| Buganda Clans and their Totems - Ngeye |
When Kintu overthrew Bemba, he could not be inaugurated king without a Muganda wife as it was required by the law of the land. He went to Kiwumu, Bumpenje in Busiro at the home of Bakazirwendo Ssemandwa to seek a hand in marriage to his beautiful daughter Nnambi Nantuttululu. The official duties of this clan are to supply the Kabaka with a chief butler (Ddumba) and the man in charge of the king’s drinking water (Kalinda). Sadly, Kalinda was among those put to death when the king died. They supplied the king with the royal potter (Sseddagala) who made the king’s cooking-pots. ***Roscoe under the Ngeye clan page 143 writes clearly on how Ssedagala picked infant Kimera from a clay pit and handed him to Mugema whose wife nursed and fed him till he grew up but Nsimbi in his book “Amannya Amaganda page 274 writes that Kimera was picked from a clay pit by son of Mulegeya called Katumba who brought him up. Katumba was given the coveted title Mugema after Kimera became kabaka of Buganda. Popular names for women: There are about fifteen different kinds of colobus monkeys in Africa but in Uganda only a few races occur. The common ones include Angola pied colobus, Geoffroy’s pied colobus and Guereza colobus. The Guereza colobus is typically black and white with long and thick fur that have made it a target of hunters. The original people who inhabited the land Muwawa now known as Buganda were called “Abalasangeye,” which translates to colobus hunters which means it has been hunted for hundreds of years. The female Guereza colobus head and body measure 48-65cm while the male is 54-75cm. The tail is 65-90cm in both sexes and can weigh up to 23kg. Their diet mainly consists of leaves. These colobus monkeys are very territorial and live in family groups headed by a dominant male fiercely intolerant to intruding males. Although they are not endangered, their habitat is being enchroached upon by man at an alarming rate. Gestation: |
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Kabaka of Buganda
