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Soninke people

The Soninke people are a West African Mande-speaking ethnic group found in Mali, southern Mauritania, eastern Senegal, The Gambia, and Guinea (especially Fouta Djallon).[5] They speak the Soninke language, also called the Serakhulle or Azer language, which is one of the Mande languages.[6] Soninke people were the founders of the ancient empire of Ghana or Wagadou c. 200–1240 CE, Subgroups of Soninke include the Jakhanke, Maraka and Wangara. When the Ghana empire was destroyed, the resulting diaspora brought Soninkes to Mali, Mauritania, Senegal, Gambia, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinée-Conakry, modern-day Republic of Ghana, Kano in Nigeria, and Guinea-Bissau where some of this trading diaspora was called Wangara.[7]

Soninke
A Portrait of a Soninke man (1890)
Total population
Over 2.0 million[citation needed]
Regions with significant populations
 Mali2,124,000 (9.8%) [1]
 Senegal225,154 (1.4%) [2]
 Mauritania248,000[3][unreliable source]
 Gambia142,606 (8.2%) [4]
Languages
Soninke, French
Religion
Predominantly Sunni Islam
Related ethnic groups
Yalunka people

Predominantly Muslims, the Soninke were one of the early ethnic groups from West Africa to convert to Islam in about the 10th century.[8] The contemporary population of Soninke people is estimated to be over 2 million.[9] The cultural practices of Soninke people are similar to the Mandé peoples, and those of the Imraguen of Mauritania. They include traditional Islamic rites of marriage,[10] circumcision,[11] and have social stratification.[12][13]

Ethnonym edit

The Soninke people are also referred to as Aswanik, Dafing, Dafi, Dyakanke, Gadyaga, Maraka, Maraxa, Marka, Marka Soninké, Saracole, Sarakolé, Sarakollé, Sarakule, Sarawule, Saraxole, Seraculeh, Serahuli, Serakhulle, Silabe, Soniake, Soninkés, Sonninké, Toubakai, Wakore.[14]

They refer to themselves by the word "Soninké", which is actually the singular of the word "Soninko",[15] but are also called "Sarakholés" by the Wolofs, "Marakas" by the Bambaras, "Wangara" by the Mandinka, "Wangarawa" by the Hausa, "Wakoré" by the Songhais, or even "Toubakai". “Marka” is the name by which they are known in Mali in the region of Kayes, Koulikoro, Sikasso, Ségou, Mopti and in Burkina Faso in that of Dafina.[16]

The term "Serakhulle," although often claimed to be a Wolof word, was used for the Soninke at least as far back as the 16th century and is used by peoples as far apart as The Gambia and Hausaland. The Jahankas, a subgroup, refer to themselves as of Serakhulle extraction. Historically, the term "Soninke" carries negative connotations in the Futa Djallon and Senegambia, hence the more common use of the term "Serakhulle."[17]

History edit

 
Diobé, ruler of Soninke colonial era town of Bakel, with his advisors (1887-1888)
 
Soninke warriors

Archaeological evidence suggests that the regions where Soninke people are found were inhabited in ancient times. These stone settlements were built on the rocky promontories of Tichit-Walata and the Tagant cliffs of Southern Mauritania. Though there are no surviving records to suggest which ethnic group these people were, the settlers of this region by between 2500 BCE and 600 BCE were likely related to the Soninke and greater Mande people. A significant agro-pastoral society had developed in this prehistoric era.[18][19][20][21][22]

According to Soninke oral tradition, the ancestor of the Soninke was Dinga, sometimes said to have come from the Middle East (though such a story is unlikely, as the "Middle Eastern" tag came about subsequent to the Mande converting to Islam),[23][24][25][26] His sons included Dyabe Sisse, the founder of the Wagadu kingdom with its capital at Kumbi.[27] Another Soninke tradition indicates that they migrated from Aswan, Egypt.[28] However theories of foreign origin are almost entirely doubted/disregarded by scholars and are believed to result from later Eurasiatic cultural influences (Namely Arab and French).[25][26] Archaeological evidence supports an evolution of the Ghana Empire and other Mande states from roots in preceding local ancestral Soninke cultures such as that of Dhar Tichitt, rather than from North Africa or the Middle East.[22][29]

The early written records about Soninke come from early Islamic historians. The Soninke, according to these records, were the founders of the ancient Ghana Empire (not to be confused with modern Ghana), also called the Wagadu Empire.[18] The empire has it's roots roughly between the (13 century BC to the 1st century BC) truly materializing within the (1st and 3rd) centuries CE but was destroyed by about the 12th century,[18] after the Muslim invasions of this region started in the 10th century.[30][19]

Demographics and distribution edit

 
Map of the Soninke population centers in Mali

In contemporary time, the total population of Soninke people is above 2 million.[9] Soninke people are found throughout West Africa and in France, given their migration when Senegal and Mali were a part of the French colonial empire.[6]

Most of the Soninke people are found in the valley of the upper Senegal river and along the Mali–Senegal–Mauritania border between Nara and Nioro du Sahel. Migrations under French colonial rule led many Soninke to build communities in Dakar, other cities in Africa and in France. Soninke community were the early settlers in France, their community is found in Paris and in southern French cities, and their language is the primary dialect spoken among many Muslim communities of France.[6] There are also many Soninke living in cities throughout Central Africa, a population that includes new migrants as well as descendants of migration dating back to the 1800s, such as the laptots who represented French mercantile and colonial interests in the region.[31]

Trade networks led by the Wangara mercantile confederations, spread Soninke people and culture throughout most of Mali and Senegal, southern Mauritania, northern Burkina Faso, as well as parts of the Gambia, and Guinea-Bissau. The Maraka-Soninke merchant communities and plantations (centered just north of the city of Segou, Mali) were an economic mainspring under the Bambara Empire, and built trade routes in the West Africa region.[citation needed]

Religion edit

The Soninke people were a coastal trade link between the Berber people of the Maghreb region and the other Empires in West Africa. In their early history, they helped exchange salt from the north and western coast for gold found inland.[32] This trade brought Muslim traders to them, particularly Arab traders interested in gold, after Islam arrived in North Africa. The earliest passing mention of Soninke people's Ghana Empire is found in the works of the 8th century Arab geographer Muḥammad ibn Ibrāhīm al-Fazārī and a more complete record is found in works of another 11th century Arab geographer Al-Bakri.[32]

The rulers and Soninke people of the Ghana Empire converted to Islam in the 11th century, and they have been Muslim ever since. Some Islamic sources suggest that the conversion was triggered after the 1076 Almoravid conquest of the Ghana Empire.[8] The Soninke people, like other Mande peoples, typically adhere to the Maliki school of Sunni Islam.[33]

Society and culture edit

 
A Soninke man in 1890, sketched by M. Philippe

The Soninke society and its culture has historically many cultural practices with its neighboring ethnic groups, particularly the Mande peoples. This includes the religion of Islam, occupations, foods, the rites of passage, family structure, weddings and social stratification.

