Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Kunda or Akunda people are an ethnic group that hails from Mambwe District of Eastern Province, Zambia of Zambia.They number approximately at 250,000 people. They speak Chikunda, a Bantu language closely related to Bisa and Nsenga.
Mambwe District [1] is a district of Zambia, located in Eastern Province. Mambwe District inhabits the Luangwa Valley between the 13th and 14th parallel of south latitude. The Kunda name for this area is "Malambo". The land is bound on the west by the Luangwa River, on the south by the Lusangazi River, and on the north by the Chisitu River.
Zambia has many indigenous tribes spread across its ten provinces. [ 1 ] [ failed verification ] This is an incomplete list of these tribes arranged in alphabetical order: Ambo
Kunda people, a Bantu-speaking ethnic group in Mozambique, Zambia, and Zimbabwe; Kunda culture, an archaeological culture classification, first discovered near Kunda, Estonia; Touré Kunda, a Senegalese band; Kunda, one of many names of a Temple tank, a well or reservoir built as part of Indian temple complexes
Kunda people; L. Lala people; Lamba people (Zambia) Lambya people; Lenje people; List of Mbunda Chiefs in Zambia; Lozi people; Lukanga Twa; Lunda people;
The name chikunda or Kunda was mistakenly applied at that time as an ethnic designation applied to all these people from the Zambezi valley of what is now the Zambezia province of Mozambique and parts of Zambia who had migrated into the Lower Shire valley, regardless of whether they came from chikunda families or not, and many did not.
This is a list of deceased historical figures (or sub-lists of them) in Zambia and its antecedent territories, and combines Zambians, Africans and non-Zambians including British people and Northern Rhodesians. [citation needed]
Kunda (Chikunda) is a Bantu language of Zimbabwe, with a some thousands of speakers in Zambia and Mozambique. There is an extinct pidgin Chikunda once used for trade. [ 2 ]