'Nilotic people' or 'Nilotes', in its contemporary usage, refers to some
ethnic groups mainly in
southern Sudan,
Uganda,
Kenya, and northern
Tanzania, who speak
Nilotic languages, a large sub-group of
Nilo-Saharan languages. These include the
Kalenjin,
Luo,
Ateker,
Dinka,
Nuer and the
Maa-speaking peoples – all which are clusters of several ethnic groups.
["Nilotic", The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.]
The terms Nilotic and Nilotes were previously used as racial classifications, based on now widely discarded perceptions.
[1]
The terms are now foremost used to distinguish "Nilotic people" from their ethnic neighbours (mainly
Bantu speaking people), based on
ethnolinguistic affiliation.
[2]
Etymologically, the terms Nilotic and Nilote (also spelled Nilot) derive from the Nile Valley, specifically the
Upper Nile and its tributaries, where most Sudanese Nilotic speaking people live.
Linguistic divisions
Main articles: Nilotic languages
Linguistically, Nilotic people are divided into three sub-groups:
★
Eastern Nilotic
★
Southern Nilotic
★
Western Nilotic
Ethnic divisions
Nilotic people constitute a large part of the population of
Southern Sudan. The largest of the Sudanese Nilotic people are the
Dinka, which includes as many as twenty-five ethnic groups. The next largest group are the
Nuer, followed by the
Shilluk.
[3]
The Nilotic people in Uganda include the
Luo group (
Acholi,
Alur and
Jopadhola), the
Ateker (
Iteso and
Karamojong), and the
Lango and
Kumam (who are linguistically affiliated with the Luo, but are often culturally grouped with the Ateker).
In Kenya, the Nilotes are often categorised in three subgroups:
★ The Plain Nilotes, who speak
Maa languages: The
Maasai,
Samburu and
Turkana
★ The River lake Nilotes: The
Joluo, which is part of the larger
Luo group
★ The Highland Nilotic or
Kalenjin, which includes several smaller groups:
Elgeyo,
Keiyo,
Kipsigis,
Marakwet,
Nandi,
Pokot,
Sabaot,
Terik, and
Tugen
References
1. The Forging of Races Cambridge University Press THE FORGING OF RACES - by Colin Kidd Excerpt
2. Encyclopædia Britannica Article: Nilot
3. Helen Chapin Metz, ed. ''Sudan: A Country Study.'' Washington: GPO for the Library of Congress, 1991.