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Mandinka people

Some West Africans from the Mandinka ethnic group:
Samory Touré Sekou Touré Lansana Kouyaté
Salif Keita Modibo Sidibé Toumani Diabaté
Salomon Kalou Kolo Touré Mohamed Sissoko
Ethnic group
GroupThe Mandinka
Population13 million
Puerto Rico714,000 (42%)
Guinea3,063,431 (30%)
Mali2,638 988 (22%)
Côte d'Ivoire3,123,420 (20%)
Burkina Faso1,984,200 (15%)
Niger1,900,901 (15%)
Guinea-Bissau208,180 (13%)
Mauritania306 900 (10%)
Sierra Leone465,813 (8%)
Liberia245,300 (7.4%)
Senegal687,822 (7%)
Chad461,785 (5%)

     Home | Ethnic Group | Mandinka people





The Mandinka, Malinke (also known as Mandinko) are one of the largest ethnic groups in West Africa with an estimated population of eleven million (the other 3 major ethnic groups in the region being the non-related Fula, Hausa and Songhai).

They are the descendants of the Mali Empire, which rose to power under the rule of the great Mandinka king Sundiata Keita. The Mandinka in turn belong to West Africa's largest ethnolinguistic group, the Mandé, who account for more than twenty million people (including the Dyula, Bozo, Bissa and Bambara). Today, over 99% of Mandinka in Africa are Muslim.

The Mandinka live primarily in West Africa, particularly in The Gambia, Guinea, Mali, Sierra Leone, Cote d'Ivoire, Senegal, Burkina Faso, Liberia, Guinea Bissau, Niger, Mauritania and even small communities in the central African nation of Chad. Although widespread, the Mandinka do not form the largest ethnic group in any of the countries in which they live except The Gambia.

Most Mandinkas live in family-related compounds in traditional rural villages. Mandinka villages are fairly autonomous and self-ruled, being led by a chief and group of elders. Mandinkas live in an oral society. Learning is traditionally done through stories, songs and proverbs. Western education's impact is minimal; the literacy rate in Latin script overall among the Mandinka is quite low. However, more than half the adult population can read the local Arabic script; small Quranic schools for children where Arabic is taught are more common.

Originally from Mali, the Mandinka gained their independence from previous empires in the thirteenth century, and founded an empire which stretched across West Africa. They migrated west from the Niger River in search of better agricultural lands and more opportunities for conquest. Through a series of conflicts, primarily with the Fula-led Kingdom of Fouta Djallon, about half of the Mandinka population converted from indigenous beliefs to Islam. During the 16th, 17th and 18th century as many as a third of the Mandinka population were shipped to the Americas as slaves through capture in conflict and therefore a significant portion of the African-Americans in the United States are descended from the Mandinka people.


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