Catalogue de recherche multilingue

MavicaNET - Catalogue de recherche multilingue

 
MavicaNet Lite - Light version



Project of



with support
Soil Science Faculty MSU



Rambler's Top100
Rambler's Top100
Catalogue

Catalogue

Aide

Recherche Aide

La voie vers la racine du catalogue

Par pays et régions Afrique Burundi  ...

La voie vers la racine du catalogue

Culture Sciences Sciences historiques Histoire régionale Histoire d'Afrique  ...

Catégorie courante

Histoire: Burundi


Sites

Sites


Aide Catégories
 
Sites

Sites

Aide Filtres
Marquer tous les sites

Histoire: Burundi

Sites au total: 6


Catégories

Catégories


AideTriage

Burundi History - English
URL: http://www.nationbynation.com/Burundi/History1.html

European exploration of Burundi began in 1858. In 1899 Burundi was incorporated into German East Africa. Following World War I the League of Nations award the Burundi territory to Belgium.

[ eng ]


Burundi -- History - English
URL: http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/NEH/br-hist.html

Timeline.

[ eng ]


Burundi: History - English
URL: http://www.rnw.nl/humanrights/html/historyburundi.html

The Twa or Pygmy were the first inhabitants of what is known today as Burundi. Then came the Hutus, a Bantu tribe, who were followed in the 16th century by the Tutsi.

[ eng ]


Rwanda -- History - English
URL: http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/NEH/rw-hist.html

Pre-Colonial History Twa, Hutu and Tutsi are the three peoples who inhabit Rwanda. The Twa, who number less than 1% percent of the population and are pygmies. They preferred living in the forests where they lived by hunting and gathering. The Twa gave way when the Hutu arrived in the region and moved deeper into the forests.

[ eng ]


An MBendi Profile: Burundi - Overview - English
URL: http://www.mbendi.co.za/land/af/bu/p0005.htm

Belgium occupied Ruanda-Urundi (as the League of Nations mandated territory encompassing both Rwanda and Burundi was named) in 1916.

[ eng ]


Historical Precursors to the Ethnic Conflict in Burundi -- Before Independence - English
URL: http://www.earlham.edu/~pols/globalprobs/burundi/description.html

A pygmoid group called the Twa are thought to be Burundi's first inhabitants, and they comprise about 1% of the population today. The Hutu finished migrating to Burundi by the 11th century, and in the 14th century the Tutsi invaded and dominated under successive Tutsi mwamis, or kings.

[ eng ]


 
Aide Triage Aide Filtres
Software powered by Cache
Recherche
Login pour les rédacteurs
Message pour le rédacteur
Forums
Options
Aide
A propos de nous