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  2. Kalenjin people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalenjin_people

    Contemporary Kalenjin culture is a product of its heritage, the suite of cultural adoptions of the British colonial period and modern Kenyan identity from which it borrows and adds to. Language. The Kalenjin speak Kalenjin languages as mother tongues. The language grouping belongs to the Nilotic family.

  3. History of the Kalenjin people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Kalenjin_people

    The Kalenjin people are an ethnolinguistic group indigenous to East Africa, with a presence, as dated by archaeology and linguistics, that goes back many centuries. Their history is therefore deeply interwoven with those of their neighboring communities as well as with the histories of Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, South Sudan, and Ethiopia .

  4. Kalenjin culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalenjin_culture

    Norms & lifestyle. Maintaining peace and amity, especially between relations, is particularly important for the Kalenjin and ranks high on their scale of values. This type of peaceful relationship is known as Tiliet and is rooted in ancient Kalenjin culture. It is the root word of Tilionutik a person's wider relationship circle.

  5. Kamuratanet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kamuratanet

    Kamuratanet. Kamuratanet is a Kalenjin traditional process of teaching its members appropriate behavior, knowledge, skills, attitudes, virtues, religion and moral standards. Kamuratanet provides parameters that are used to determine what is acceptable and normal and what is not acceptable, and therefore abnormal.

  6. Traditional Kalenjin society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Kalenjin_society

    Traditional Kalenjin society. Traditional Kalenjin society is the way of life that existed among the Kalenjin -speaking people prior to the advent of the colonial period in Kenya and after the decline of the Chemwal, Lumbwa and other Kalenjin communities in the late 1700s and early 1800s. [1]

  7. Kalenjin mythology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalenjin_mythology

    The Asisian religion superseded older Kalenjin mythologies following contact with the Southern Cushities. Three major religious pillars (the sun, thunder and lightning, and living spirits) were explained to have a bearing on Kalenjin religious beliefs. [3] All these pillars are subsumed within Kalenjin fears and psychologies controlled by ...

  8. Kalenjin languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalenjin_languages

    The Kalenjin languages are a family of a dozen Southern Nilotic languages spoken in Kenya, eastern Uganda and northern Tanzania. The term Kalenjin comes from an expression meaning 'I say (to you)' or 'I have told you' (present participle tense). Kalenjin in this broad linguistic sense should not be confused with Kalenjin as a term for the ...

  9. Marakwet people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marakwet_people

    The Marakwet and Pokot tribes are both sub-groups of the larger Kalenjin. War started as a result of livestock theft , and the tribes have since gone through periods of war and peace. War raged between some of the Marakwet clans, e.g. Kapkau and Karel from the valley, because of a land dispute and this has resulted in a loss of lives (11 people ...