Map showing the approximate distribution of Bantu (light brown) vs. other
Niger-Congo languages (medium brown).
Bantu is a label used in a general sense for over 400 ethnic groups in
Sub-Saharan Africa, from Cameroon, Southern Africa, Central Africa, to Eastern Africa, united by a common language family (the
Bantu languages) and in many cases common customs.
Definition
"Bantu", and similar sounding cognates, means "people" in many Bantu languages. Dr.
Wilhelm Bleek first used the term "Bantu" in its current sense in his 1862 book A
Comparative Grammar of South African Languages, in which he hypothesized that a vast number of languages located across
central, southern, eastern, and western Africa shared so many characteristics that they must be part of a single language group.
This basic thesis (of linguistic affinity) has been confirmed by numerous researchers using the comparative method. On the other hand, the theory of a single ethnic group has been widely challenged
since it was proposed - not least because a language may be spread by a relatively small number of human carriers.
Origins
1. = 3000 - 1500 BC origin
2 = ca.1500 BC first migrations
2.a = Eastern Bantu, 2.b = Western Bantu
3. = 1000 - 500 BC
Urewe nuclus of Eastern Bantu
4. - 7. southward advance
9. = 500 BC - 0 Congo nucleus
10. = 0 - 1000 AD last phase
[1] [2] [3]
Early iron age findings in eastern and southern Africa
Before the expansion of the Bantu languages and their speakers, the southern half of Africa is believed to have been populated
by Pygmies and Khoisan speaking people, today occupying the
arid regions around the Kalahari and the rainforest
of Congo Basin; whereas Cushites, Nilotes and other people speaking Afro-Asiatic languages
inhabited north-eastern and northern Africa. Northwestern Africa, the Sahara, and the Sudan were inhabited by people speaking
Mande and Atlantic languages (such as the
Fulani and Wolof) and other people speaking
Nilo-Saharan languages.
There are two basic theories of the spread of the Bantu languages and societies. The first was advanced by Joseph Greenberg in 1963. He had analyzed and compared several hundred African languages and found that
a group of languages spoken in Southeastern Nigeria were the most closely related to languages
from the Bantu group. He theorized that Proto-Bantu (the hypothetical ancestor of the Bantu
languages) was originally one of these languages that spread south and east over hundreds of years.
This was quickly challenged by Malcolm Guthrie who analyzed each Bantu language and
found that the most stereotypical were those spoken in Zambia and in the southern
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). This provided the alternative
theory that Bantu speakers had spread from this location in all directions.
Bantu expansion
-
The Bantu expansion was both a physical migration and a diffusion of language and knowledge into neighboring populations, and
societal groups (usually through inter-marriage or by small groups moving to new areas). Bantu speakers developed novel methods
of agriculture and metalworking which allowed people to colonize new areas in greater densities. Both linguistics and genetics support the idea that the Bantu expansion was one
of the most significant human migrations and expansions within the past few thousand years.
By about 1000 AD it had reached modern day Zimbabwe and South
Africa. In Zimbabwe a major southern hemisphere empire was established, with its capital at Great Zimbabwe. It controlled trading routes from South Africa to north of the Zambezi, trading gold, copper, precious stones, animal hides, ivory and metal goods with the Arab traders of the Swahili coast. By the 14th or 15th centuries the
Empire had collapsed, with the city of Great Zimbabwe being abandoned. The expansion primarily ended with the clashes between the
Xhosa and Boers at Graaff
Reinet inn 1779.
Another theory, rather unsupported by the existing evidence, held is that the Bantu society originated from the Congo and due
to factors like agriculture and trade in ivory they spread out to the north, east and the south.
With slave trade the further scattered out across Africa some running from the slave traders.
The use of the term "Bantu" in South Africa
-
Black South Africans were at times officially called "Bantus" by the apartheid regime. The term is derived from
the Zulu term for people "abantu" the plural of "umuntu." Examples of its usage are as follows:
- One of South Africa's politicians of recent times General Bantubonke Harrington Holomisa " all the people" who is know as
Bantu Holomisa .
- The South African apartheid regime, used the term "Bantustan", to refer to the "homelands"
(Transkei, Bophuthatswana, Venda and the Ciskei).
- The abstract noun Ubuntu is derived regularly from the Nguni noun Umuntu.
Bibliography
- J. Desmond Clark, The Prehistory of Africa, Thames and Hudson, 1970
- April A. Gordon and Donald L. Gordon, Understanding Contemporary Africa, Lynne Riener, London, 1996
- Kevin Shillington, History of Africa, St. Martin's Press, New York, 1995 (1989)
See also
References
- ^ The Chronological
Evidence for the Introduction of Domestic Stock in Southern Africa
- ^ A Brief History of Botswana
- ^ On Bantu and Khoisan in (Southeastern) Zambia, (in German)
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