Kanuri Heritage Research Center

Kanuri Heritage Research Center

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Kanuri Language, Culture, History & Literature Research Center.

Kanuri Heritage Research Center established and powered by DigitAge Resource Ltd RC: 1377638, a tourism and curatorial company registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission of Nigeria (CAC), for the preservation, teaching and assimilation of kanuri language, culture, history, literature and learning among others. It was established out of desire and the need to safeguard the image and glory of

12/01/2025

Join the Borno Creator's Community Today!

Dear All,

Are you a blogger, YouTuber, podcaster, social media influencer, or any form of content creator based in Borno? If so, we’re excited to invite you to join the Borno Creator's Community—a vibrant network of creators coming together to collaborate, grow, and thrive!

Why Join the Borno Creator's Community?

1. Collaboration Opportunities

Work with fellow creators to amplify your voice and create impactful content. For example, team up with a filmmaker to bring your storytelling to life or collaborate with a local influencer to host a community-focused event.

2. Skill Sharing and Development

Learn from experts and peers through workshops, webinars, and mentorship programs. Imagine attending a session on “Maximizing YouTube Monetization” or learning the art of storytelling in Kanuri to connect with local audiences.

3. Cultural Representation

Let’s celebrate and share the rich heritage of Borno with the world through digital content. Whether it’s documenting Borno traditions, showcasing local festivals, or sharing stories of resilience, our community will provide the tools and support to make it happen.

4. Networking and Growth

Expand your network by connecting with like-minded individuals, brands, and organizations that can support your creative journey.

5. Exclusive Resources

Gain access to tools, platforms, and opportunities tailored for creators in Borno, such as partnerships with local businesses and insights into digital trends.

How to Join

Becoming a member of the Borno Creator's Community is easy:

Join our WhatsApp Group https://chat.whatsapp.com/CSbzWd358MK641UAmOa8Sm for regular updates.

To get started, please introduce yourself by sharing your name, niche, and a link to your channel, platform, page, or previous work.

Upcoming Event

Join us for our Launch Meetup coming up soon to learn more about the community, meet fellow creators, and share ideas.

Together, we can harness the power of community and creativity to make Borno a hub for impactful digital content creation.

We look forward to welcoming you!

Warm regards,

Borno Creator's Community (BCC)

29/11/2024

Call for Papers

20/04/2024
02/03/2024

Valedictory Lecture

20/01/2024

Invitation to the Kanem Borno Cultural Summit - Date Announcement

On behalf of His Eminence Shehu of Borno Alh. (Dr) Abubakar Umar Garbai Al-Amin El-Kanemi CFR FSNE, Vice President Jama'atul Nasir Islam and Vice President of Supreme Council of Islamic Affairs, I respectfully extend my warmest greetings to you and express my gratitude for your esteemed presence and guidance on the forthcoming Kanem Borno Cultural Summit. It is with great pleasure and honour that I extend an invitation to you on behalf of His Eminence the Shehu of Borno for an important event that is scheduled to take place this coming February 2024.

As a community, our historical heritage as Kanem People is deeply rooted, and we must gather from all corners of the globe to celebrate, exchange ideas, and pave the way for a brighter future. The Kanem Borno Cultural Summit serves as a platform to foster unity, preserve our traditions, and address the challenges of human and natural-made disasters, language degradation, and other vices bedevilling our communities.

After careful consideration and thorough discussions with His Eminence and other key stakeholders, we are delighted to announce that the date for the Kanem Borno Cultural Summit has been set for February 16-18, 2024 (Arrival date: 15th February). This prestigious event will take place in Maiduguri, the Capital city of Borno, and we are already in the process of organizing various enlightening sessions, panel discussions, cultural showcases, and networking opportunities to ensure a memorable and impactful summit.

The Kanem Borno Cultural Summit aims to bring together prominent members of our community, including traditional title holders, community leaders, scholars, professionals, youth representatives, and individuals who are passionate about our shared background. This gathering will catalyze collaboration, knowledge exchange, and innovation, with the ultimate goal of fostering social cohesion, socio-cultural growth and development for the Kanem people.

Your esteemed presence and wisdom will be invaluable at the Kanem Cultural Summit. We kindly request your support and participation in making this event a resounding success. We are open to collaboration and suggestions, and we encourage you to reach out to us with any thoughts or ideas you may have. Together, we can shape the future of our community and empower our youth to carry the Kanem legacy forward.

In the coming days, we will be sharing more detailed information regarding the summit, including the official dates, registration processes, and program highlights. We kindly ask for your patience, as we are working diligently to ensure a seamless and impactful event.

Finally, we kindly request your assistance in spreading the word about the Kanem Global Summit to all Kanem lineage and associations within your network. By sharing this information within our community, we can maximize participation, engagement, and impact.

