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  2. Guinean Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guinean_Americans

    The Guinean community participates in Muslim and Christian festivals and "informal social events throughout the year". The Guineans have diverses associations in the USA, which are located in states such as New York, Illinois, Texas and Georgia, among others. These associations finance health care of the Guineans, among other things.

  3. Fula Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fula_Americans

    Fula Americans, Fulani Americans or Fulbe Americans are Americans of Fula (Fulani, Fulbe) descent. The first Fulani people who were forcibly expatriated to United States from the slave trade came from several parts of West and Central Africa. Many Fulbe came of places as Guinea, Senegal, Guinea-Bissau, Sierra Leone, Nigeria and Cameroon. Recent ...

  4. Fula people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fula_people

    The Fula, Fulani, or Fulɓe people [a] are an ethnic group in Sahara, Sahel and West Africa, widely dispersed across the region. [22] Inhabiting many countries, they live mainly in West Africa and northern parts of Central Africa, South Sudan, Darfur, and regions near the Red Sea coast in Sudan. The approximate number of Fula people is unknown ...

  5. List of Hopewell sites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hopewell_sites

    Located at the confluence of the Muskingum and Ohio rivers in Washington County, Ohio, it has been covered by development of the modern-day city of Marietta. The site once consisted of at least four large platform mounds, three walled enclosures, and a large burial mound, now enclosed and preserved in the Mound Cemetery .

  6. Gbagyi people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gbagyi_people

    The Gbagyi or Gbari (plural - Agbagyi/Agbari) [1] are an ethnic group found predominantly in Central Nigeria with an estimated population of 12 million spread in four states, including Abuja, and located in thirty local government areas. [2] It is also the name of their language. Members of this ethnic group speak two dialects.

  7. Dambazawa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dambazawa

    The origin of the Dambazawa is as unclear as that of the Fulani race itself, but sources within the clan believe it to be of a Dayebe Fulani group. It was at the time of Sundiata Keita (c. 1217–1255 A.D.) the Fulbe of that era began adopting surnames that conformed to their socioeconomic groups.

  8. Fula jihads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fula_jihads

    The Futa Jallon, located mainly in present-day Guinea, was a major state with a written constitution and ruling alternance between the 2 main parties: the Soriya and the Alphaya. The Futa Jallon state was born in 1735 when Fulani Muslims decided to rise against the non-Muslim indigenous groups and Djalonke rulers to create a confederation of ...

  9. Abdul Rahman Ibrahima Sori - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Rahman_Ibrahima_Sori

    Abdul Rahman Ibrahima was a Torodbe Fulani Muslim prince born in 1762, [3] in Timbuktu, [4] the son of Ibrahima Sori and a Moorish wife. [5] When he was aged five, his father removed the family from Timbuktu to Timbo, [4] now located in Guinea, and there in 1776 Ibrahima consolidated the Islamic confederation of Fouta Djallon, with Timbo as its capital, eventually succeeding as its Almami.