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The Swahili people (Swahili: Waswahili, وَسوَحِيلِ) comprise mainly Bantu, Afro-Arab, and Comorian ethnic groups inhabiting the Swahili coast, an area encompassing the East African coast across southern Somalia, Kenya, Tanzania, and northern Mozambique, and various archipelagos off the coast, such as Zanzibar, Lamu, and the Comoro Islands.: 9–11
Waungwana وَؤُنْڠوَانَ | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Regions with significant populations | |
| |
Swahili Coast and archipelagos | c. 1.2 million |
996,000[citation needed] | |
56,074 | |
? | |
? | |
4,000 | |
Diaspora | c. 0.8 million |
400,000 | |
113,000 | |
100,000 | |
90,000 | |
Languages | |
Religion | |
Islam (Sunni, Shia, Sufism, Ibadi) | |
Related ethnic groups | |
|
The original Swahili distinguished themselves from other Bantu peoples by self-identifying as Waungwana (the civilised ones). In certain regions, such as Lamu Island, this differentiation is even more stratified in terms of societal grouping and dialect, hinting at the historical processes by which the Swahili have coalesced over time. More recently, through a process of Swahilization, this identity extends to any person of African descent who speaks Swahili as their first language, is Muslim, and lives in a town of the main urban centres of most of modern-day Tanzania and coastal Kenya, northern Mozambique, or the Comoros.
The name Swahili originated as an exonym for the language derived from Arabic: سواحل, romanized: Sawāhil, lit. 'coasts', with Waungwana as the endonym. Modern Standard Swahili is derived from the Kiunguja dialect of Zanzibar. Like many other world languages, Swahili has borrowed a large number of words from foreign languages, particularly administrative terms from Arabic but also words from Portuguese, Persian, Hindi, Spanish, English, and German. Other, older dialects like Kimrima and Kitumbatu have far fewer Arabic loanwords, indicative of the language's fundamental Bantu nature. Swahili served as coastal East Africa's lingua franca and trade language from the ninth century onward. Zanzibari traders' intensive push into the African interior from the late eighteenth century induced the adoption of Swahili as a common language throughout much of East Africa. Thus, Swahili is the most spoken African language, used by far more than just the Swahili people themselves.[12]
Definition
This article's factual accuracy may be compromised due to out-of-date information. The reason given is: A genetic study, published on 29 March 2023, confirmed the presence of significant Iranian-origin ancestry in the Y-chromosomal DNA of medieval inhabitants of the Swahili coast, strongly supporting elements of the Persian-admixture origin story. Therefore, this section, which currently rejects the Persian-admixture narrative, needs to be updated to reflect recent findings..(March 2023) |
The Swahili people originate from Bantu inhabitants of the coast of Southeast Africa, in Kenya, Tanzania, and Mozambique. These Bantu-speaking agriculturalists settled the coast at the outset of the first millennium. Archaeological finds at Fukuchani, on the northwest coast of Zanzibar, indicate a settled agricultural and fishing community from the 6th century CE at the latest. The considerable amount of daub found indicates timber buildings, and shell beads, bead grinders, and iron slag have been found at the site. There is evidence of limited engagement in long-distance trade: a small amount of imported pottery has been found—less than 1% of total pottery finds, mostly from the Persian Gulf and dated to the 5th to the 8th centuries. The similarity to contemporary sites such as Mkokotoni and Dar es Salaam indicate a unified group of communities that developed into the first centre of coastal maritime culture. The coastal towns appear to have been engaged in Indian-Ocean trade at this early period, and trade rapidly increased in importance and size between the mid-8th and the 11th century.
A local 15th-century genealogy, the Kilwa Chronicle, identifies the rulers and founders of the costal cities as immigrants from the Persian city of Shiraz, in the 11th century. This forms the basis of the Shirazi-era origin myth that proliferated along the coast at the turn of the millennium.[citation needed] A 2022 DNA study that obtained samples from 80 Muslim graves, from cities across the region, found the maternal ancestry of the studied population was primarily of East African lineages, principally Bantu and Pastoral Neolithic, while the majority of the male heritage was Asian. Some academics reject the authenticity of the primarily Persian origin claim, pointing to the relative rarity of Persian customs and speech, lack of documentary evidence of Shia Islam in the Muslim literature on the Swahili coast, and instead a historic abundance of Sunni Arab-related evidence. The documentary evidence, like the archaeological, "for early Persian settlement is likewise completely lacking". The most likely origin for the stories about the Shirazi is from Muslim inhabitants of the Lamu archipelago who moved south in the 10th and 11th centuries. They brought with them a coinage tradition and a localized form of Islam. These African migrants seem to have developed a concept of Shirazi origin as they moved further southwards, near Malindi and Mombasa, along the Mrima coast; the longstanding trade connections with the Persian gulf gave credence to these myths. In addition, because most Muslim societies are patrilineal, one can claim distant identities through paternal lines despite phenotypic evidence to the contrary. The so-called Shirazi tradition represents the arrival of Islam in these eras, one reason it has proven so long-lasting. Extant mosques and coins demonstrate that the "Shirazi" were not Middle Eastern immigrants but northern Swahili Muslims. They moved south, founding mosques and introducing coinage and elaborately carved inscriptions and mihrabs; they should be interpreted as indigenous African Muslims who played the politics of the Middle East to their advantage. Some still use this foundation myth a millennium later to assert their authority, even though the myth's context has long been forgotten. The Shirazi legend took on new importance in the 19th century, during the period of Omani domination. Claims of Shirazi ancestry were used to distance locals from Arab newcomers, since Persians are not viewed as Arabs but still have Islamic pedigree. The emphasis that the Shirazi came very long ago and intermarried with indigenous locals ties this claim to the creation of convincing indigenous narratives about Swahili heritage without divorcing it from the ideals of being a maritime culture.
