Footnotes
[1] Meek (1931) Vol. 1, pp. 532-3.
[2] Ibid., p. 533, & Meyer (1939), p.2.
[3] Meyer (1939), pp.1-52; (1940 a) pp.117-148; (1940 b),
210-231.
[4] Meyer (1939), p. 4.
[5] Greenberg (1950), p.396.
[6] Meyer (1939), p.4 "Die Mambilasprache zerfallt
in eine betrachtliche Anzahl cinzelner Dialekte, die in Vortschatz und in der Grammatik
stark von einander abseichen."
[7] Census (1952), pp. 26-7.
[8] To the best of my knowledge this census is unpublished.
It was made available to me by the French Administrative Officer at Banyo, the headquarters
of the District in which the Mambila live.
[9] Meek (1931) Vol. 1 p.534.
[10] Carpenter (1933), unpublished.
[11] Newton (1936), unpublished.
[12] Census (1953), p. 7.
[13] Meek (1931), Vol. 1. p. 534.
[14] Meek (1931), Vol. 1, p.532.
[15] Meek, Ibid.
[16] Percival (1938). Unpublished.
[17] McCulloch, et al. (1954), p.12.
[18] I was told by 2 Kaka informants from Mbem (a Kaka
village) that the Mambila political system was similar to their own.
[19] According to Kaberry the men of the Mbem and Mbaw
Native Authorities do more work on the farms that is the case for the men in other
areas of Bamenda Province. Kaberry (1952), p.55.
[20] Dugast (1949), p.132.
[21] Meek (1931), Vol. 1. p. 534.
[22] Ibid. p. 535.
[23] Ibid Vol. 11, p.551.
[24] Ibid. Bol. 11, pp. 564-5.
[25] Percival (1938), Unpublished. "...As to the Fulani
invasions, it seems likely, not only on general impressions, but also from Mambila
genealogies and from the names of Fulani chiefs involved, that they did not begin
until 1875 or later....." Percival refers only to the Mambila Plateau.
[26] Percival (1938), Unpublished.
[27] 18 to 24 days trek during the rainy season and from
to 10 to 14 days during the dry season when a car or lorry may be driven down as
far as Serti. There are no roads in the Mambila District.
[28] D.H. means District Head.
[29] Cameroons Annual Report (1953), section 257, p.63.
[30] E. Ardener, an anthropologist, who has been conducting
research on the labour force employed by the Cameroons Development Corporation, informed
me that there are approximately 20 labourers working for the Corporation and for
Elders & Fyffes Ltd., who are listed as being of Mambila origin. Unfortunately
no information is availableas to their provenance. I suspect that they came from
Bamonda Province or the French Cameroons rather than from Adamawa for, if any Adamawan
had emigrated to the South, I should have been likely to hear of it.