Mande Languages

Mande (or Manding) is the name of a group of languages which are spoken in several countries in West Africa, including Mandinka, Soninke, and Bambara. The family has over one million speakers, chiefly in Gambia, Senegal and Guinea Bissau. This linguistic group is part of the Niger-Congo family. Though, there is still a debate as to whether it actually belongs in the Nilo-Saharan language family. The group was first recognized in 1854 by Koelle in his Polyglotta Africana. He mentioned 13 languages under the heading North-Western High-Sudan Family, or Mandga Family of Languages. In 1901 Maurice Delafosse made a distinction of two groups in his Essai de manuel pratique de la langue mand ou mandingue. He speaks of a northern group mand-tan and a southern group mand-fu. This distinction was basically done only because the languages in the north use the expression tan for ten whereas the southern group use fu. In 1924 L. Tauxier notes that this distinction is not well founded and there is at least a third subgroup he called mand-bu. It is not until 1950 when A. Prost supports this view and gives further details. In 1958 Welmers publishes an article The Mande Languages where he divides the languages into three subgroups - North-West, South and East. His conclusion was based on lexicostatistic research. Greenberg follows this distinction 1963 in The Languages of Africa. Long (1971) and G. Galtier (1980) follow the distinction into three groups but with notable differences.
   
The Southern Group (Cte d'Ivoire)
  • Dan | Yacouba |
  • Gban | Gagou |
  • Gouro | Gouro |
  • Mwan | Mona |
  • Ngain | Ngain (Gben)|
  • Toura | Toura |
  • Wan | Ouan |
  • Yaour | Yaour |
Mande languages are spoken in Members of this language family were responsible for the three major empires of West Africa: Ghana, Mali, and Songhay.

See also

References

  • Delafosse, Maurice (1901) Essai de manuel pratique de la langue mand ou mandingue. Paris : Leroux. 304 p.
  • Delafosse, Maurice (1904) Vocabulaires comparatifs de plus de soixante langues ou dialectes parls la Cte d'Ivoire et dans les rgions limitrophes, avec des notes linguistiques et ethnologiques. Paris : Leroux. 285 p.
  • Nazam HALAOUI, Kalilou TERA, Monique TRABI (1983) Atlas des langues mand-sud de Cte d'Ivoire. Abidjan : ACCT-ILA.

 

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