book chapter

Tribal studies in northern Nigeria

Kegan Paul, Trench, TrubnerLondon • Published In 1931 • Pages:

By: Meek, C. K. (Charles Kingsley).

Abstract
The author was a government anthropologist in Nigeria when this study was published. Included in this source are data on the Katab, Kachichere, Kagoro, Kaje, Morwa, and Jaba, living in what were at the time Zaria and Plateau provinces. Most of the information is concerned with the Katab, the most numerous of the tribes. Topics discussed in greater detail than others are: tribal nomenclature, kinship structure, social customs, political structure, and religion. Of particular interest is the analysis of the social significance of a type of marriage found among the Katab and neighboring tribes in which a man elopes with a married woman. The kin groups referred to as clan and sub-clan have been indexed for 614 (Clans) and 613 (Lineages) respectively.
Subjects
Identification
Vocabulary
Body alterations
Dwellings
Community structure
Marriage
Adoption
Kinship
Cult of the dead
Congregations
culture
Katab
HRAF PubDate
2015
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Western Africa
Document Type
book chapter
Evaluation
Creator Types
Government Official
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Robert Lee ; 1960; Teferi Adem ; 2010; Ian Skoggard ; 2012
Field Date
1925-1930
Coverage Date
1925-1930
Coverage Place
Kaduna and Nasarawa states, Nigeria
Notes
C. K. Meek
Includes bibliographical references
LCCN
32002870
LCSH
Katab (African people)