Social stratification edit

Soninke society, like other groups in Mande, is shaped by various forms of social stratification.[34][35][13]

The Soninke strata have included a free category called Horro or Horon, a caste system category called Namaxala or Nyaxamalo, and slaves called Komo.[36][12][37] In the Jaara subgroup of the Soninke people, the nobility called Tunkanlenmu was another strata.[37][38] Soninke society became highly stratified after the 13th century.[36]

The slaves were the largest stratum, one at the bottom among the Soninke like other West African ethnic groups, and constituted up to half of the population. The slaves among the Soninke people were hierarchically arranged into three strata.[39] The village slaves were a privileged servile group who lived apart from the village and took orders from the village chief. The domestic slaves lived with a family and could not be sold. The lowest level among slaves were the trade slaves who could be bought and sold. With time, each of these strata became endogamous, states Daniel Littlefield, a professor of history.[39]

Above the slaves were the castes of Soninke, which too were hereditary, endogamous, and had an embedded hierarchical status.[40] They included, for example, the garanke (leather workers) below the fune (bard), the fune below the gesere or jeli (griots, singers), and the jeli below the tage or numu (smiths, pottery workers).[40]

The castes and serf system can be linked to the Mandé 'Nyamakalaw' (literally 'caste'). archaeological evidence shows that Arabs and Berbers would later participate in an already established and integrated trade and transport network with West Africa (trading in gold, salt, and some slaves to a lesser extent), building upon the pre-existing trade routes trading had extended into Ghana and the western Atlantic coast by the 11th century trading systems became increasingly sophisticated in 13th and 14th century Mali Empire and 16th century Songhai Empire.[41]

As the practice of slavery grew, so did the caste system. Tamari suggests that a corollary of the rising slavery system was the development and growth of the caste system among numerous ethnic groups of Africa by about the 13th century.[41][42] McIntosh concurs with Tamari, but states that the emergence of caste systems likely occurred much earlier in West African societies such as Soninke, Mande, Malinke, Wolof, Serer, and others.[41] She places the development and spread of castes in these societies to about the 10th century, because the slave capture, slave trade and slave holding by elite families was an established institution in West Africa by then, and slavery created a template for servile relationships and social stratification of human beings.[41]

The linguistic evidence suggests that stratification structure relating to caste system and slavery likely were shared between the Manding and Soninke people, and possibly some others such as the Dogon people of West Africa.[43] However, the linguistic differences between the caste and slave systems of the Soninke and Manding on one hand and northern ethnic groups of Africa such as the Tuareg people and Moors on the other, suggests that these evolved separately.[44]

Marriage edit

 
A Soninke woman, an 1853 sketch by David Boilat

Marriage in Soninke society follows Islamic practices. Cousin marriages are common and preferred in Soninke culture, just as with the Fula people.[10] Parents consent to marriage.[10] A traditional proverb states, "Cousins are made for each other." The practice among Soninke merchants, states Saskia Brand, a professor of psychology and educational sciences, may be related to the cultural belief that cousin marriages "helps to keep the money in the family".[10]

If both families agree, the couple is engaged (i na tamma laga) in a mosque. Each month after the engagement, the man pays the woman's family a bridewealth dower (nakhafa) for their food and other spending. The marriage, called futtu, is complete with a marriage contract that mentions the dower, and is accompanied with a wedding event called karikompe.[citation needed][45]

The newly married couple has advisors. The man's advisor is called the khoussoumanta-yougo and the woman's is called khoussoumanta-yakhare. After one week of celebration, the women meet to show the gifts that the couple received from their parents mostly from the woman's mother.[46]

Marriage across social strata and caste lines has been taboo, states Saskia Brand. But, in polygynous noble families, a noble could take a wife from the slave strata.[10]

Circumcision edit

 
A Soninke woman and her daughter in Sélibaby, Mauritania

The Soninke practise circumcision and call it birou. Every afternoon, the boys who were circumcised the previous year organize tam-tams[clarification needed] for the new boys in order to prepare them psychologically. Throughout the circumcision ceremony, the boys to be circumcised sit around the “tambour” called “daïné”. The other teenagers of the village, young girls, women, men, and slaves form a circle around the boys. During this time the boys are surrounded with beautiful scarves called disa sing.[47] The author Mamadou Soumare wrote “Above its traditional surgery, the ritual of circumcision makes in evidence, the physical endurance, the pain, the courage, in one word the personality of the child.”

Female genital mutilation edit

The Soninke people have long carried out female genital mutilation (FGM), also called female circumcision.[11][48] The prevalence rate of FGM is higher among the Soninke than among neighbouring ethnic groups such as Wolof people and others,.[11] The practice is culturally done as a ritual of social acceptance, and sometimes assumed to be required for religious reasons.[11] In Mauritania and Senegal, FGM of a child is illegal in contemporary law but continues because it is culturally sanctioned for young girls as young as one year old.[11] According to the 2009 Report on Human Rights Practices by the US State Department, FGM practice among Soninke has included the most dangerous Type III mutilations.[49]

Foods edit

Breakfast foods include fonde, porridge made of millet, sugar, milk, and salt, and sombi, porridge made of rice, millet or corn. For lunch demba tere and takhaya are very common, both containing rice and peanuts, frequent Soninke ingredients. Dere, a stew, is a mixture of millet and beans.[50]

Economy edit

The Soninke traditionally engage in both trade and agriculture. During the rainy season, men and women both cultivate. However, women usually stay at home to cook and take care of their children. They also do other work, such as dyeing cotton material.[citation needed]

Many early West African immigrants in France came from this ethnic group.[51] The Soninke are an influential ethnic group in the Gambia, Senegal, and Mali.

