The Wameru of Tanzania: Historical Origin and Their Role in the Process of National Integration
Journal Title: Social Evolution & History - Year 2016, Vol 15, Issue 2
Abstract
The Meru live in one of the most fertile and densely populated areas of Tanzania, and their current population number is about 198,000 peo- ple. Today they are organized in 26 clans. Most Wameru claim their origin from the Machame and Siha/Ng'uni groups associated with Chagga community, whose ancestors arrived and settled on the slopes of Mt. Meru about 400 years ago. Three clans traced back to the Maasai ancestors. The Meru actively opposed Christianity, and the missionaries were treated extremely hostile. The first Meru who adopted Christianity in 1905 was ostracized by the whole community. In the course of time the situation changed and currently most Meru are Christians. The Meru actively participated in libera-tion movement and were among the closest comrades of Julius Nierere. The economic liberalization evoked changes influencing the Meru people economy. Along with agriculture, many families are now engaged in various off-farm activities.
Authors and Affiliations
Marina L. Butovskaya, Valentina N. Burkova, Dmitriy V. Karelin
State Building, States, and State Transformation in Africa: Introduction
Postcolonial societies are a unique event in world history. Their emergence in the mid-twentieth century did not result from centuries-old internal social processes, but was directly determined by the formation and short...
Review of ‘Searching for Boko Haram. A History of Violence in Central Africa’ by Scott MacEachern
Review of Scott MacEachern, Searching for Boko Haram. A History of Violence in Central Africa. New York: Oxford University Press, 2018. 233 pp. ISBN 9780190492526. In English
Review of ‘Rural Community: “A Novel Embedded in History” by Leonid Alayev
Review of Leonid Alayev, Rural Community: “A Novel Embedded in History”: Critical Analysis of the Theory of Community, Historical Evidence of its Development and Role in the Stratified Society. Moscow: LENAND/URSS, 2016....
The Imperial Curve of Large Polities
Many researchers, from Edward Gibbon to Arnold Toynbee, were interested in how large polities would emerge and collapse. Traditionally, the history of empires was considered both in temporal and spatial dynamics. This ar...
Resistance and Collaboration: Conflicting Memories of the Liberation Struggle (1964–1974) in Northern Mozambique
The liberation struggle was fought in Mozambique between 1964 and 1974. The fighting was the longest and most intense in the northern province of Cabo Delgado. I will detail the different experience of the war in this pr...