
A lively exploration that places the peoples of East Africa at the heart of geographic study, this work invites listeners to travel beyond maps and into the daily lives of the region’s most striking communities. Written with the aim of turning bland memorisation into vivid curiosity, it blends scientific observation with a storyteller’s eye, offering a fresh perspective on the cultures that shaped the landscape under British rule.
The narration moves from the fierce, lion‑skinned warriors of the Maasai to the intimate customs of the Kikuyu and the Baganda, weaving together their social structures, oral legends, and spiritual beliefs. It also introduces the diminutive forest pygmies of Uganda, whose hunting techniques and simple material world stand in stark contrast to the towering pastoral groups of the Horn. Listeners will hear colorful descriptions of cattle herding, communal rituals, and the rich tapestry of languages that echo across savannas and riverbanks, all presented with the careful detail of an early twentieth‑century anthropologist.
Language
en
Duration
~55 minutes (53K characters)
Series
Native races of the British Empire, book 3
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United Kingdom: Oxford University Press, 1920.
Credits
The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2022-02-26
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1886–1962
A British-born anthropologist who built much of his career at Chicago’s Field Museum, he is remembered for wide-ranging studies of African societies and for an early, influential history of tattooing. His work also grew out of field expeditions, including a 1929–1930 research trip in West Africa.
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by Wilfrid D. (Wilfrid Dyson) Hambly

by C. W. (Charles William) Hobley