574 
APPENDIX. 
he resolved to go to Bagirmi, and consequently 
changed his direction west, and then N.W., towards 
Bororit. He started the same day, and slept at Kin- 
ji-Minrak, a large village of the Kajanga, consisting 
of 500 huts, and the native place of Saleh Derret, 
having passed Jombo Sarkale and Gundogm, a vil- 
lage of the Kajanga, consisting of three hamlets. 
West a little south. 
5th. O'shena, a place of the Kashemere, south of the Be- 
teha. Having passed in the morning Gosmin, in a 
sandy tract, then Tongong, a small hamlet of She- 
koma, the mother of Mohammed the eldest son of 
the sherif, inhabited by Kajanga, then Jerad, also a 
Kajanga place, on the Beteha, and Ofulek, a village 
inhabited by Moslemin of the tribe of the Dajo, he 
stayed, during the heat, at Biren, a considerable 
place with a mixed population consisting of nas Ko- 
rongo, Garday, Kolotang, and Jungorang, south of 
the Beteha, and sixteen to seventeen hours south of 
Wara. Passing then Biren Kenga, a place of the 
Waday, and Kashemere on the Beteha, he arrived 
at O'shena. 
6th. A'm-kharaba, a large place of the Kashemere, for- 
merly belonging to A^u. Horra, the brother of the 
sherif, who fell in the battle of Torbigen. Of all 
the inhabitants of Waday, the Kashemere prepare 
their meals in the richest and most palatable manner. 
Pass in the morning Kelti, a considerable place of 
the Kashemere, and the village Butere, both south 
of the Beteha, and stay, during the heat, in Fun- 
duk, another place of the Kashemere, quite close to 
A^-khamba. 
7th. Kaure, a place north of the Beteha, where you stop 
for the night, on account of the good edibles, the 
Kaure people being, next to the Kashemere, the most 
excellent cooks in Waday, while next to them in this 
