Jackson, M. 1987. The migration of a name: reflections on Alexander in Africa. Cultural anthropology 2(2). 235-254.
@article{59486,
author = {Jackson, M.},
journal = {Cultural anthropology},
number = {2},
pages = {235-254},
title = {The migration of a name: reflections on Alexander in Africa},
volume = {2},
year = {1987},
inlg = {English [eng]},
jfmnote = {Mostly about Kuranko oral traditions and a mythical figure Yilkanani, whose name derives from Dhul-Quarnein, Arabic for Alexander the Great. Thus 'the Macedonian world-conqueror who referred his origins to a North African god, centuries later figures as an ancestor of a ruling lineage in a remote West African society. Ironically, this transmigration of Alexander's name has taken place as a result of Islam – a faith that the Marah rulers steadfastly repudiated for centuries, and a faith that did not even exist in Alexander's time' (p. 240).},
keywords = {;naf;waf;srl;ant;ltr;u.712;x.211;},
lgcode = {Kuranko [knk] (autotranslated from Maho's coding system)},
macro_area = {Africa},
src = {eballiso2009}
}
| Name in source | Glottolog languoid |
|---|---|
| Kuranko (autotranslated from Maho's coding system)] |