Notable Soninke people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Mali". www.cia.gov. Retrieved November 19, 2020.
  2. ^ "Senegal". www.cia.gov. Retrieved November 19, 2020.
  3. ^ "Soninke in Mauritania". Joshua Project. Retrieved November 19, 2020.
  4. ^ . www.gbosdata.org. Archived from the original on 2021-11-19. Retrieved 2021-06-17.
  5. ^ Ralph A. Austen (1999). In Search of Sunjata: The Mande Oral Epic as History, Literature and Performance. Indiana University Press. p. 143. ISBN 0-253-33452-7.
  6. ^ a b c Andrew Dalby (1998). Dictionary of Languages: The Definitive Reference to More Than 400 Languages. Columbia University Press. p. 574. ISBN 978-0-231-11568-1.
  7. ^ John O. Hunwick (2003). Timbuktu and the Songhay Empire: Al-Saʿdi's Taʾrīkh Al-Sūdān Down to 1613. BRILL Academic. pp. xxviii with footnote 18. ISBN 90-04-12822-0.
  8. ^ a b Asante, Molefi Kete. The History of Africa: The Quest for Eternal Harmony. New York: Routledge, 2007. 121-2.
  9. ^ a b Diagram Group (2013). Encyclopedia of African Peoples. Routledge. p. 825. ISBN 978-1-135-96341-5.
  10. ^ a b c d e Saskia Brand (2001). Mediating Means and Fate: A Socio-Political Analysis of Fertility and Demographic Change in Bamako, Mali. BRILL Academic. pp. 69–71. ISBN 90-04-12033-5.
  11. ^ a b c d e Ouldzeidoune, Nacerdine; Keating, Joseph; Bertrand, Jane; Rice, Janet (2013). "A Description of Female Genital Mutilation and Force-Feeding Practices in Mauritania: Implications for the Protection of Child Rights and Health". PLOS ONE. 8 (4): e60594. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...860594O. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0060594. PMC 3621896. PMID 23593257.
  12. ^ a b Michael Gomez (2002). Pragmatism in the Age of Jihad: The Precolonial State of Bundu. Cambridge University Press. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-521-52847-4.
  13. ^ a b Monica Bella (1987), AFRICA STUDIES: THE EXPLORATION OF ALTERNATIVE LAND TENURE AND ORGANIZATIONAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE BAKEL SMALL IRRIGATED PERIMETERS 2017-11-18 at the Wayback Machine, University of Wisconsin-Madison, United States Agency for International Development, Quote:"Soninke society is not egalitarian, but rather is stratified into castes. At the top there is the noble or hore caste. The hore consist of debeaumme, nyinvaaumme, and the marabouts or religious leaders. The power of the marabouts is less than that of other nobles. Next are the artisan castes or nyakhamala. ...";
    Edouard François Manchuelle (1987). Background to Black African Emigration to France: The Labor Migrations of the Soninke, 1848-1987. University of California Press. pp. 50–52.
  14. ^ RAMEAU, BnF [1]
  15. ^ Mamadou Dramé, « Cérémonies et rites chez les Soninké », dans Peuples du Sénégal, Sépia, Saint-Maur, 1996, p. 65
  16. ^ James Stuart Olsen (1996). The Peoples of Africa: An Ethnohistorical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 373. ISBN 978-0313-27-918-8.
  17. ^ Sanneh, Lamin. “Futa Jallon and the Jakhanke Clerical Tradition. Part I: The Historical Setting.” Journal of Religion in Africa, vol. 12, no. 1, 1981, pp. 38–64. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/1581013. Accessed 2 Dec. 2020.
  18. ^ a b c David C. Conrad (2009). Empires of Medieval West Africa: Ghana, Mali, and Songhay. Infobase. pp. 23–25. ISBN 978-1-60413-164-2.
  19. ^ a b Kevin Shillington (2012). History of Africa. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 88–89. ISBN 978-1-137-00333-1.
  20. ^ Holl, Augustin. "Coping with uncertainty: Neolithic life in the Dhar Tichitt-Walata, Mauritania, ( ca. 4000–2300 BP)". Research Gate. Comptes Rendus Geosciences.
  21. ^ Holl, Augustin (1985-12-01). "Subsistence patterns of the Dhar Tichitt Neolithic, Mauritania". African Archaeological Review. 3 (1): 151–162. doi:10.1007/BF01117458. ISSN 0263-0338. S2CID 162041986.
  22. ^ a b Holl A (1985). "Background to the Ghana Empire: archaeological investigations on the transition to statehood in the Dhar Tichitt region (Mauritania)". Journal of Anthropological Archaeology. 4 (2): 108. doi:10.1016/0278-4165(85)90005-4.
  23. ^ David C. Conrad (2009). Empires of Medieval West Africa: Ghana, Mali, and Songhay. Infobase. p. 25. ISBN 978-1-60413-164-2., Quote: "The legend often begins by describing how the ancestor Dinga came from somewhere in the Middle East."
  24. ^ History in Africa, Volume 10, by Africa Studies Association, p. 60, Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1983
  25. ^ a b Levtzion and Spaulding. Medieval West Africa: Views From Arab Scholars and Merchants (2003), p. 27.
  26. ^ a b Mauny, Raymond (1961), Tableau géographique de l'ouest africain au moyen age, d'après les sources écrites, la tradition et l'archéologie, Dakar: Institut français d'Afrique Noire
  27. ^ Levtzion, Nehemia (1973). Ancient Ghana and Mali. New York: Methuen & Co Ltd. pp. 16–18, 21. ISBN 0841904316.
  28. ^ Alexander, Leslie M.; Rucker, Walter C. Jr. (9 February 2010). Encyclopedia of African American History [3 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781851097746. Retrieved 25 April 2018 – via Google Books.
  29. ^ Munson, Patrick J. (1980), "Archaeology and the prehistoric origins of the Ghana Empire", The Journal of African History, 21 (4): 457–466, doi:10.1017/s0021853700018685, JSTOR 182004, S2CID 161981607
  30. ^ Soninke people 2016-11-05 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopædia Britannica, Quote: "The Soninke were the founders of the ancient empire of Ghana, which was destroyed after the invasions of Muslim conquerors in the 10th century".
  31. ^ François Manchuelle (1997). Willing Migrants: Soninke Labor Diasporas, 1848-1960. Ohio University Press. from the original on 2017-10-02.
  32. ^ a b Kevin Shillington (2012). History of Africa. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 90–92. ISBN 978-1-137-00333-1.
  33. ^ John A. Shoup (2011). Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East: An Encyclopedia. ABC-CLIO. pp. 183–184. ISBN 978-1-59884-362-0.
  34. ^ Haddy Tunkara-Bah (2016). "Sociocultural factors influencing fertility among the Soninke". African Renaissance. 13 (1–2): 31–44., Quote: "The Soninke society in the Gambia is primarily rural and highly gender-stratified culture. (...) In the Soninke social organization everyone occupies a place."
  35. ^ Tal Tamari (1991). "The Development of Caste Systems in West Africa". The Journal of African History. Cambridge University Press. 32 (2): 221–250. doi:10.1017/s0021853700025718. JSTOR 182616. S2CID 162509491.
  36. ^ a b Tal Tamari (1995). David C. Conrad and Barbara E. Frank (ed.). Status and Identity in West Africa: Nyamakalaw of Mande. Indiana University Press. pp. 61–63. ISBN 0-253-11264-8.
  37. ^ a b Sean Hanretta (2009). Islam and Social Change in French West Africa: History of an Emancipatory Community. Cambridge University Press. pp. 37 with footnote 23. ISBN 978-0-521-89971-0.
  38. ^ Mamadou Lamine Diawara (1990), La Graine de la Parole: dimension sociale et politique des traditions orales du royaume de Jaara (Mali) du XVème au milieu du XIXème siècle, volume 92, Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden GmbH, pages 35-37, 41-45
  39. ^ a b Daniel C. Littlefield (1991). Rice and Slaves. University of Illinois Press. pp. 79 footnote 11. ISBN 978-0-252-06214-8.
  40. ^ a b Barbara G. Hoffman (2001). Griots at War: Conflict, Conciliation, and Caste in Mande. Indiana University Press. pp. 8, 10–12, 30–31, 35–36, 235–240, 246, 269–270 note 31. ISBN 0-253-10893-4.
  41. ^ a b c d Susan McIntosh (2001). Christopher R. DeCorse (ed.). West Africa During the Atlantic Slave Trade: Archaeological Perspectives. Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 17–18. ISBN 978-0-7185-0247-8.
  42. ^ Tamari, Tal (1991). "The Development of Caste Systems in West Africa". The Journal of African History. Cambridge University Press. 32 (2): 221–250. doi:10.1017/s0021853700025718. S2CID 162509491.
  43. ^ Tal Tamari (1995). David C. Conrad and Barbara E. Frank (ed.). Status and Identity in West Africa: Nyamakalaw of Mande. Indiana University Press. pp. 65–67, 71–73. ISBN 0-253-11264-8.
  44. ^ Tal Tamari (1995). David C. Conrad and Barbara E. Frank (ed.). Status and Identity in West Africa: Nyamakalaw of Mande. Indiana University Press. pp. 68–69. ISBN 0-253-11264-8.
  45. ^ Sumareh, Muhammed F. "the history of soninke(sarahule) and culture".
  46. ^ . Soninkara.com. 2002. Archived from the original on 2006-01-13. Retrieved 2006-04-05.
  47. ^ "The circumcision among Soninke". Soninkara.com. from the original on 2006-12-25. Retrieved 2006-04-28.
  48. ^ Ericksen, K. P. (1989). "Female Genital Mutilations in Africa". Cross-Cultural Research. 23 (1–4): 182–204. doi:10.1177/106939718902300104. S2CID 144624739.
  49. ^ US State Department (2010). Country Reports on Human Rights Practices 2009. Government Printing Office. p. 554.
  50. ^ "Soninke Recipes". Soninkara.com. 2002. from the original on 2007-02-20. Retrieved 2006-04-05.
  51. ^ Meadows, R. Darrell (1999). . Journal of Social History. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2006-04-28.

