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Harla people
The Harla, also known as the Harala, are an extinct ethnic group that inhabited Ethiopia and Somalia. They spoke the now extinct Harla language, an Afro-Asiatic tongue of either the Cushitic〔 or Semitic branches. ==History== The Harla are credited by the present-day inhabitants of Hararghe with having constructed various historical sites found in the province. Although now mostly lying in ruins, these structures include stone necropoles, store pits, mosques and houses. According to the scholars Azais, Chambard and Huntingford, the builders of these monumental edifices were ancestral to the Somalis ("proto-Somali"). Modern traditions similarly link the Harla with the Ismail Jabarti and the Darod ancestors of the Somali Ogaden clan, in addition to other Somali clans living amongst the western Issa and in areas below Harar. Field research by Enrico Cerulli identified a modern group called the "Harla" living amongst the Somali in the region between the cities of Harar and Jijiga. ''Encyclopaedia Aethiopica'' suggests that this population "may be a remnant group of the old (), that integrated into the Somali genealogical system, but kept a partially separate identity by developing a language of their own." Cerulli published some data on this Harla community's language (called ''af Harlaad''), which resembled the Somali dialects spoken by the Yibir and Midgan low-caste groups.
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