Ethnic groups and languages ​​in Sierra Leone

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Main settlement areas of the various ethnic groups

Sierra Leone is a multiethnic state in which numerous ethnic groups are native. In 2015, Sierra Leone had almost 7.1 million inhabitants who officially belong to 15 ethnic groups and just as many languages. Ethnologue , on the other hand, knows 25 living languages ​​in Sierra Leone, two of which are threatened with extinction.

With more than two million people each, the Temne and Mende represent the largest ethnic groups in Sierra Leone. Their languages ​​are spoken most often as mother tongue, followed by Krio .

Official language in Sierra Leone is English , main traffic language (lingua franca) is Krio .

Ethnic groups and mother tongues

Note: Sorted by share in 2015.

Ethnic group Share in%
(1963)
Share in%
(2003/04)
Share in%
(2013)
Absolute
(2015)
Share in%
(2015)
language Absolute
(2015)
Share in%
(2015)
Mende 30.9 37.45   33.2   000000002258232.00000000002,258,232 32.2   Mende 000000002065349.00000000002,065,349 29.7
Temne 29.8 23.83   35.5   000000002220211.00000000002.220.211 31.7   Temne 000000001851300.00000000001,851,300 26.6
Limba 09.86 06.4   000000000592190.0000000000592.190 08.5   Limba 000000000380060.0000000000380.060 05.5
Kono 4.4 000000000363051.0000000000363.051 05.2   Kono 000000000306824.0000000000306.824 04.4
Koranko 2.8 000000000313384.0000000000313,384 04.4   Koranko 000000000277356.0000000000277.356 04.0
Fullah 3.4 000000000266581.0000000000266,581 03.5   Fullah 000000000173003.0000000000173.003 02.5
Susu 000000000203779.0000000000203,779 02.9 Susu 000000000155175.0000000000155.175 02.2
Kissi 02.98 000000000175843.0000000000175.843 02.5   Kissi 000000000154341.0000000000154.341 02.2
Loko 02.53 02.9   000000000165692.0000000000165.692 02.4   Loko 000000000091668.000000000091,668 01.3
Madingo 02.26 02.4   000000000160080.0000000000160.080 02.2   Madingo 000000000088650.000000000088,650 01.3
Sherbro (Bullom) 01.20 02.6   000000000134606.0000000000134,606 01.9   Sherbro 000000000081304.000000000081,304 01.2
Krio ( Creoles ) 05.62 01,2   000000000094593.000000000094,593 01.3   Krio 000000001265295.00000000001,265,295 18.2
Yalunka 000000000051781.000000000051,781 00.7 Yalunka 000000000044935.000000000044,935 00.6
Crimea 000000000015729.000000000015,729 00.2 Crimea 000000000001669.00000000001,669 00.0
Vai 00.06 000000000001205.00000000001,205 00.0   Vai 000000000001043.00000000001,043 00.0

Ethnologue also names the following languages ​​for Sierra Leone, from which an occurrence of the respective ethnic groups in the country can be derived: Maninkakan ( Malinke ), N'Ko , Bassa ( Bassa ), Bullom So ( Bullom-Sherbro ), Gola ( Gola ), Klao , Pular ( Fullah ) and Bom . The economically influential Lebanese are among the most recently immigrated ethnic groups . The Kru and Bassa immigrated from Liberia . The Maroons are freed slaves .

literature

  • C. Magbaily Fyle: Unity in Diversity: Ethnicity and National Consciousness in Sierra Leone , National Consultative Conference - Building a United and Cohesive Nation, 2013. ( PDF )
  • Suzanne LeVert: Cultures of the World, Sierra Leone. Marshall Cavendish Benchmark, New York 2006, ISBN 978-0-7614-2334-8 . ( PDF )

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e f Sierra Leone 2015 Population and Housing Census national analytical report. Statistics Sierra Leone, October 2017, p. 89ff.
  2. ^ Sierra Leone. Ethnologue.com. Retrieved March 7, 2019.
  3. POPULATION AND HOUSING CENSUS SIERRA LEONE - The Analytic Report. Central Statistics Office, 1995, p. 15.
  4. ^ Sierra Leone Integrated Household Survey (SLIHS) 2003/04. Government of Sierra Leone, November 2007. ( available online  ( page no longer available , search in web archivesInfo: The link was automatically marked as defective. Please check the link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. )@1@ 2Template: Dead Link / www.statistics.sl  
  5. ^ Sierra Leone. CIA, In: The World Factbook, 2013. ( available online )
  6. Mohammed B. Sillah: The Lebanese Immigrants in Sierra Leone: A Market Dominant-Minority and Revisiting the Constitutional Statute for Naturalization and Citizenship , In: American International Journal of Social Science, Vol. 5, No. 4, August 2016. ( available online )