Bibliography edit

  • (in English) François Manchuelle, Origins of Black African Emigration to France : the Labor Migrations of the Soninke, 1948-1987, Santa Barbara, University of California, 1987 (Thèse)
  • (in French) M. T. Abéla de la Rivière, Les Sarakolé et leur émigration vers la France, Paris, Université de Paris V, 1977 (Thèse de 3 cycle)
  • (in French) Amadou Diallo, L’éducation en milieu sooninké dans le cercle de Bakel : 1850-1914, Dakar, Université Cheikh Anta Diop, 1994, 36 p. (Mémoire de DEA)
  • (in French) Alain Gallay, « La poterie en pays Sarakolé (Mali, Afrique Occidentale) », Journal de la Société des Africanistes, Paris, CNRS, 1970, tome XL, n° 1, p. 7-84
  • (in French) Joseph Kerharo, « La pharmacopée sénégalaise : note sur quelques traitements médicaux pratiqués par les Sarakolé du Cercle de Bakel », Bulletin et mémoires de la Faculté mixte de médecine et de pharmacie de Dakar, t. XII, 1964, p. 226-229
  • (in French) Nianguiry Kanté, Contribution à la connaissance de la migration "soninké" en France, Paris, Université de Paris VIII, 1986, 726 p. (Thèse de 3 cycle)
  • (in French) Michael Samuel, Les Migrations Soninke vers la France, Paris, Université de Paris. (Thèse de 3 cycle)
  • (in French) Badoua Siguine, La tradition épique des forgerons soninké, Dakar, Université de Dakar, 198?, (Mémoire de Maîtrise)
  • (in French) Badoua Siguine, Le surnaturel dans les contes soninké, Dakar, Université de Dakar, 1983, 215 p. (Mémoire de Maîtrise)
  • (in French) Mahamet Timera, Les Soninké en France : d'un histoire à l'autre, Karthala, 1996, 244 p. ISBN 2-86537-701-6
  • (in French) Louis Léon César Faidherbe, Vocabulaire d'environ 1,500 mots français avec leurs correspondents en ouolof de Saint-Louis, en poular (toucouleur) du Fouta, en soninké (sarakhollé) de Bakel, 1864, Saint-Louis, Imprimerie du Gouvernement, 1864, 70 p.
  • (in French) Louis Léon César Faidherbe, Langues sénégalaises : wolof, arabe-hassania, soninké, sérère, notions grammaticales, vocabulaires et phrases, E. Leroux, 1887, 267 p.
  • (in French) Christian Girier, Parlons soninké, l'Harmattan, Paris, 1996, ISBN 2-7384-3769-9
  • (in French) Rhonda L. Hartell, Alphabets de langues africaines, Unesco et Summer Institute of Linguistics, Dakar, 1993;
  • (in French) Direction de la promotion des langues nationales du Sénégal, Livret d'auto-formation en Soninké, éditions Kalaama-Edicef, 2001.

External links edit

  • (in French) Site of the commune of Diawara, Sénégal 2006-12-08 at the Wayback Machine
  • (in French) Soobe - Association culturelle de Soninké en Egypte
  • (in French) Diaguily - Portail de Diaguily, ville soninké du sud de la Mauritanie
  • (in English) Ethnologue - Soninké language at Ethnologue
  • (in French) Soninkara.com - Portail de la communauté soninké
  • (in French) Soninkara.org - Société et Culture Soninké - Soninké News
  • (in English) Asawan.org - Soninke literature - free online library/bookstore

