682 
INDEX. 
Kagza, well of, iv. 1 6. 
Kakali village, iii. 194. 
Kakaru town, v. 653. 
Kala, westernmost town of territory of Lo- 
gon, iii. 281. 
Kala, considerable Bambara town, former 
importance, iv. 589 ; v. 489. 
Kalala Tebu village, mode of preparing salt 
at, V. 427. 
Kalemri Bornu village, in its state of wel- 
fare, ii. 198. Half deserted, v. 384. 
Kalikagori village, iii. 29. 
Kaliluwa village, near Kukawa, first arrival 
at, ii. 242. Encampment in, on setting 
out for Timbuktu, iv. 12. 
Kaliluwa Gremari village, school at, ii. 54 3. 
Kalliyul town, on the valley of Fogha, no- 
tice of bravery of inhabitants, iv. 229 ; 
V. 315. 
Kalowa village described, ii. 206. 
Kambasa, walled town of Kebbi, iv. 205, 
206. Specimens of civil strife, ib. 
Kammane town of Zanfara and inhabitants, 
v. 352. 
Kanem, the original portion of the Bor. 
nu Empire, ii. 262, 633. Power of, 636. 
When given up to the Bulala, 641. 
Reconquered, 645. Most important in- 
digenous tribes of, ii. 274. General 
character of, iii. 40. Bornu white shirts 
the medium of commerce in, 75. Ac- 
count of the eastern parts of, 481. 
Imam Ahmed's account of, iii, 498. 
Kanembu, their superior appearance in com- 
parison with the Kanuri, v. 413. Settled 
on shores of the Tsad, ii. 329. Cattle- 
breeders, ii. 332. Their original native 
attire, 330. Manner of protecting their 
heads from rain, 526. Huts figured, v. 4 1 1 . 
Kano and its inhabitants, ii. 97. Ground 
plan of town, 107. Quarters of, 121. 
History of, 116, 562. Not identical with 
Ghana, 117. Population, 124. Com- 
merce, 125. Revenues and administra- 
tion of the province, 143. Chief places 
in the province, 558. Second residence 
in, V. 358. Climate unfavourable to Eu- 
ropeans, 360. 
Kano to A'lamay, route by way of Khadeja, 
ii. 195, note. 
Kanta, fights the King of Bornu, ii. 645. 
dynasty of, in Kebbi, iv. 213. Van- 
quishes the King of Songhay, 603. 
Kanuri, identical with Bornawi, origin of 
name [changed by the Mandingoes into 
the form Kanin-k6]. Characteristics of, ii. 
164. Fine specimens of Kanuri females, 
ii. 522. 
Kany^nni, important market-place of Wan- 
garawa noticed, iv. 558. 
Karammia trees, ii. 12. 
Karawa, former capital of Mandara, ii. 654. 
Karba village, ii. 353. 
Kardi, walled town of Kebbi, corn-maga- 
zine, iv. 2] 2. 
Kare town and vicinity, v. 518. 
Kargha, or Karka, the S.E. corner of the 
Tsad, ii. 200; iii. 514, 534. 
Karglmawa village, ii. 190. 
Kari, or Konna, important town, on Upper 
Niger, v. 466. 
Kasambara, chief place of Baghena, v. 500. 
Kasanni hamlet and vicinity, v. 280. 
Kashlmma town, ii. 222. 
Kaso village, iv. 89. 
Kasr Khafaji'Aamer, el gharbi and e' sherki, 
remarkable specimens of ruins of Byzan- 
tine and middle-age architecture, i. 106, 
108. 
Kasr Dawan, remarkable specimen of a 
stronghold of Arab chieftain, i. 73. 
Kasr Doga, Roman sepulchre of immense 
size in tlie Tarhona, i. 70. 
Kasr el Jahaliyeh, Mohammedan* legends 
concerning, i. 18. 
Kasr el Jebel, Turkish fortress of, i. 24. 
Excursion from, 25 — 32. 
Kasr Jefara and its vicinity, i. 84. 
Kasr Ghurian, Turkish fortress of, i. 43, 
49. 
Katsena, town of, ii. 43. More healthy 
than Kano, ii. 81. History and de- 
scription of, 69. Kings of, 73. Sur- 
rounding country, 84. Quarters of the 
town, 555. Chief places in the province, 
557. Return to, iv, 95. Interview with 
the governor, 97. Amount of tribute 
paid by, iv. 127. 
Katakirri, edible bulbous root, ii. 387. 
Katuru, walled town of Zanfara, iv. 128. 
Kauye-n-Salakh, magnificent tulip-tree near, 
ii. 9. 
Kawa great chief of Awelimmid in former 
times, iv. 628. 
Kawa village, ii. 335. 
Kawo, the characteristic weed of Negro- 
land. See Asclepias gigantea. 
Kebbi, province of, iv. 204. Form of name, 
iv. 163, note. Partition of, between S6- 
koto and Gando, 533. Fertile but swampy 
valleys, v. 323. Former importance of, 
V. 319. Dynasty of Kanta, iv. 213, 603. 
Number of walled towns in, 204. 
Kechiduniya village, iv. 40. 
Keghamma, former dignity in Bornu, ii. 
467. 
Keghamma, in Kanem, iii. 101. 
Kelara antelope, notice of, ii. 325. 
Kel, meaning of the word, i. 237, 339. 
Kel e' Suk tribe, whence named, v. 181. 
