Amarar tribe
Amarar (or Amarer) is a bedouin tribe of the Beja people inhabiting the mountainous country on the west side of the Red Sea from Suakin northwards towards Al-Qusayr. Between them and the Nile are the Ababda and Bisharin Beja tribes and to their south dwell the Hadendoa (another Beja subgroup).[1] The country of the Amarar is called the Atbai. Their headquarters are in the Ariab district. The tribe is divided into four great families: (1) Weled Gwilei, (2) Weled Aliab, (3) Weled Kurbab Wagadab, and (4) the Amarar proper of the Ariab district. They claim to be of Koreish blood and to be the descendants of an invading Arab army. Possibly some small bands of Koreish Arabs may have made an inroad and converted some of the Amarar to Islam. Further than this there is little to substantiate their claim.[2] The Amarar are said to speak the purest form of the Beja language.[3]
References
- Burckhardt, John Lewis (1819). Travels in Nubia: by the late John Lewis Burckhardt. Association for Promoting the Discovery of the Interior Parts of Africa. Retrieved 24 November 2016.
- One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Amarar". Encyclopædia Britannica. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 781. This cites:
- Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, edited by Count Gleichen (London, 1905)
- Sir F. R. Wingate, Mahdism and the Egyptian Sudan (London, 1891)
- A. H. Keane, Ethnology of Egyptian Sudan (London, 1884).
- Institute, International African (2017-09-27). Practical Orthography of African Languages: Bound with: Orthographe Pratique des Langues Africaines; The Distribution of the Semitic and Cushitic Languages of Africa; The Distribution of the Nilotic and Nilo-Hamitic Languages of Africa; and Linguistic Analyses. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-60137-5.