The Baligham, also called the Nepgayidbi ("people of the palace") are an ethnic group in Cameroon. The Ndaghams left Bafu-Fondong (about 4 km from Dschang, western region of Cameroon), in the mid-18th century due to several factors including Fulani raids or Jihads, and famine caused by desertification.

In their long and eventful migration, the Baligamba kingdom had become too large and after the loss of their leader Gawolbe, quarrels over leadership occurred which led to the breakup of the kingdom into small factions. One by one, faction after faction left, each going their own way until the legitimate successor, Galanga, was left only with a handful of followers. These he named Nepgayidbi.

Introduction

Origin of name, official status, location. Population, look. Culture, language, relationship with neighbours and others.

The people

Groups

The History

Post independence Today Ahidjo Pre-independence Pre WW1 Pre Colonisation Pre-migration

The Geography

Landscape Vegetation Climate

Politics

Administration Public relations

Religion

Traditional Christianity Islam

Tourism


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.