: I. The Niger-Congo Family". Southwestern Journal of Anthropology. 5 (2): 79–100. doi:10.1086/soutjanth.5.2.3628626. S2CID 149333938.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hakansson, Thomas. "Grain, Cattle, and Power: The Social Processes of Intensive Cultivation and Exchange in Precolonial Western Kenya". Journal of Anthropological Research (50): 249–276.
  23. ^ a b Hakansson, N. Thomas; LeVine, Robert (1995). "Contradiction and Change: Gender and Divergent Life-Course Strategies among the Gusii". In Weisner, Thomas; Bradley, Candice; Kilbride, Philip (eds.). In African Families and the Crisis of Social Change. New York: Greenwood Press.
  24. ^ a b c d Hakansson, Thomas (1988). "Bridewealth, Women, and Land: Social Change among the Gusii of Kenya". Uppsala Studies in Cultural Anthropology (9). Stockholm: Almkvist & Wiksell International.
  25. ^ LeVine, Robert A. (1982). "Gusii Funerals: Meanings of Life and Death in an African Community". Ethos. 10 (10): 26–65. doi:10.1525/eth.1982.10.1.02a00030.
  26. ^ a b c d Hakansson, Thomas (1994). "Detachable Women: Gender and Kinship in Process of Socioeconomic Change among the Gusii of Kenya". American Ethnologist (21): 516–538. doi:10.1525/ae.1994.21.3.02a00040.

Further reading[edit]

  • Greenberg, J., 1963. : Contributions to the History of Bantu Linguistics: Papers Contributed 1935–1960 . C. M. Doke, D. T. Cole. American Anthropologist, 65(5), pp. 1193–1194.
  • LeVine, Robert A., Sarah LeVine, P. Herbert Leiberman, T. Betty Brazelton, Suzanne Dixon, Amy Richman, and Constance H. Keefer (1994). Child Care and Culture: Lessons from Africa. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • LeVine, Robert A. (1959). "Gusii Sex Offenses: A Study in Social Control". American Anthropologist 61:965–990.
  • LeVine, Robert A., and Barbara B. LeVine (1966). Nyansongo: A Gusii Community in Kenya. Six Cultures Series, vol. 2. New York: John Wiley & Sons.
  • LeVine, Sarah (1979). Mothers and Wives: Gusii Women of East Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • LeVine, Sarah, and Robert A. LeVine (forthcoming). Stability and Stress: The Psychosocial History of an African Community.
  • Mayer, Philip (1950). "Gusii Bridewealth Law and Custom". The Rhodes-Livingstone Papers, no. 18. London: Oxford University Press.
  • Mayer, Philip (1949). "The Lineage Principle in Gusii Society". International African Institute Memorandum no. 24. London: Oxford University Press.

External links[edit]