580 APPENDIX. 
sold for iron hoes, called te akika," of which forty will 
buy a slave ; more valuable objects are bartered for salt or 
clothes.* 
East, about one day's journey from Wukari, are said to be 
Juggum and Gonkoy : Juggum is the name of a considerable 
place ; but as for Gonkoy, I was unable to ascertain whether 
it was the name of a district or a town. Gonkoy is said to 
be three days and a half from Bu-manda, the stations on the 
road being at the villages or towns of U'riyo, U'rbo, then, near 
the mayo, Mantaje (?), Bu-manda being reached on the fourth 
day ; and I have another itinerary leading from Bu-manda 
to Juggum in five days, through a country desolated by 
those predatory wars by which the Fulbe are so distinguished. 
Only one day before reaching Juggum there is a place inha- 
bited by pagans, called Gante. I will further mention here 
some places around Wukari : though, from the imperfect cha- 
racter of my information, I am not able to lay them down on 
the map, nevertheless I hope a list of them will prove use- 
ful to the next expedition up the river. Along the south 
side of the river are said to lie east from Gonkoy the places 
Balli, Jubu, Tinto; one day south from Wukari the town 
Konte ; then westward, and towards the north-west, the 
following places, some of them on the north side of the 
Benuwe: Kurgoy (a walled town), U'ngosalla, Torma, 
A'kata (near a rivulet, the residence of a chief called Jxmmi), 
Konde, Bembem, Minchi-n-Agaya (on the north side of the 
Benuwe), Katsena Alia (a name most probably corrupted by 
the Hausa traders), a large town situated on the east side of 
a river or rivulet. Between Katsena Alia and Fanda there 
are said to be the following places: Zango kogi-n-Alla (a 
whimsical fataki name — that is to say, used by the native 
* A large piece of native cloth of Kwana manufacture, very 
interesting to those who feel real concern for the state of industry 
among the native Africans, was forwarded to England by the 
vizier of Bornu at my urgent request. 
