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Munshi tribe : ウィキペディア英語版
Tiv people

''Tiv'' (sometimes pronounced as ''Tivi''〔Duggan, E. de C. (1932) "Notes on the Munshi ("Tivi") Tribe of Northern Nigeria: Some Historical Outlines" ''Journal of the Royal African Society'' 31(123)〕) is an ethno-linguistic group or nation in West Africa. They number over two million individuals in Nigeria and Cameroon. The Tiv language is spoken by two or three million people in Nigeria, and only a few in Cameroon. In Nigeria, most speakers are found in Benue, Nasarawa and Taraba. In precolonial times, the Hausa referred to the Tiv as "Munchi", a term not accepted by Tiv people. They depend on agricultural produce for commerce and life.
==History==
The Tiv came into contact with European culture during the colonial period. During November 1907 to spring 1908, an expedition of the Southern Nigeria Regiment led by Lieutenant-Colonel Hugh Trenchard's came into contact with the Tiv. Trenchard brought gifts for the tribal chiefs. Subsequently, roads were built and trade links established between Europeans and the Tiv. But before construction of roads began a missionary named Mary Slessor went throughout the region seeing to the people's needs.
The geographical position of the Tiv, according to Laura Bohannan and Paul J. Bohannan (1969: 9)
and Rubingh (1969: 58), is between 6° 30' and 8° 10' north latitude and 8° and 10° east
longitude. The Tiv shares borders with the Chamba and Jukun of Taraba State in the
northeast; with the Igede (Benue), Iyala, Gakem and Obudu of Cross River State in
the southeast; and the Idoma of Benue State to the south. There is also an international
boundary between the Tiv and the Republic of Cameroon at a southeastern angle of
the ethnic group’s location. They are among the minority ethnic groups in Nigeria.
Numbering about six million individuals, according to 2014 estimates, they occupy the Middle Belt States of Benue, Taraba, Nasarawa, and Plateau.1
A few TIv are also found in Cross River and Adamawa States of Nigeria and in Cameroon.
There are numerous submissions about the origin of Tiv people. We are, however,
in agreement with Torkula (2006: 1) that: “Although different views are held about the
Tiv origin, the version that commands popularity and currency is that which traces
their origin to the Bantu people who once inhabited the Central African continent, in
the Shaba area of the present Democratic Republic of Congo.” The popularity and
currency of this version is due to the assorted pieces of evidence supporting it. One
such piece of evidence is linguistic. R. C. Abraham (1934: 6–7), for instance, compiled
a list of 67 Tiv words and juxtaposed them with the words of Bantu Nyaza showing a
striking similarity in both phonetics and semantics. Based on that, Abraham (1934: 5)
concluded that the Tiv were “real Bantu” and subsequently that they came from the
Congo. Another linguistic piece of evidence has to do with the present writer’s family
name of Tsenôngu which is Tiv and which when ended with an “o” (as done by many
Tivs without any semantic harm) is the name of a town of 300 000 people in the
present Democratic Republic of Congo. Such pieces of linguistic evidence testify to
the fact that the Tiv actually migrated from the Congo; from there they passed through
several places before settling in the Benue Valley, their present location.
The main occupation of the Tiv is subsistence farming. They regard yam farming
as their birthright and commit themselves to its work with religious dedication.
As for their social organization, traditional Tiv society was completely egalitarian.
There was no central authority. They had no king so every man was ruler of his own
house. They lived in compounds administered by the oldest man. Many compounds
formed clans and districts that were variously divided and sub-divided. The elders of
the various clans (upyaven) and districts (ityar) met and discussed issues at those levels
and arrived at democratic decisions that bound their sections. If an issue involved the
whole ethnic group, the elders of the various sections and districts met and took a
decision. This situation obtained until 1946 when the colonialists established a Tiv
central authority by creating the office of a paramount ruler. The paramount ruler
(Tor Tiv) lives and administers the people in Gboko, their headquarters town, which
was built in 1932. Ascendancy to the Tor Tiv throne is not hereditary.
Leo Frobenius, the German traveller, for example, declared them (the Tiv people) as
the “best storytellers in Africa” (Keil 1979: 20). Laura Bohannan too has, under the
pseudonym of Elenore Smith Bowen, often been referred deservedly to for her
admiring description of a Tiv tale-telling session in her autobiographical novel, Return
to Laughter. Commenting on Bohannan’s book, Frances Harding (1992: 156) has said
that: “So important does Bohannan consider storytelling in Tiv life that not only is its
performance the occasion of the laughter which gives the novel its title, but it is
recognized as a healing, binding force in the community.”
Indeed Keil (1979: 57) was right in his submission that “qualitatively, all visitors to
Tivland agree that storytelling can be a very dramatic event.” But it is not just in
storytelling that members of the ethnic group have made their artistic mark; they are
known for their dance craft, poetic creativity and general aesthetic profundity. To
provide just one example relating to their dance repertoire, in 1973 the ethnic group
alone accounted for fifty-four of the one hundred and eighty-eight dances performed
at the “Festival of 200 Dances of the Benue-Plateau State” held in Jos, Nigeria. The
then Benue-Plateau State comprised more than thirty ethnic nationalities. This is
statistical testimony to the dancing skills in Tivland. Indeed, the ethnic group is
generally artistically active. And one of the avenues where this artistic activity exhibits
itself is in nuptial poetry. But before we focus on this subgenre, it is good to discuss
briefly marriage in Tivland

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Tiv people」の詳細全文を読む



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