Loma people explained

Loma people should not be confused with Lom people.

Group:Loma
Population:309,000
Region1: Guinea
Pop1:144,000 [1]
Region2: Liberia
Pop2:165,000 [2]
Langs:Loma, French, English
Rels:Traditional, Christianity, Islam
Related:Mende people, Kpelle people, Kissi people, Mano people, Vai people, Kono people, Gbandi people

The Loma people, sometimes called Loghoma, Looma, Lorma or Toma, are a West African ethnic group living primarily in mountainous, sparsely populated regions near the border between Guinea and Liberia.[3] [4] Their population was estimated at 330,000 in the two countries in 2010.[5] They are closely related to the Mende people.[4]

The Loma speak a language in the Southwestern branch of the Mande languages, belonging to the Niger-Congo family of languages. The language is similar to the Kpelle, Mende, Vai, and Bandi languages.[3] The Loma refer to their language as Löömàgòòi pronounced as /lɔːmàɡòːi/ or Löghömàgòòi pronounced as /lɔɣɔmàɡòːi/).[3] The Loma people, led by Wido Zobo and assisted by a Loma weaver named Moriba, developed a writing script for their language in the 1930s.[5] This writing script contains at least 185 characters.[6]

The Mandinka, Koniaka, and Kissi refer to the Loma as Toma.[1] [3] Loma refer to themselves as Löömàgìtì (pronounced as /lɔːmàɡìtì/, or Löghömagiti pronounced as /lɔɣɔmaɡiti/ in Guinea).[3] They have retained their Traditional Religion, and resisted the Islamic jihads. The Loma people called the religious conflict with Mandinka people as a historic 'rolling war'.[7]

The Loma people are notable for their large wooden masks that merge syncretic animal and human motifs. These masks have been a part of their Poro secret rites of passage. The largest masks are about six feet high, contain feather decorations and believed by Loma to have forest spirits.[8]

The Loma people farm rice, but in shifting farms. They are exogamous people, with patrilineal social organization in matters related to inheritance, succession and lineage affiliations with one-marriage rule. Joint families, or virilocal communities are common, wherein families of brothers settle close to each other.[9]

The Loma people are also referred to as Buzi, Buzzi, Logoma, Toale, Toali, Toa, or Tooma.[10]

Loma patronyms

Loma surnames
  • Bamavogui
  • Bassingui
  • Bavogui (Gbavogui)
  • Béavogui
  • Billivogui
  • Bolivogui
  • Dopagui
  • Dopavogui
  • Falivogui
  • Foniwogui
  • Grovogui
  • Guilavogui
  • Goépogui
  • Golovogui
  • Gouavogui
  • Honivogui
  • Inapogui
  • Kalivogui
  • Kebawogui
  • Koévogui
  • Koivogui
  • Koropogui
  • Kovogui
  • Kovoigui
  • Koyavogui
  • Kpakpavogui
  • Lenogui
  • Monpagui
  • Nikavogui
  • Oivogui
  • Onépogui
  • Onipogui
  • Onivogui
  • Pamavogui
  • Papavogui
  • Poévogui
  • Povogui
  • Sakouvogui
  • Sakovogui
  • Sampogui
  • Savogui
  • Sedepogui
  • Sevogui
  • Sivogui
  • Soivogui
  • Solopogui
  • Solovogui
  • Somopogui
  • Soropogui
  • Sorovogui
  • Sovogui
  • Sovoïgui
  • Sowogui
  • Sympogui (Simpogui)
  • Toulouvogui
  • Toupouvogui
  • Zoumanigui

Notable Loma people

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Toma . Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Sixteenth edition . 2009 . SIL International. M. Paul . Lewis.
  2. Web site: Loma . Ethnologue: Languages of the World, Sixteenth edition . 2009 . SIL International. M. Paul . Lewis.
  3. http://anthropology.si.edu/leopold/pubs/leopold_1991_chapter2.htm . Leopold . Robert Selig . Prescriptive Alliance and Ritual Collaboration in Loma Society . 1991 . 2 . Indiana University . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110716235904/http://anthropology.si.edu/leopold/pubs/leopold_1991_chapter2.htm . 2011-07-16 .
  4. Book: Anthony Appiah. Henry Louis Gates. Encyclopedia of Africa. 2010. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-533770-9. 84.
  5. Book: Frank Sherman. Liberia: The Land, Its People, History and Culture. 2010. New Africa Press. 978-9987-16-025-9. 211–212.
  6. Book: Anthony Appiah. Henry Louis Gates. Encyclopedia of Africa. 2010. Oxford University Press. 978-0-19-533770-9. 552.
  7. Christian K. Højbjerg (2010), Victims And Heroes: Manding Historical Imagination In A Conflict-Ridden Border Region (Liberia-Guinea), in The Powerful Presence of the Past, Brill Academic,, pages 273-294
  8. Book: Ayodeji Olukoju. Culture and Customs of Liberia. 2006. Greenwood Publishing Group. 978-0-313-33291-3. 61–62.
  9. Currens . Gerald E. . The Loma Avunculate: An Exercise in the Utility of Two Models . Ethnology . University of Pittsburgh Press . 11 . 2 . 1972 . 111–121 . 10.2307/3773294 . 3773294 .
  10. RAMEAU, BnF https://data.bnf.fr/en/12220239/toma__peuple_d_afrique_/