YO'WARU.-THE SURK. 
469 
Mayo seem to He the villages Seri and Nyamihara, 
the former inhabited by Songhay, the latter by 
Ftilbe. 
3rd. Gano^a. 
4th. Kogi or Jogi, having passed several hamlets, one of 
them called Ginnewo, a hamlet of cattle breeders 
with a ksar, then Doko, Ngudderi, Joneri, Sabare, 
and Burlul. 
5 th. Kora. 
6th. Konna. 
7th. Tenengu. The distance between Urungiye and Te- 
nengu can, however, be performed in two days good 
travellino^. 
Between Urungiye and Mobti lie the following places : — 
U'ro-Modi, Karam, a Songhay village ; Rogonte, a hamlet 
of Fulbe, Yerere, a hamlet inhabited by slaves of the Ftilbe, 
Walo on the Mayo Fenga ; Kaya, a village inhabited by 
Aswanek, and finally, Sare-mele and Sare-bele, the river 
probably forming a great bend near Wonyaka, so that these 
latter towns are touched at in coming from both sides, either 
the N. or the S. 
H. — From Yowaru to Hamda-AUdhi. 
1st day. Dogo, on a small creek. 
2nd. Shay, probably meaning the place of embarkation, on 
the N.W. side of the river, which is very wide in 
this spot. Pass on the road one or two branches 
of stagnant water, which you must cross in a boat. 
Perhaps one of these branches is the same on which 
the village Mayo lies. 
3rd. Encamp on the bank of a smaller creek (Mayo 
dhanneo ?) 
4th. Niakongo. 
5th. Berber, a very short march. 
6th. Siye, in the morning. 
7th. Hamda-Allahi, the capital of the kingdom of Masina. 
H II 3 
