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Sukuma Museum

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Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Sukuma Museum
Phone:
+255 765 667 661

Address:
| Bujora Cultural Centre, Mwanza, Tanzania

The Sukuma are a Bantu ethnic group inhabiting the southeastern African Great Lakes region. They are the largest ethnic group in Tanzania, with an estimated 8.9 million members or 16 percent of the country's total population. Sukuma means north and refers to people of the north. The Sukuma refer to themselves as Basukuma and Nsukuma . They speak Sukuma, which belongs to the Bantu branch of the Niger-Congo family. The Sukuma live in northwestern Tanzania on or near the southern shores of Lake Victoria, and various areas administrative districts of the Mwanza, southwestern tip of Mara Region, Simiyu Region and Shinyanga Region. The northern area of their residence is in the famous Serengeti Plain. Sukuma families have migrated southward, into the Rukwa Region and Katavi Region, encroaching on the territory of the Pimbwe. These Sukuma have settled outside Pimbwe villages. The Sukumaland is mostly a flat scrubless savannah plain between 910 and 1,220 metres elevation. Twenty to forty inches of rain fall from November to March. High temperatures range from 26 to 32 °C while lows at night seldom drop below 15 °C . Population is very spread out among small farm plots and sparse vegetation.
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