Online Encyclopedia

AFARS (DANAK;L)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 299 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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AFARS (DANAK;L)  , a tribe of
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African "
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Arabs " of Hamitic stock . They occupy the arid coast-lands between Abyssinia and the sea . They claim to be Arabs, but are more akin to the Galla and Somali . The tribe is roughly divisible into a pastoral and a coast-dwelling
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group . Their religion is chiefly fetich and tree-worship; many, nominally, profess Mahommedanism . They are distinguished by narrow straight noses, thin lips and small pointed chins; their cheekbones are not prominent . They are more scantily clothed than the Abyssinians or Galla, wearing, generally, nothing but a
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waist-
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cloth . Their
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women, when quite young, are
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pretty and graceful . Their huts are often tastefully decorated, the floors being spread with yellow mats, embroidered with red and
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violet designs . The Afars are divided into many sub-tribes, each having an hereditary sultan, whose power is, however, limited . They are desperate fighters and in 1875 successfully resisted an attempt to bring them under
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Egyptian
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rule . In 1883–1888, however, their most important sultan concluded
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treaties placing his country under
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Italian
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protection .

The Afar region is now partly under Abyssinian and partly under Italian authority . The Afars are also found in considerable

numbers in French
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Somaliland . They have a saying " Guns are only useful to frighten cowards." They were formerly redoubtable pirates, but the descendants of these corsairs are now fishermen, and are the only sailors in the Red Sea who hunt the
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dugong . See Fr . Scazamucci and E . H . Giglioli, Notizie sui Danakil (1884) ; P . Paulitschke, Ethnographie Nordost-Afrikas (2 vols., Berlin, 1893-'896), and Die geographische Erforschung der Addl-Lander and Hardrs in Ost-Afrika (
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Leipzig, 1884) .

End of Article: AFARS (DANAK;L)
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