Should you require any additional information or have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us via email at [email protected] or by phone at +2348023234103. We are here to assist you in any way possible and look forward to your participation.

Amb (Dr) Hassan Zanna Boguma FCIPDM WIP
(Zanna Boguma of Borno)
Chairman

25/06/2023

According to some records, the Margi (or Marghi) migrated to the Nile Valley from Yemen together with some tribes such as the Bura, Kilba, Kanakuru, Mandara, Bolewa, Karekare, Ngamo, Ngizzim and Tera due to some certain frictions. They were also forced to move from Sudan in Central Africa to Lake Chad.

Other historical records indícate that parts of these tribes, especially the Marghi, were settled in Kenya, while the majority of Marghi migrated together with the other tribes mentioned to the Lake Chad area before reaching some other places.

Under the pressure of Borno expansion, a large number of Marghi drifted gradually south. From about the fourteenth century they appear to have lived in the region they now occupy.

Madagali was before the arrival of the Fulbe 'a Marghi community, named for the spear (gali) of a Marghi named Margif.



Name
First mentioning of ‘Mergi’ is on Fra Mauro’s map of 1459. Ibn Furtu (Lange 1987) describes Idris Alauma’s military campaigns against the Sao, Margi, Gamergu and Mandara of Kerawa, between 1564 and 1576. The Margi chief ‘Adwa’ had renounced his alliance and Idris Aloma brought him to book. Barth (1857,II:374ff) describes ‘The Border-Country of The Marghi’ obtaining ‘once more a sight of Mount Dalantuba [Zelidva spur], marking out as it were, the beginning of a mountainous region [the Gwoza Hills to his left]’. Barth reaches ‘the outskirts of Molghoy [Malgwe] ... district’ and then the settlement of the same name the following day. The day after he reaches ‘I’sge, or I’ssege’ (Isge). He describes how ‘The whole range of mountains, which forms the western barrier of the little country of Wandala, lay open before me [him] at the distance of about twenty miles [to the east]’. Barth refers here to the western range of the Northern Mandaras. He (ibid 396ff) also mentions ‘Gulug/Guluk’ (Margi-Gulak) and mistakes Rumsiki for ‘Mindif’).



Language
Hoffmann (1963:1) informs us that the Margi refer to themselves and to their language as ‘Margyi’. In Hansford et al (1976:125, 189) he classifies Margi as Central Chadic (Biu-Mandara A) under Bura group, Eastern. Hoffmann (1963) speaks of five Margi dialects: 1. Central, 2. Gwara, 3. South Margi, 4. Mlgwi (Malgwe), and 5. Wurga. SIL (1987) classifies the dialects of ‘Lassa (Babul)’ and ‘Gulak (Dzer)’ under ‘Marghi Central’. Meek (1931:234) sees the Margi language as almost identical with that of Kilba and only little difference to Bura. Blench (1999) classifies Margi under the Bura group of the Bura/Higi major group.



Ethnicity
Meek (1931 ibid) informs us that the Margi of Adamawa consist roughly of three strata: (a) indigenous people (in a relative sense), (b) Pabir, and (c) Kanuri. He explains that the indigenous inhabitants belong to the same group as the indigenous Bura and Kilba, which is a group which has fused to some extent with the Higi, Gudur, and Fali. He is of the opinion that the Higi, in particular, show definite linguistic and cultural connection with the Margi. Margi settlements are organised in small chieftaincies, e.g. the chieftaincy of Gulak, which served as place of reference for the tradition of origin among the Hide (see page Hide/Tur).

Socioeconomic Outlook
Marghi people are predominantly farmers and fishermen. They consider farming with the highest esteem. Hence, it is to everyman's pride to be considered a great farmer.

Hunting, crafting and trading are other mainstays of the Marghi community economy.

Marghi people before the arrival of the colonial masters lived in the round and rectangular mud buildings, these were: thatch-roofed and fenced with corn stalks (kadaka), mud walls stone piles (dziga) as in the case of Margi dzurngu some of them fence their compounds with cacti or Widu more especially Margi dzakwa or Margi south.



Sociopolitical Structure
According to documented history, the Marghi Udzurngu, Margi babal and Margi tittim (dzakwa) all cali their chiefs with "Ptil" and their council of elders with "Shilir pathla" while Margi putai cali their chiefs "Mai".

Almost all Marghi people address their council of elders with this ñame, they cali or address the chiefs first son (prince) with " yerima or maina" while the chiefs daughter (princess) with "Ngwatam", the chief priest is addressed with "thluffu", the chiefs assistant is called "Wakir and the chiefs messenger is called "Achama" while the traditional police to the council are called "Dogar".



Traditional meals
Marghi special is a local food popular with the Margi natives of Maiduguri, Borno. It is either cooked with white zobo or the yakuwa and spinach(alayyahu). It is called "Meltuble" by the Marghi natives of Adamawa State.