soninke, people, west, african, mande, speaking, ethnic, group, found, mali, southern, mauritania, eastern, senegal, gambia, guinea, especially, fouta, djallon, they, speak, soninke, language, also, called, serakhulle, azer, language, which, mande, languages, . The Soninke people are a West African Mande speaking ethnic group found in Mali southern Mauritania eastern Senegal The Gambia and Guinea especially Fouta Djallon 5 They speak the Soninke language also called the Serakhulle or Azer language which is one of the Mande languages 6 Soninke people were the founders of the ancient empire of Ghana or Wagadou c 200 1240 CE Subgroups of Soninke include the Jakhanke Maraka and Wangara When the Ghana empire was destroyed the resulting diaspora brought Soninkes to Mali Mauritania Senegal Gambia Burkina Faso Cote d Ivoire Guinee Conakry modern day Republic of Ghana Kano in Nigeria and Guinea Bissau where some of this trading diaspora was called Wangara 7 SoninkeA Portrait of a Soninke man 1890 Total populationOver 2 0 million citation needed Regions with significant populations Mali2 124 000 9 8 1 Senegal225 154 1 4 2 Mauritania248 000 3 unreliable source Gambia142 606 8 2 4 LanguagesSoninke FrenchReligionPredominantly Sunni IslamRelated ethnic groupsYalunka peoplePredominantly Muslims the Soninke were one of the early ethnic groups from West Africa to convert to Islam in about the 10th century 8 The contemporary population of Soninke people is estimated to be over 2 million 9 The cultural practices of Soninke people are similar to the Mande peoples and those of the Imraguen of Mauritania They include traditional Islamic rites of marriage 10 circumcision 11 and have social stratification 12 13 Contents 1 Ethnonym 2 History 3 Demographics and distribution 4 Religion 5 Society and culture 5 1 Social stratification 5 2 Marriage 5 3 Circumcision 5 3 1 Female genital mutilation 5 4 Foods 6 Economy 7 Notable Soninke people 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEthnonym editThe Soninke people are also referred to as Aswanik Dafing Dafi Dyakanke Gadyaga Maraka Maraxa Marka Marka Soninke Saracole Sarakole Sarakolle Sarakule Sarawule Saraxole Seraculeh Serahuli Serakhulle Silabe Soniake Soninkes Sonninke Toubakai Wakore 14 They refer to themselves by the word Soninke which is actually the singular of the word Soninko 15 but are also called Sarakholes by the Wolofs Marakas by the Bambaras Wangara by the Mandinka Wangarawa by the Hausa Wakore by the Songhais or even Toubakai Marka is the name by which they are known in Mali in the region of Kayes Koulikoro Sikasso Segou Mopti and in Burkina Faso in that of Dafina 16 The term Serakhulle although often claimed to be a Wolof word was used for the Soninke at least as far back as the 16th century and is used by peoples as far apart as The Gambia and Hausaland The Jahankas a subgroup refer to themselves as of Serakhulle extraction Historically the term Soninke carries negative connotations in the Futa Djallon and Senegambia hence the more common use of the term Serakhulle 17 History editMain article History of the Soninke people nbsp Diobe ruler of Soninke colonial era town of Bakel with his advisors 1887 1888 nbsp Soninke warriorsArchaeological evidence suggests that the regions where Soninke people are found were inhabited in ancient times These stone settlements were built on the rocky promontories of Tichit Walata and the Tagant cliffs of Southern Mauritania Though there are no surviving records to suggest which ethnic group these people were the settlers of this region by between 2500 BCE and 600 BCE were likely related to the Soninke and greater Mande people A significant agro pastoral society had developed in this prehistoric era 18 19 20 21 22 According to Soninke oral tradition the ancestor of the Soninke was Dinga sometimes said to have come from the Middle East though such a story is unlikely as the Middle Eastern tag came about subsequent to the Mande converting to Islam 23 24 25 26 His sons included Dyabe Sisse the founder of the Wagadu kingdom with its capital at Kumbi 27 Another Soninke tradition indicates that they migrated from Aswan Egypt 28 However theories of foreign origin are almost entirely doubted disregarded by scholars and are believed to result from later Eurasiatic cultural influences Namely Arab and French 25 26 Archaeological evidence supports an evolution of the Ghana Empire and other Mande states from roots in preceding local ancestral Soninke cultures such as that of Dhar Tichitt rather than from North Africa or the Middle East 22 29 The early written records about Soninke come from early Islamic historians The Soninke according to these records were the founders of the ancient Ghana Empire not to be confused with modern Ghana also called the Wagadu Empire 18 The empire has it s roots roughly between the 13 century BC to the 1st century BC truly materializing within the 1st and 3rd centuries CE but was destroyed by about the 12th century 18 after the Muslim invasions of this region started in the 10th century 30 19 Demographics and distribution edit nbsp Map of the Soninke population centers in MaliIn contemporary time the total population of Soninke people is above 2 million 9 Soninke people are found throughout West Africa and in France given their migration when Senegal and Mali were a part of the French colonial empire 6 Most of the Soninke people are found in the valley of the upper Senegal river and along the Mali Senegal Mauritania border between Nara and Nioro du Sahel Migrations under French colonial rule led many Soninke to build communities in Dakar other cities in Africa and in France Soninke community were the early settlers in France their community is found in Paris and in southern French cities and their language is the primary dialect spoken among many Muslim communities of France 6 There are also many Soninke living in cities throughout Central Africa a population that includes new migrants as well as descendants of migration dating back to the 1800s such as the laptots who represented French mercantile and colonial interests in the region 31 Trade networks led by the Wangara mercantile confederations spread Soninke people and culture throughout most of Mali and Senegal southern Mauritania northern Burkina Faso as well as parts of the Gambia and Guinea Bissau The Maraka Soninke merchant communities and plantations centered just north of the city of Segou Mali were an economic mainspring under the Bambara Empire and built trade routes in the West Africa region citation needed Religion editThe Soninke people were a coastal trade link between the Berber people of the Maghreb region and the other Empires in West Africa In their early history they helped exchange salt from the north and western coast for gold found inland 32 This trade brought Muslim traders to them particularly Arab traders interested in gold after Islam arrived in North Africa The earliest passing mention of Soninke people s Ghana Empire is found in the works of the 8th century Arab geographer Muḥammad ibn Ibrahim al Fazari and a more complete record is found in works of another 11th century Arab geographer Al Bakri 32 The rulers and Soninke people of the Ghana Empire converted to Islam in the 