Turu people (Tanzania)

Tυrυ
PersonMυnyatυrυ, Mυrιmi
PeopleWanyatυrυ, Arιmi
LanguageKιnyatυrυ, Kιrιmi
CountryUnyatυrυ, Urιmi
Nyaturu warrior.

The Turu (Arimi, Wanyaturu) are an ethnic and linguistic group based in the Singida Region of north-central Tanzania who speak Bantu language Kinyaturu.[1] In 1993, the Turu population was estimated to number 556,000.[2] The current population of the Turu is now over 1,000,000. They speak the Turu language.[3]

Arimi (the people of Rimi) is the original endonym.[citation needed] The word Arimi itself literally means farmers. Wanyaturu (the people of Nyaturu) is replacing it, reflecting Swahili contact; indeed, the prefix wa- is Swahili rather than the Turu a-.

  1. ^ Schneider, Harold K. (July 1966). "Turu Ecology: Habitat, Mode of Production, and Society". Africa. 36 (3): 254–268. doi:10.2307/1157682. ISSN 1750-0184. JSTOR 1157682. S2CID 146539985.
  2. ^ "Ethnologue report for Tanzania". Ethnologue. Archived from the original on 2005-05-04. Retrieved 2023-10-09.
  3. ^ "Nyaturu in Tanzania". Joshua Project.

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