The Margi Man and some more gist about the Marghis
A good number of Marghi are great warriors. All male children of the age of 10 years and above are taught how to use bows and arrows, Marghi warriors used poisoned arrows to shoot games and their enemies, they always carry small knives on their arms and big knives around their waist, short sword in their armpits, two spears bows and quivers full of arrows. The Marghi man can fight both on foot and on horseback, also he can ambush and attack whether alone or in groups when attacked, Marghi believed in self-confidence, self- reliance, self-sufficiency and being independent.

Marghi men in those days can marry many wives for the purpose of working on the farmlands with their children. As Marghi people consider farming as their top priority among other occupations, before the advent of modern farming techniques and transportation system, Marghi people used to carry out their Guinea corn harvesting, threshing and storing 100% manually, the most tedious work is the transportation of the farm produce from the farmlands which usually covers eight (8) to fifteen (15) kilometres distance, all the family members used to carry guinea corn on their heads with container call ghururu, trekking on foot to a temporary storing cage near the house. This work usually takes one to two weeks to complete, this process is called "Zabga" and songs usually accompany the trekking to encourage them to cover the journeys.

The next stage of guinea corn work in Marghi is very exhausting even in this present days, everyone including children is eager to witness the occasion, this is called "Dugu uhi" means guinea corn threshing. This is usually a great occasion since the farmer invites people like Son in-laws, friends, relatives and neighbours to participate in the work. The man and his wives usually prepare local drinks (umpadlu and cham cham) to entertain the people coming to do the work, while the men will be threshing the guinea corn singing with drum beating, the women are busy fetching water to brew the local drink. A cow, sheep or goat is usually slaughtered for the occasion of the man is rich, young men aged 15-35 who are usually much engaged in this work often demonstrate their strengths and techniques to attract young ladies who usually stand by the sides of the threshing area cheering them. In the end, elderly women usually spend one to three days winnowing "mpiu" and gathering the guinea corn into the family granary "val tsam".

Margi Attire
In 1959-60 Margi women wore as their standard garment a goat skin fringe called dzar with a cloth covering their buttocks called gumbara. The latter by tradition was made of alternating strips of blue and white cotton, but among older women any piece of cloth that caught their fancy was substituted. This woman was typical of a young mother with one exception to be noted below. Unmarried women dressed more elaborately and faddishly, as will be seen in a later photograph of Nggeramu dancing after a beer market wherein she wears numerous plastic ornaments that were the fad of that year.

The traditional apparel of men was the ram skin pizhi, worn here by Makarama Thlama. Outside his compound he would have worn a loose fitting indigo blue gown over the pizhi. However, even by 1959 it was clear that the pizhi was a thing of the past. Young men rarely wore them except on ceremonial occasions, when they were obligatory, and with each returning visit pizhis were rarer.

It is, however, difficult to speak of "traditional" Margi attire, because their society has been so dynamic that there is no bench mark. When I spoke to older women about dzar they told me that in their youth it had been entirely different, and during our 1959-60 field work several of the young women affected different fashions. It is not surprising then that with encroaching modernity everything changed. In 1987 one only saw dzar and bare breasts in remote hamlets, and I saw no men wearing pizhi. When men dressed for an occasion, the style was the generic robes of Northern Nigerian Muslims, but most often both men and women wore a mix and match of used garments of western manufacture.

Finally, it is necessary to say a word about the unusual red coloring of Margi mothers in many of the following pictures. When a child was born and first shown in public, traditionally the mother and child were covered with a mixture of oil and red ochre called yinsidu. In some instances, however, a mother who had had several miscarriages or some similar misfortune may have wished to break that sequence, and she would not wear yinsidu. That is the case of the woman in the photograph above.

Margi Woman

Margi men wearing pizhi

Sources:

Mandaras.info
The Joshua Project
James H. Vaughan
connectnigeria.com

19/06/2023

The Ngizim people (Ngizmawa, Ngezzim) live in Yobe State, northeastern Nigeria. As of 1993, there were an estimated 80,000 Ngizim. The tribe lives primarily in Potiskum, the largest city in Yobe State and originally a Ngizim town, as well as the areas to the east and south of the city. Ngizim populations once inhabited parts of Borno and Jigawa states, but have since lost their cultural identity after being assimilated into other ethnic groups. The Ngizim speak a Chadic language also called Ngizim.