11th century and they have been Muslim ever since Some Islamic sources suggest that the conversion was triggered after the 1076 Almoravid conquest of the Ghana Empire 8 The Soninke people like other Mande peoples typically adhere to the Maliki school of Sunni Islam 33 Society and culture edit nbsp A Soninke man in 1890 sketched by M PhilippeThe Soninke society and its culture has historically many cultural practices with its neighboring ethnic groups particularly the Mande peoples This includes the religion of Islam occupations foods the rites of passage family structure weddings and social stratification Social stratification edit Soninke society like other groups in Mande is shaped by various forms of social stratification 34 35 13 The Soninke strata have included a free category called Horro or Horon a caste system category called Namaxala or Nyaxamalo and slaves called Komo 36 12 37 In the Jaara subgroup of the Soninke people the nobility called Tunkanlenmu was another strata 37 38 Soninke society became highly stratified after the 13th century 36 The slaves were the largest stratum one at the bottom among the Soninke like other West African ethnic groups and constituted up to half of the population The slaves among the Soninke people were hierarchically arranged into three strata 39 The village slaves were a privileged servile group who lived apart from the village and took orders from the village chief The domestic slaves lived with a family and could not be sold The lowest level among slaves were the trade slaves who could be bought and sold With time each of these strata became endogamous states Daniel Littlefield a professor of history 39 Above the slaves were the castes of Soninke which too were hereditary endogamous and had an embedded hierarchical status 40 They included for example the garanke leather workers below the fune bard the fune below the gesere or jeli griots singers and the jeli below the tage or numu smiths pottery workers 40 The castes and serf system can be linked to the Mande Nyamakalaw literally caste archaeological evidence shows that Arabs and Berbers would later participate in an already established and integrated trade and transport network with West Africa trading in gold salt and some slaves to a lesser extent building upon the pre existing trade routes trading had extended into Ghana and the western Atlantic coast by the 11th century trading systems became increasingly sophisticated in 13th and 14th century Mali Empire and 16th century Songhai Empire 41 As the practice of slavery grew so did the caste system Tamari suggests that a corollary of the rising slavery system was the development and growth of the caste system among numerous ethnic groups of Africa by about the 13th century 41 42 McIntosh concurs with Tamari but states that the emergence of caste systems likely occurred much earlier in West African societies such as Soninke Mande Malinke Wolof Serer and others 41 She places the development and spread of castes in these societies to about the 10th century because the slave capture slave trade and slave holding by elite families was an established institution in West Africa by then and slavery created a template for servile relationships and social stratification of human beings 41 The linguistic evidence suggests that stratification structure relating to caste system and slavery likely were shared between the Manding and Soninke people and possibly some others such as the Dogon people of West Africa 43 However the linguistic differences between the caste and slave systems of the Soninke and Manding on one hand and northern ethnic groups of Africa such as the Tuareg people and Moors on the other suggests that these evolved separately 44 Marriage edit nbsp A Soninke woman an 1853 sketch by David BoilatMarriage in Soninke society follows Islamic practices Cousin marriages are common and preferred in Soninke culture just as with the Fula people 10 Parents consent to marriage 10 A traditional proverb states Cousins are made for each other The practice among Soninke merchants states Saskia Brand a professor of psychology and educational sciences may be related to the cultural belief that cousin marriages helps to keep the money in the family 10 If both families agree the couple is engaged i na tamma laga in a mosque Each month after the engagement the man pays the woman s family a bridewealth dower nakhafa for their food and other spending The marriage called futtu is complete with a marriage contract that mentions the dower and is accompanied with a wedding event called karikompe citation needed 45 The newly married couple has advisors The man s advisor is called the khoussoumanta yougo and the woman s is called khoussoumanta yakhare After one week of celebration the women meet to show the gifts that the couple received from their parents mostly from the woman s mother 46 Marriage across social strata and caste lines has been taboo states Saskia Brand But in polygynous noble families a noble could take a wife from the slave strata 10 Circumcision edit nbsp A Soninke woman and her daughter in Selibaby MauritaniaThe Soninke practise circumcision and call it birou Every afternoon the boys who were circumcised the previous year organize tam tams clarification needed for the new boys in order to prepare them psychologically Throughout the circumcision ceremony the boys to be circumcised sit around the tambour called daine The other teenagers of the village young girls women men and slaves form a circle around the boys During this time the boys are surrounded with beautiful scarves called disa sing 47 The author Mamadou Soumare wrote Above its traditional surgery the ritual of circumcision makes in evidence the physical endurance the pain the courage in one word the personality of the child Female genital mutilation edit The Soninke people have long carried out female genital mutilation FGM also called female circumcision 11 48 The prevalence rate of FGM is higher among the Soninke than among neighbouring ethnic groups such as Wolof people and others 11 The practice is culturally done as a ritual of social acceptance and sometimes assumed to be required for religious reasons 11 In Mauritania and Senegal FGM of a child is illegal in contemporary law but continues because it is culturally sanctioned for young girls as young as one year old 11 According to the 2009 Report on Human Rights Practices by the US State Department FGM practice among Soninke has included the most dangerous Type III mutilations 49 Foods edit Breakfast foods include fonde porridge made of millet sugar milk and salt and sombi porridge made of rice millet or corn For lunch demba tere and takhaya are very common both containing rice and peanuts frequent Soninke ingredients Dere a stew is a mixture of millet and beans 50 Economy editThe Soninke traditionally engage in both trade and agriculture During the rainy season men and women both cultivate However women usually stay at home to cook and take care of their children They also do other work such as dyeing cotton material citation needed Many early West African immigrants in France came from this ethnic group 51 The Soninke are an influential ethnic group in the Gambia Senegal and Mali Notable