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Journal article

The Bakooki in Buganda: identity and assimilation on the peripheries of a Ugandan kingdom

English
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AUC Library
Taylor & Francis
Abingdon
Africa | Eastern Africa
1753-1055

The traditional conception of the Ugandan Kingdom of Buganda as a highly centralised entity has often masked the histories of peripheral communities within the polity. Moreover, where the politics, culture and identity of Buganda's peripheries has been considered, it has tended to be analysed through the sole example of the Kingdom of Bunyoro's “Lost Counties†. This article seeks to redress this lacuna in Buganda historiography through a discussion of identity alteration in the south-western Buganda county of Kooki. It argues that Kooki was politically and culturally distinct from Buganda before its incorporation within the kingdom in 1896 and, consequently, that the assimilation of an indigenous population into Ganda cultural norms within the colonial period represents ethnic change. Furthermore, it posits that the processes of identity alteration by which “Bakooki†became “Baganda†differed significantly as a whole from those which have been documented within the “Lost Counties...

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