Before the Fulani Jihad of 1804, the history of the Ngizim people was closely linked with that of the Bornu Empire. By 1472, when the capital of the Bornu Empire, Birni Ngazargamu, was established, the Ngizim had gained a reputation as formidable warriors. As they consolidated their influence over parts of modern-day Yobe State, their cultural capital Potiskum became a regional center. During the early part of the 20th century, the Ngizim rebelled against the Fika Emirate, which had been given political control over them by the colonial authorities. The local British district officer lead forces against the Ngizim; Mai Agudum, the rebel leader, was later executed. The Ngizim emirate was not restored until 1993 when Mai Muhammadu Atiyaye was appointed by the state governor. The current Ngizim leader, Mai Umaru Bubaram Ibn Wuriwa Bauya was recently upgraded to the status of a first-class Emir by former Governor Bukar Abba Ibrahim.[6]

In his notes on the "History of the first twelve years of the reign of Mai Idris Alooma (1571–1583) by Imam Ahmad Ibn Furtua", H. R. Palmer informs us about the word Ngizim. "There are various forms of this name which though they are distinguished seem to denote the same people — N'gizim, N'gujam, N'gazar, N'Kazzar, N'gissam". In another part of the notes, he tells us that Birni N'gazargamu was founded by Mai Ali Ghaji Dunamani in about 1462, who acquired the site from the "So" who lived in the region. "The name of the capital is correctly spelled as N'gazargamu or N'gasarkumu. The first part of the word signifies that the previous inhabitants of the region where N'gazar or N'gizim. The later part of the word "Gamu" or "Kumu" is the same as the first part of the word "Gwombe" and means either (i) chief or King or (ii) ancestral spirit." Going by the scattered references to the N'gizim one would at best only guess the extent of their spread in the Western Sudan. There is reference to N'gizim and then the tribe of N'gizim in the west of the empire known as the Binawa. Binawa is also known as Mabani who extended from Bursari region west of Birni Gazargamu to Katagum.

There are various references to Ngizim people in Kanem-Bornu history as early as the days of the Kanem civil wars in 1396. It can be said that the Ngizim people have played a considerable role in moving the capital of the empire from Njimi to N'gazargamu. Quoting H. R. Palmer:

"... other clans of the Kayi (Zaghawa) came down to the region of lake Fittri from Wadai, but evidently that took place after 1259 A.D. It is the fusion of these new clans of Kayi with the inhabitants of the Fittri region (called in the tradition Ngizim) which gave rise to a separate political entity which arose in the Fittri region about 1350 A.D. and was called Bulala".

From another source, we find a reference to the Ngizim being one of the earliest groups to migrate from Kanem:

"According to Bornu traditions, the Bade and the related Ngizim of Potiskum – who today comprise of the emirate of Bedde – were the first people to migrate from Kanem round the north side of Lake Chad and reach the Komadugu Yobe, at the time when the So were still the dominant power in Bornu".

Ngizim is one of five Chadic languages indigenous to Yobe State, the others being Bade, Bole, Karekare, and Ngamo. Ngizim is a member of the West Branch of Chadic and is hence related to Hausa, the dominant language throughout northern Nigeria. Ngizim's closest linguistic relatives are Bade, spoken north of Potiskum in Bade (Bedde) Emirate, and Duwai, spoken east of Gashua. Unlike some of the other languages in Yobe State, Ngizim has very little dialect variation.

The traditional ruler of the Ngizim people is the Mai Potiskum, whose stool is located in Potiskum. Like most traditional rulers in northern Nigeria, Mai Potiskum is also the foremost Islamic leader among his people.

Concerning their more recent history, during the period of the Fulani Jihad specifically in 1808, a group of N'gizim under the leadership of Bauya left Mugni as a result of an attack on Birni N'gazargamu by the Fulani Jihadi terrorists. They took a south course to the Kaisala area. On arrival, Bauya and his group helped the inhabitants of Kaisala repulse an attack on them by the N'gazar (branch of Ngizim) of Daura (Dawura). After a counter-attack on Daura and its conquest, Bauya founded his own section of settlement and called it "Pataskum" which was corrupted by Europeans to "Potiskum". The word "Pataskum" is an Ngizim phrase meaning forest of "Skum" trees. "Pata" meaning forest in the Ngizim language and "Skum" is a type of tree found abundantly in the area at the time of founding Potiskum town.

References:

"Ethnologue Report: Ngizim". www.ethnologue.com.

"Yobe Language Research Project". www.humnet.ucla.edu.

A Sudanic Chronicle: The Borno expeditions of Idris Alauma (1564–1576), pp. 122 and 155

Project, Joshua. "Ngizim, Ngizmawa in Nigeria". joshuaproject.net. Retrieved 27 August 2022.

Palmer, H. R. Sudanese Memoirs. p. 32.

"Yobe Ngizims and their values". Nigeria Tribune. Nigeria. 20 July 2007.

Wikipedia

Palmer, H. R. History of the first twelve years of the reign of Mai Idris Alooma of Bornu (1571–1583), by his Imam Ahmed Bin Furtua. p. 4.

Hoghen, S. J.; Kirk-Greene, A. H. M. Emirates of Northern Nigeria. p. 363.
Pataskum Emirate Palace Museum

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