Soninke people editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Soninke people news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Doussou Bagayoko Malian musician Mamadou Bagayoko Malian footballer Siaka Bagayoko Malian footballer Abdoulaye Bathily Senegalese historian and politician Djegui Bathily Senegalese Judoka Lassana Bathily Malian opportunist Germain Berthe Malian footballer Ousmane Berthe Malian footballer Hassoun Camara French footballer Khassa Camara Mauritanian footballer Soninke Camara Malian musician Zoumana Camara French footballer Kaya Magan Cisse Papiss Cisse Senegalese footballer Lassana Hawa Cissokho Malian musician Moussa Diagana Mauritanian writer Ismael Diakite Mauritanian footballer Souleymane Diamoutene Malian footballer Fousseni Diawara Malian footballer Diaby Doua Malian musician Boubacari Doucoure French footballer Cheick Doucoure Malian footballer Kamory Doumbia Malian footballer Moussa Doumbia Malian footballer Boukary Drame Senegalese footballer Cheche Drame Malian musician Mamadou Lamine Drame was a 19th century marabout who fought against French colonization Demba Ganda Fadiga Malian musician Diadia Fadiga Malian musician Ganda Fadiga Malian griot Khalilou Fadiga Senegalese footballer Babou Fofana Malian footballer Gueida Fofana French footballer Guessouma Fofana Mauritanian footballer Lamine Gassama Senegalese footballer Mamoudou Gassama undocumented migrant from Mali Omare Gassama Mauritanian footballer Omar Gassama Gambian politician Sadio Gassama Malian politician Bingourou Kamara Senegalese footballer Frederic Kanoute Malian footballer Sadio Kanoute Malian footballer N Golo Kante French footballer Ibrahima Kebe Senegalese visual artist Babacar Khouma Senegalese footballer Sekou Koita Malian footballer Mademba Konte Malian musician Yimbi Kumma Malian rapper Linky LK Malian rapper Mamadou Demba Magassa Malian musician Mohamed Magassouba Malian football coach Moussa Marega Malian footballer Moussa Niakhate Senegalese footballer Falaye Sacko Malian footballer Lamine Sakho Senegalese footballer Harouna Samake Malian Kamale N goni player Issaka Samake Malian footballer Soumaila Samake Malian basketball player Yeah Samake Malian entrepreneur and politician Mamadou Samassa Malian footballer Diadie Samassekou Malian footballer Oumou Sangare Malian musician Younousse Sankhare Senegalese footballer Landing Savane Senegalese politician Sitapha Savane Senegalese basketball player Djibril Sidibe Malian footballer Gabourey Sidibe American actress Mahamadou Sidibe Malian footballer Kaidama Sidibe former Prime Minister of Mali Muhammed B Sissoho Gambian Soninke Tv amp Radio talk show host Sidney Sokhona Mauritanian filmmaker Bintou Soumbounou Malian musician Maimouna Soumbounou Malian musician Fanta Souroukou Malian musician Youssouf Sabaly Senegalese footballer Myriam Soumare French track and field athlete Yacouba Sylla Malian footballer Abubacarr Tambadou former Minister of Justice of the Gambia Adama Tamboura Malian footballer Aice Tamoura Malian musician Demba Tandia Malian musician Mamadou Tandja former President of Niger from 1999 to 2010 Sidy Bonco Tangoudia Malian musician Djelimady Tounkara Malian musician Maakan Tounkara French handball player Mamadou Tounkara Spanish footballer Bassala Toure Malian footballer Halima Kissima Toure Malian musician Baleme Kandji Traore Malian musician Molla Wague Malian footballer Moussa Wague Senegalese footballer Moustapha Soumare Malian diplomat and UN Special Representative Myriam Soumare French sprinterSee also editSoninke languageReferences edit Mali www cia gov Retrieved November 19 2020 Senegal www cia gov Retrieved November 19 2020 Soninke in Mauritania Joshua Project Retrieved November 19 2020 Distribution of the Gambian population by ethnicity 1973 1983 1993 2003 and 2013 Censuses GBoS www gbosdata org Archived from the original on 2021 11 19 Retrieved 2021 06 17 Ralph A Austen 1999 In Search of Sunjata The Mande Oral Epic as History Literature and Performance Indiana University Press p 143 ISBN 0 253 33452 7 a b c Andrew Dalby 1998 Dictionary of Languages The Definitive Reference to More Than 400 Languages Columbia University Press p 574 ISBN 978 0 231 11568 1 John O Hunwick 2003 Timbuktu and the Songhay Empire Al Saʿdi s Taʾrikh Al Sudan Down to 1613 BRILL Academic pp xxviii with footnote 18 ISBN 90 04 12822 0 a b Asante Molefi Kete The History of Africa The Quest for Eternal Harmony New York Routledge 2007 121 2 a b Diagram Group 2013 Encyclopedia of African Peoples Routledge p 825 ISBN 978 1 135 96341 5 a b c d e Saskia Brand 2001 Mediating Means and Fate A Socio Political Analysis of Fertility and Demographic Change in Bamako Mali BRILL Academic pp 69 71 ISBN 90 04 12033 5 a b c d e Ouldzeidoune Nacerdine Keating Joseph Bertrand Jane Rice Janet 2013 A Description of Female Genital Mutilation and Force Feeding Practices in Mauritania Implications for the Protection of Child Rights and Health PLOS ONE 8 4 e60594 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 860594O doi 10 1371 journal pone 0060594 PMC 3621896 PMID 23593257 a b Michael Gomez 2002 Pragmatism in the Age of Jihad The Precolonial State of Bundu Cambridge University Press p 24 ISBN 978 0 521 52847 4 a b Monica Bella 1987 AFRICA STUDIES THE EXPLORATION OF ALTERNATIVE LAND TENURE AND ORGANIZATIONAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE BAKEL SMALL IRRIGATED PERIMETERS Archived 2017 11 18 at the Wayback Machine University of Wisconsin Madison United States Agency for International Development Quote Soninke society is not egalitarian but rather is stratified into castes At the top there is the noble or hore caste The hore consist of debeaumme nyinvaaumme and the marabouts or religious leaders The power of the marabouts is less than that of other nobles Next are the artisan castes or nyakhamala Edouard Francois Manchuelle 1987 Background to Black African Emigration to France The Labor Migrations of the Soninke 1848 1987 University of California Press pp 50 52 RAMEAU BnF 1 Mamadou Drame Ceremonies et rites chez les Soninke dans Peuples du Senegal Sepia Saint Maur 1996 p 65 James Stuart Olsen 1996 The Peoples of Africa An Ethnohistorical Dictionary Greenwood Publishing Group p 373 ISBN 978 0313 27 918 8 Sanneh Lamin Futa Jallon and the Jakhanke Clerical Tradition Part I The Historical Setting Journal of Religion in Africa vol 12 no 1 1981 pp 38 64 JSTOR www jstor org stable 1581013 Accessed 2 Dec 2020 a b c David C Conrad 2009 Empires of Medieval West Africa Ghana Mali and Songhay Infobase pp 23 25 ISBN 978 1 60413 164 2 a b Kevin Shillington 2012 History of Africa Palgrave Macmillan pp 88 89 ISBN 978 1 137 00333 1 Holl Augustin Coping with uncertainty Neolithic life in the Dhar Tichitt Walata Mauritania ca 4000 2300 BP Research Gate Comptes Rendus Geosciences Holl Augustin 1985 12 01 Subsistence patterns of the Dhar Tichitt Neolithic Mauritania African Archaeological Review 3 1 151 162 doi 10 1007 BF01117458 ISSN 0263 0338 S2CID 162041986 a b Holl A 1985 Background to the Ghana Empire archaeological investigations on the transition to statehood in the Dhar Tichitt region Mauritania Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 4 2 108 doi 10 1016 0278 4165 85 90005 4 David C Conrad 