Ethnos

Peoples of the World

Chewa

Malawi derives its name from the Maravi, a Bantu people who came from the southern Congo about 600 years ago. On reaching the area north of Lake Malawi, the Maravi divided. One branch, the ancestors of the present-day Chewas, moved south to the west bank of the lake. The other, the ancestors of the Nyanjas, moved down the east bank to the southern part of the country. By AD 1500, the two divisions of the tribe had established a kingdom stretching from north of the present-day city of Nkhotakota to the Zambezi River in the south, and from Lake Malawi in the east, to the Luangwa River in Zambia in the west.

Migrations and tribal conflicts precluded the formation of a cohesive Malawian society until the turn of the 20th century. In more recent years, ethnic and tribal distinctions have diminished. Regional distinctions and rivalries, however, persist. Despite some clear differences, no significant friction currently exists between tribal groups, and the concept of a Malawian nationality has begun to take hold. Predominantly a rural people, Malawians are generally conservative and traditionally nonviolent.

The Chewas constitute 90% of the population of the central region; the Nyanja tribe predominates in the south and the Tumbuka in the north. In addition, significant numbers of the Tongas live in the north; Ngonis--an offshoot of the Zulus who came from South Africa in the early 1800s--live in the lower northern and lower central regions; and the Yao, who are mostly Muslim, predominate in the Southern Region of the country and live in a wide band from Blantyre and Zomba north to Lake Malawi and east to the border with Mozambique. ***

Acholi
Afar
Akan
Amhara
Azande
Baganda
Bakongo
Bambara
Baoule/Baule
Basotho
Batswana
Bedouin
Berbers
Chewa
Ewe
Falasha
Fang
Fon
Fula/Fulani
Ga
Herero
Hutu
Ibibio
Ibo
Ijaw
Jola
Kabre/Kabye
Kanuri
KhoiKhoi
Kikuyu
Kpelle
Krous/Kru
Luba
Luo
Malinke
Mande
Mandinka
Mbuti
Mossi
Ndebele
Nyakyusa
Ogoni
Oromo
Ovambo
Serer
Shona
Somali
Songhai
Soninke
Swazi
Tiv
Tsonga
Tuareg
Tutsi
Venda
Wolof
Xhosa
Yoruba
Zulu



Chewa (Heritage Library of African Peoples Central Africa)
by: John Peffer-Engels, Ola Oloidi
01 September, 1996

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

Catholics, peasants and Chewa resistance in Nyasaland, 1889-1939
by: Ian Linden
1974

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

Women, Presbyterianism and Patriarchy: Religious Experience of Chewa Women in Central Malawi (Kachere Monograph,)
by: Isabel Apawo Phiri
01 April, 2001

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

Chewa Medical Botany: A Study of Herbalism in Southern Mafawi (The Herbalist Tradition - Medicinal Plants of Malawi , Part 1&2)
by: Brian Morris, Jerome D. Msonthi
01 August, 1997

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

The structure of shifting agriculture in two Chewa villages (University of Maryland. Agricultural Experiment Station. Miscellaneous publication 629)
by: Dean Fanning Tuthill
1968

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

Focus and Phrasing in Chichewa Phonology (Outstanding Dissertations in Linguistics, Vol 3)
by: Jonni M. Kanerva
01 January, 1990

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

The history of the Chewa (Mbiri ya Achewa) (Studien zur Kulturkunde)
by: Samuel Josia Ntara
1973

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

The Chewa of Zomba District and their interaction with the 'Mangochi' Yao from 1850 to 1900
by: Kings Mbacazwa Phiri
1978

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

The Syntax of Chichewa (Cambridge Syntax Guides)
by: Sam Mchombo, J. Bresnan, D. Lightfoot, I. Roberts, N. V. Smith, N. Vincent
14 October, 2004

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

Comparative Discourse Analysis and the Translation of Psalm 22 in Chichewa, a Bantu Language of South-Central Africa (Studies in the Bible and Early)
by: Ernst R. Wendland
01 June, 1993

*More Information/Reader Reviews

*Check prices and availability in:
UK, Canada, France, Germany or Japan

Browse ALL Chewa Materials

The Magic of Africa

Now available!

Browse
African:

Music
Medicine
Spirituality
History
Biography
Photography
Art
Cooking
Ethnography
Literature
Fiction
Children's Books
Poetry
Drama



***This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Demographics_of_Malawi"


Contact Ethnos
almudo.com