ANTHROPOLOGY 



481 



and is usually, but not always, associated with the speakini^ of Bantu 

 languages, an exce})tion to this rule being the people of Karaniojo, in the 



A IIANir .NKl.l 



north-eastern part of the Central Province. This folk s})eaks a language 

 related on the one hand to ^Nlasai, and on the other to the Bari of the >.'ile, 

 but its physical characteristics differ wholly from those of the Sfik, .Masai, 

 and Nile Negroes, and agree closely with the Bantu type. Sir H. M. 



