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Tammari people
The Tammari people, or Batammariba, also known as ''Somba,'' are an Oti–Volta-speaking people of the Atakora Department of Benin and neighboring areas of Togo, where they go by the name of ''Taberma.'' They are famous for their two-story fortified houses, known as ''Tata Somba'' ("Somba house"), in which the ground floor is used for housing livestock at night, internal alcoves are used for cooking, and the upper floor contains a rooftop courtyard and is used for drying grain, sleeping quarters, and granaries. These evolved by adding an enclosing roof to the clusters of huts joined by a connecting wall that are typical of Gur-speaking areas of West Africa. The Tammari are mostly animist by religion. Their language is in the Gur family. ==Gallery==
File:Togo Taberma house 08.jpg|The entrance of a Tammari house, with twin altars File:Togo Taberma house 02.jpg|A Tammari house with granaries. The forked poles at the left granary are ladders, with steps cut along their lengths File:Togo Taberma house 04.jpg|Neighboring Tammari houses, with multiple altars
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