680 
INDEX. 
iii. 452. Of Wadal, 547. In Songhay, 
more despotical, iv. 416. 
Gozenakko village and its inhabitants, ii. 13. 
Grain, different prices of, ii. 313 ; v. 338. 
Granaries, tower-like, iv. 331. Granaries 
or corn-stacks as usual in Negroland, i. 
539 ; ii. 5. In the Manga country, iv. 29. 
Groundnuts, an essential article of native 
food, and important article of export trade, 
ii. 432 ; iii. 334. In Bagirmi, in general 
cultivated to a small extent, iii. 447, 505 
passim. Cultivated between the corn, ii. 
434. 
Guinea- worm disease, i. 271. Produced by 
drinking stagnant water, ii. 546. Not 
met with in women, ib. 
Guibi, general meaning, ii. 299. 
Gulbi-n-S6koto swamps, v. 321. 
Gulumbe, walled town, iv. 209 ; v. 323. 
Gumda village, iv. 89. 
Gummel, town, its commercial importance 
and its inhabitants, ii. 164. Its state of 
decay, v. 374. 
Gumrek, Jake, i. 553. 
Gundam town described, v. 467. 
Gundurai wilderness, passage through, iv. 
130. 
Guram town, v. 473. 
Gurara river. Lander's Rari, ii. 563. 
Gure, capital of Muniyo, described, iv. 51- 
58. Visit to the governor, 53. His 
character, 54. 
Gurgul, a small shallow drain of Senegal, 
V. 522. 
Guri and inhabitants, v. 492. 
Gurma, hilly country of, iv. 250. Colonised 
by the Songhay, 259. Province and in- 
habitants of, 550. Their connection with 
the Tombo, ib. 
Guro-nuts, a commercial staple of Tim- 
buktu, V. 27. Their import into Kano, 
ii. 131. Conditions of the trade in, ib. 
Gushi territory, villages in, iv. 68. 
Gwanin el Kohol, section of the Berabish 
notice of the, v. 65. 
Gwasem, Roman sepulchre near, i. 93. 
Haddada, peculiar tribe in Kanem, account 
of, iii. 485. 
Haj Beshlr, biographical notice of, ii. 290. 
End of his career, 670. Policy with 
regard to the pagan tribes, iii. 232, 
254. 
Ilaj Mohammed A'skia, iv. 41 4. See A'skia. 
Hamda- Allahi, capital of empire of Masina, 
iv. 474 ; v. 469, passim. 
Hamiyen, warm springs of, described, iii. 
572. 
Hamma, son-in-law to Annur, i. 368, 431. 
. Parting with, i. 518. 
Hammada, description of the, i. 135-141. 
Meaning of the term, 140. 
Handara village, iv. 76. 
Hausa, historical notices of, ii. 69. Intel- 
ligence of race and general character, 163. 
Character and importance of language, 
passim. Its relation to the Berber, ii. 
70, n. Nobleman and retinue, v. 309. 
Hatita, chief of the A'zkar, arrival of, i. 179. 
His dealings, 191. Sketch of, on his 
camel, 195. 
Halluf, Kanemma chief, iii. 84, seq. 
Haw-n-adak, an encampment, iv. 348. 
Hay, method of storing, in the Musgu 
country, iii. 176. 
Head-dress of females in Bagirmi, iii, 320. 
In Kano, ii. 109. In Kukawa, 317. In 
Belarigo, 308. Curious ornaments of, 
in Libtako, iv. 292. 
Henderi Siggesi, valley of Kanem, iii. 96. 
Hendi-kiri, camping-ground near, on the 
Niger, v. 147. 
Hereditaments with some African tribes 
descend from the possessor to his sister's 
son, i. 341. Probable foundation of the 
custom, 342. 
Hibiscus esculentus, iii. 28, 421. In gene- 
ral use in Bagirmi, iv. 448. 
Hlllet e' Sheikh Sldi el Miikhtar, a cele- 
brated place of worship, i. 370 ; iv. 
454. 
Hogar, or Hagara, account of the, i. 566. 
Holcus cernuus, cultivated to great extent in 
Bornu, ii. 241, 355. Different varieties 
of, found in different districts, 505. Sor- 
ghum, the general grain in Bornu, 540. 
H. saccharatus, in southern provinces of 
Bornu, in Musgu, iii. 152. The red species 
in Musgu, 175. 
Hombori mountain range figured, iv. 330. 
Described, 333. 
Hombori town, route to, iv. 320, note. 
Horses, indifferent, in A'gades, i. 395. 
Fine in Daraerghu, 542. Bornu horses, 
their excellence, ii. 315; iii. 22. Ex- 
posed to all changes of weather, ii. 452. 
Barbarous Musgu mode of securing seat 
on, 198. Fine race of, in Libtako, iv. 
294. Of Tawarek, on Niger, 345, 347. 
Numerous in Sarayamo, 372, 376. In- 
different in Timbuktu, v. 66. Of the 
Songhay, 208. Value of, in the desert, 
437. 
House, in Kano, plan of, ii. 124; in Ku- 
kawa, plan of, 299 ; in Timbuktu, plan of, 
iv. 451. Houses in A'gades, i. 442, 446. 
Hiilluf, Logon town, famed for sorcery, 
iii. 283. 
Huts, general character of, i. 538. Huts 
called bango, or bongo, ii. 24, 369, 402. 
