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Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia
Britannica article "
Baggāra". The
Baggāra (Arabic: البَقَّارَة, romanized: al baqqāra "heifer herder"), also...
- Al-
Baggara or
Bakara (Arabic: البقّارة (البكّارة), al-Baqqārah or al-Bakkārah) is an Arab
tribe of the
Euphrates tribes spread widely between Syria, Jordan...
-
tribe of the
nomadic Baggara people predominantly in Sudan's
Darfur region and Chad. The
Rizeigat belong to the
greater Baggara Arabs fraternity of Darfur...
- The term "Abbala" is
mostly used in
Sudan to
distinguish them from the
Baggara, a
grouping of Arab
ethnicities who herd cattle. Although, the two groupings...
-
amongst his deputies,
Abdallahi ibn Muhammad, with the help
primarily of the
Baggara of
western Sudan,
overcame the
opposition of the
others and
emerged as...
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Baggara cattle are an
autochthonous Sudanese breed part of the
shorthorned Zebu
group of
breeds of
eastern Africa.
Baggara cattle are
smaller and thinner...
- Hawazma, part of Sudan's
Baggara tribe, are
cattle herders who roam the area from the
southern parts of
North Kurdufan to the
southern borders of South...
- and
Rashaida who
speak Hejazi Arabic. In addition, Arab
tribes like the
Baggara and
other Darfurians, both who
speak Chadian Arabic.
Sudanese Arabs of...
- by
native administration leaders:
either provide security for the Arab
Baggara communities of
South Darfur and
South Kordofan, or
these communities would...
- Moreover, the
Baggara Arabs and
Abbala in
Darfur and Chad also
claim a
Juhani background,
though there is some
evidence that the
Baggara Arabs and Abbala...