2009 Empires of Medieval West Africa Ghana Mali and Songhay Infobase p 25 ISBN 978 1 60413 164 2 Quote The legend often begins by describing how the ancestor Dinga came from somewhere in the Middle East History in Africa Volume 10 by Africa Studies Association p 60 Holt Rinehart and Winston 1983 a b Levtzion and Spaulding Medieval West Africa Views From Arab Scholars and Merchants 2003 p 27 a b Mauny Raymond 1961 Tableau geographique de l ouest africain au moyen age d apres les sources ecrites la tradition et l archeologie Dakar Institut francais d Afrique Noire Levtzion Nehemia 1973 Ancient Ghana and Mali New York Methuen amp Co Ltd pp 16 18 21 ISBN 0841904316 Alexander Leslie M Rucker Walter C Jr 9 February 2010 Encyclopedia of African American History 3 volumes ABC CLIO ISBN 9781851097746 Retrieved 25 April 2018 via Google Books Munson Patrick J 1980 Archaeology and the prehistoric origins of the Ghana Empire The Journal of African History 21 4 457 466 doi 10 1017 s0021853700018685 JSTOR 182004 S2CID 161981607 Soninke people Archived 2016 11 05 at the Wayback Machine Encyclopaedia Britannica Quote The Soninke were the founders of the ancient empire of Ghana which was destroyed after the invasions of Muslim conquerors in the 10th century Francois Manchuelle 1997 Willing Migrants Soninke Labor Diasporas 1848 1960 Ohio University Press Archived from the original on 2017 10 02 a b Kevin Shillington 2012 History of Africa Palgrave Macmillan pp 90 92 ISBN 978 1 137 00333 1 John A Shoup 2011 Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 183 184 ISBN 978 1 59884 362 0 Haddy Tunkara Bah 2016 Sociocultural factors influencing fertility among the Soninke African Renaissance 13 1 2 31 44 Quote The Soninke society in the Gambia is primarily rural and highly gender stratified culture In the Soninke social organization everyone occupies a place Tal Tamari 1991 The Development of Caste Systems in West Africa The Journal of African History Cambridge University Press 32 2 221 250 doi 10 1017 s0021853700025718 JSTOR 182616 S2CID 162509491 a b Tal Tamari 1995 David C Conrad and Barbara E Frank ed Status and Identity in West Africa Nyamakalaw of Mande Indiana University Press pp 61 63 ISBN 0 253 11264 8 a b Sean Hanretta 2009 Islam and Social Change in French West Africa History of an Emancipatory Community Cambridge University Press pp 37 with footnote 23 ISBN 978 0 521 89971 0 Mamadou Lamine Diawara 1990 La Graine de la Parole dimension sociale et politique des traditions orales du royaume de Jaara Mali du XVeme au milieu du XIXeme siecle volume 92 Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden GmbH pages 35 37 41 45 a b Daniel C Littlefield 1991 Rice and Slaves University of Illinois Press pp 79 footnote 11 ISBN 978 0 252 06214 8 a b Barbara G Hoffman 2001 Griots at War Conflict Conciliation and Caste in Mande Indiana University Press pp 8 10 12 30 31 35 36 235 240 246 269 270 note 31 ISBN 0 253 10893 4 a b c d Susan McIntosh 2001 Christopher R DeCorse ed West Africa During the Atlantic Slave Trade Archaeological Perspectives Bloomsbury Academic pp 17 18 ISBN 978 0 7185 0247 8 Tamari Tal 1991 The Development of Caste Systems in West Africa The Journal of African History Cambridge University Press 32 2 221 250 doi 10 1017 s0021853700025718 S2CID 162509491 Tal Tamari 1995 David C Conrad and Barbara E Frank ed Status and Identity in West Africa Nyamakalaw of Mande Indiana University Press pp 65 67 71 73 ISBN 0 253 11264 8 Tal Tamari 1995 David C Conrad and Barbara E Frank ed Status and Identity in West Africa Nyamakalaw of Mande Indiana University Press pp 68 69 ISBN 0 253 11264 8 Sumareh Muhammed F the history of soninke sarahule and culture Culture Et Tradition Soninkara com 2002 Archived from the original on 2006 01 13 Retrieved 2006 04 05 The circumcision among Soninke Soninkara com Archived from the original on 2006 12 25 Retrieved 2006 04 28 Ericksen K P 1989 Female Genital Mutilations in Africa Cross Cultural Research 23 1 4 182 204 doi 10 1177 106939718902300104 S2CID 144624739 US State Department 2010 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices 2009 Government Printing Office p 554 Soninke Recipes Soninkara com 2002 Archived from the original on 2007 02 20 Retrieved 2006 04 05 Meadows R Darrell 1999 Willing Migrants Soninke Labor Diasporas 1848 1960 Journal of Social History Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2006 04 28 Bibliography edit in English Francois Manchuelle Origins of Black African Emigration to France the Labor Migrations of the Soninke 1948 1987 Santa Barbara University of California 1987 These in French M T Abela de la Riviere Les Sarakole et leur emigration vers la France Paris Universite de Paris V 1977 These de 3 cycle in French Amadou Diallo L education en milieu sooninke dans le cercle de Bakel 1850 1914 Dakar Universite Cheikh Anta Diop 1994 36 p Memoire de DEA in French Alain Gallay La poterie en pays Sarakole Mali Afrique Occidentale Journal de la Societe des Africanistes Paris CNRS 1970 tome XL n 1 p 7 84 in French Joseph Kerharo La pharmacopee senegalaise note sur quelques traitements medicaux pratiques par les Sarakole du Cercle de Bakel Bulletin et memoires de la Faculte mixte de medecine et de pharmacie de Dakar t XII 1964 p 226 229 in French Nianguiry Kante Contribution a la connaissance de la migration soninke en France Paris Universite de Paris VIII 1986 726 p These de 3 cycle in French Michael Samuel Les Migrations Soninke vers la France Paris Universite de Paris These de 3 cycle in French Badoua Siguine La tradition epique des forgerons soninke Dakar Universite de Dakar 198 Memoire de Maitrise in French Badoua Siguine Le surnaturel dans les contes soninke Dakar Universite de Dakar 1983 215 p Memoire de Maitrise in French Mahamet Timera Les Soninke en France d un histoire a l autre Karthala 1996 244 p ISBN 2 86537 701 6 in French Louis Leon Cesar Faidherbe Vocabulaire d environ 1 500 mots francais avec leurs correspondents en ouolof de Saint Louis en poular toucouleur du Fouta en soninke sarakholle de Bakel 1864 Saint Louis Imprimerie du Gouvernement 1864 70 p in French Louis Leon Cesar Faidherbe Langues senegalaises wolof arabe hassania soninke serere notions grammaticales vocabulaires et phrases E Leroux 1887 267 p in French Christian Girier Parlons soninke l Harmattan Paris 1996 ISBN 2 7384 3769 9 in French Rhonda L Hartell Alphabets de langues africaines Unesco et Summer Institute of Linguistics Dakar 1993 in French Direction de la promotion des langues nationales du Senegal Livret d auto formation en Soninke editions Kalaama Edicef 2001 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Soninke in French Site of the commune of Diawara Senegal Archived 2006 12 08 at the Wayback Machine in French Soobe Association culturelle de Soninke en Egypte in French Diaguily Portail de Diaguily ville soninke du sud de la Mauritanie in English Ethnologue Soninke language at Ethnologue in French Soninkara com Portail de la communaute soninke in French Soninkara org Societe et Culture Soninke Soninke News in English Asawan org Soninke literature free online library bookstore Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Soninke 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