514 
APPENDIX I. 
4th (long), Agayar, a well or hasi. 
5th. Gimi, a hasi, belonging, like the foregoing one, to the 
district Aftot. 
6th. Kereni, a hasi. 
7th. El Wad, a valley without water. 
8th. El A^rruwa, a hasi. 
9th. Encamp in the wilderness without water. 
10th. Shemmama, a name which is given by the Arabs to 
the whole district along the north side of the Senegal. 
You arrive at the river opposite two villages called 
(by the Arabs) Guru '1 hajar. It seems not to be 
identical with the Guri '1 haire of the Fulbe, as 
that is one short day from Bakel, while our route 
evidently follows a far more westerly course, even 
west of the one which I am about to give. 
LL. — Route from Kahaide to the frontier of Tagdnet, direction 
N.N.E., according to Haj I'hrahim from Kahaide. 
1st day. E'njekudi, or Tisilit Taleb Mahmud, a well with 
an encampment of Arabs, called collectively by my 
informant, Shenagit, and Limtuna. 
2nd. Monge, a village of the Limtuna, consisting of tents 
made of camels' hair. 
3rd. Moyet, another village of the Limtuna, or rather two 
sections of this once powerful but now degraded 
Berber tribe, the Dagebambera (this is probably not 
their proper name), and the Welad e' Shefaga. 
4tli. Basengiddi, a village inhabited by the Limtuna, the 
Twaber (a section of the former). El Hejaj, the Re- 
hala. El Heba, and the Welad 'Abd- Allah. The 
country rather hilly. 
5th. Wanja, or Jenur, as you choose, both of them being 
settlements of Arabs and close to each other. Here 
live the Tagat, the Idaw el Hassan, the Welad 
Biyeri, and the Jejeba ; the food of these people 
consisting of sour milk, dhurra, and fruits. From 
