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APPENDIX, 
Fittri, a large but open place (built by the Bulala, 
before whose arrival and settlement in the country, 
Kudu was the capital of Fittri), the residence of 
Jurab ben A'bu. Sekin, the present ruler of the Bu- 
lala. The country abounds in rich pasture-grounds. 
The road from Melme to Ya'wo forms an angle, first 
east, further on south. 
11th. Seta, a place of the Bulala. 
12th. Hafir, encampment without a village, still within the 
territory of the Fittri. 
13th. Jeddada, no inhabited place ; encampment in the sandy 
valley of the meandering Bat-ha, which in the dry 
season forms only stagnant pools of water. 
14th. Surra, a locality only temporarily inhabited by the 
Arab tribe of the Ja'atena, who frequent it during 
the rainy season. The territory belongs to Waday. 
15th. Difda, a place of the Arab tribe of the Khozam. 
16th. Nejme, a place of the Arab tribe of the Hemedat. 
17 tli. Kunjur, a village of the tribe of the Kuka. 
18th. Dermama, a place of the tribe of the Kuka. From 
Dermama to A'bu. Telfan, a great mountain inhabited 
by pagans of the tribe of the Dajo, one day, a little 
south from east. 
19th. Birket Fatima, an extensive basin filled by the water 
of the Bat-ha beyond the north limit of the wadi, with 
a place of the Arab tribe of the Masmaja, frequented 
likewise by the Erzegat. 
20th. Kahet el Khalla, another large pond of water, with a 
hamlet inhabited by the Dajo, a tribe of negroes 
under the rule of Waday, with a language of their 
own. 
21st. Ojob, a place of the Masalit, negroes with a peculiar 
speech (ertana). 
22nd. Foroli, a place of the Siyada, a division of the Ma- 
salit. 
23rd. 'Am Hajar, a place of the Masalit. 
