The Dar Daju Daju are an ethnic group numbering 34,000 people in the Guéra Region of southwestern Chad.[1] They are one of seven distinct ethnicities comprising the Daju people. They speak the Daju Mongo language[1][2] and are mostly Muslim.[2]
^ abEthnologue: "Daju, Dar Daju - A language of Chad"
^ abThe Joshua Project: "Daju of Dar Dadju, Saaronge of Chad" retrieved August 31, 2013
and 21 Related for: Dar Daju Daju people information
the Dajupeople. They speak the Daju Mongo language and are mostly Muslim. Ethnologue: "Daju, DarDaju - A language of Chad" The Joshua Project: "Daju of...
The Daju languages are spoken in isolated pockets by the Dajupeople across a wide area of Sudan and Chad. In Sudan, they are spoken in parts of the regions...
The Dajupeople are a group of seven distinct ethnicities speaking related languages (see Daju languages) living on both sides of the Chad-Sudan border...
Daju Mongo, also Wadai Daju or DarDajuDaju, is an Eastern Sudanic language, one of three closely related languages in the area called "Daju" (the other...
The Dar Fur Daju are an ethnic group in the Sudan. They are one of seven distinct ethnicities comprising the Dajupeople. They speak the Nyala language...
The Daju kingdom was a medieval monarchy that existed in Darfur (Sudan) from possibly the 12th–15th century. Its name stems from the Dajupeople, the ruling...
romanized: DārDājū) while ruled by the Daju, who migrated from Meroë c. 350 AD, and it was renamed Dartunjur (Arabic: دار تنجر, romanized: Dār Tunjur) when...
Dar Sila is the name of the wandering sultanate of the Dar Sila Daju, a multi-tribal ethnic group in Chad and Sudan. The number of the people in this...
written records the Daju and the 14th century migrants the Tunjur were the earliest powers in Darfur. The transition of power from the Daju to the Tunjur was...
together in opposition to Astaboran without proper comparative work. Jebel and Daju also share many similarities with Surma and Nilotic, though their pronominal...
ethnic cleansing campaign against the Dajupeople. Nothing else is known about the current state of the Kujarke people. According to Paul Doornbos, the Kujarke...
into the region with other Nilo-Saharan speakers, such as the Masalit and Daju, who were agriculturalists practicing varying degrees of animal husbandry...
Other ethnic groups that inhabit Kordofan are Nubians, Daju, Beja, Zaghawa, and Funj people. Nilotic tribes, Nuba, Shilluk and Dinka, also inhabit parts...
Romani people or Gypsies in Sudan include subgroups like Nawar, Halebi and Ghagar. Romani people in Egypt Romani people in Libya Romani people in Syria...
dialect, though it is not particularly close. Tama is spoken by 63,000 people in Dar Tama, a well irrigated area near Guéréda that extends from Kebkebiya...
kingdom, which replaced the old Daju kingdom in the 15th century and extended as far west as Wadai. The Tunjur people were probably Arabised Berbers and...
400s-1600s) Kingdom of Nobatia (c.400s-c.700s) Kingdom of Alodia (c.700s-c.1500) Daju Kingdom (c.1100s-1400s) Kingdom of al-Abwab (13th–15/16th century) Tunjur...
suggest a slightly different orthography to the one proposed by Jabr el Dar. They added ‘s’ for the palatal fricative in order to distinguish it from...
Guanches Guanartematos: (pre–15th century AD) (Gran Canaria) Telde Gáldar Daju kingdom (12th century–15th century AD) preceded by Tora (overthrown by Tunjur)...
over the border and destabilised the nation. Already poor, the nation and people struggled to accommodate the hundreds of thousands of Sudanese refugees...
founded in 1225 as a Sakya monastery when "the Ngamring ruler Drakpa Dar (Grags pa dar), also known as Yöntsun (Yon btsun), invited the Sakya master Shākya...