APPENDIX II. 



A SYNOPTICAL TABLE OF ALL THE EACES AND TEIBES 

 OF NOETH-EAST AFEICA.* 



Wa-Ganda 



Wa-Nijoru 

 Wa-Soga 

 Wa- Gamba 

 Wa-Karagwk 



Wa-Songora 

 Wa-Sambara 

 Wa- Tutwa 

 Wa-Sukmn<( 



Wa-Zinza 

 Wa-Nyambo 



I. BANTU GEOUP. 



North-west side Victoria Nyanza, from the Somerset to the Alexandria Nile 



(Tanguré), the most numerous and powerful Bantu nation in the region 



of the Great Lakes. 

 Between Somerset Nile and Albert Nyanza. 

 East from the Somerset Nile. 



East from the Wa-Soga territory ; limits undefined. 

 West side Victoria Nyanza, from the Alexandria Nile southwards to the Wa-Zinza 



territory. 

 West side of the Victoria Nyanza, between the Wa-Karagwé and the coast. 

 South-east coast Victoria Nyanza, north ot Speke Gulf. 

 South of Speke Gulf. 

 Large nation with numerous subdivisions (Wa-Rima, Wa-Vîra, Wa-Smas, Wa- 



Hindi, &c.), south coast Victoria Nyanza, south of Speke Gulf. 

 South coast Victoria Nyanza, west from the Wa-Sukuma. 

 Large tribe in Karagwé ; speak the Zongora language, a distinct Bantu dialect. 



II. NEGRO GROUP. 



Numerically the Negro is by far the most important element in Egyptian Sudan. It 

 is in almost undisturbed possession, not only of the main stream from the great lakes 

 to and beyond the Sobat junction, but also of the Sobat Valley itself, and of the 

 countless headwaters of the White Nile converging from the west and south-west at 

 Lake No, above the Sobat junction. Within this area is probably concentrated one- 

 half of the population of the whole Nile basin, from the equatorial lakes to the 

 Mediterranean, a population which has been roughly estimated at about forty millions. 

 Here are several large and powerful Negro nations, some still enjoying political 

 autonomy, such as the Zandeh (Nyam-Nyam), the Mittu, and the Monbuttu, who 

 occupy the low water-parting between the Nile, Congo, and Tsad basins, some 

 brought within the limits of the Khedive's possessions, such as the Bari and Nuer 



* Enlarged from A. H. Keane's " Ethnology of Egyptian Sudan." London: 1884. 