There are two main theories about the origins of the Shirazi subgroup of the Swahili people. One thesis, based on oral tradition, states that immigrants from the Shiraz region in southwestern Iran directly settled various mainland ports and islands on the eastern African seaboard beginning in the tenth century. By the time of Persian settlement in the area, the earlier occupants had been displaced by incoming Bantu and Nilotic populations. More people from different parts of the Persian Gulf also continued to migrate to the Swahili coast over several centuries thereafter, and these formed the modern Shirazi. The second theory also posits that they came from Persia but first settled in the Horn of Africa. In the twelfth century, as the gold trade with the distant entrepot of Sofala on the Mozambique seaboard grew, the settlers are said to have moved southwards to various coastal towns in Kenya, Tanzania, northern Mozambique, and the Indian Ocean islands. By 1200 CE, they had established local sultanates and mercantile networks on the islands of Kilwa, Mafia, and Comoros, along the Swahili coast, and in northwestern Madagascar. More recent studies support the Swahili origin myth, indicating that "Asian ancestry includes components associated with Persia and India, with 80–90% of the Asian DNA originating from Persian men".[This quote needs a citation]
Modern Swahili people speak the Swahili language as a mother tongue, which belongs to the Bantu branch of the Niger-Congo family. The language contains loanwords from Arabic.
Religion
Islam established its presence on the southeast African coast around the 9th century, coincident to Bantu traders both settling on the coast and tapping into the Indian Ocean trade networks. The Swahili people follow the Sunni denomination of Islam.
Large numbers of Swahili undertake the Hajj and Umrah from Tanzania, Kenya, and Mozambique. Traditional Islamic dress, such as the jilbab and thob, are also popular among the Swahili. The Swahili also are known for their use of divination, which has adopted some syncretic features from underlying traditional indigenous beliefs. For instance, they believe in djinn, and many men wear protective amulets featuring verses from the Qu'ran.[citation needed]
Divination is practiced through Qur'anic readings. Often the diviner incorporates verses from the Qur'an into treatments for certain diseases. On occasion, he or she instructs a patient to soak a piece of paper containing Qur'anic verses in water. With this ink-infused water, literally containing the word of Allah, the patient will then wash his or her body or drink it to cure themselves of affliction. The only people permitted to become medicine givers in the culture are prophets and teachers of Islam.
Some Swahili people practice Christianity.
Language
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOW1MMlppTDFwaGJucHBZbUZ5TFhCNWMyRXRZMjlwYmk1cWNHY3ZNakl3Y0hndFdtRnVlbWxpWVhJdGNIbHpZUzFqYjJsdUxtcHdadz09LmpwZw==.jpg)
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpOWpMMk14TDB4aGJYVmZaRzl2Y2k1cWNHY3ZNakl3Y0hndFRHRnRkVjlrYjI5eUxtcHdadz09LmpwZw==.jpg)
The Swahili language is a member of the Bantu subgroup of the Niger-Congo family. Its closest relatives include Comorian, spoken on the Comoros Islands, and the Mijikenda language of the Mijikenda people in Kenya.
With its original speech community centred on Zanzibar and the coastal parts of Kenya and Tanzania, collectively a seaboard referred to as the Swahili Coast, Swahili became the tongue of the urban class in the African Great Lakes region and eventually went on to serve as a lingua franca during the post-colonial period.
Genetics
In 2022, DNA was extracted, analyzed, and compared in 80 samples taken from people buried between 1250 and 1800 CE in towns that were mostly along the Swahili Coast in modern Kenya and Tanzania. It is believed that these people were Swahili elites, because they were buried in cemeteries near the main mosques. Before 1500 CE, inhabitants of the region carried both African and Asian/Near Eastern ancestry, which was mainly Persian-related (with more than half of their DNA originating from African ancestors and another large portion from Asian ancestors). The male ancestors of elite Swahili people were a mix of approximately 83% Asian and 17% African; about 90% of the Asian DNA was Persian, and the rest was Indian. The female ancestors of Swahili elites were about 97% African and 3% Asian. This is consistent with the narrative of the Kilwa Chronicle. After this time, Arabian ancestry becomes more prevalent, which correlates with the archaeological and historical record of interactions with Southern Arabia (Oman).
Economy
For centuries, the Swahili depended greatly on trade from the Indian Ocean, and they played an important role as middlemen between southeast, central, and southern Africa as well as the outside world. Trade contacts have been noted as early as 100 CE by early Roman writers who visited the southeast African coast in the 1st and 2nd centuries CE. Trade routes extended from Kenya to Tanzania into modern-day Congo, along which goods were brought to the coasts and sold to Arab, Indian, and Portuguese traders. Historical and archaeological records attest to Swahilis being prolific maritime merchants and sailors who plied the southeast African coastline to lands as far away as Arabia,Persia, Madagascar,: 110 India, and China. Chinese pottery and Arabian beads have been found in the ruins of Great Zimbabwe. During the height of the Middle Ages, ivory and slaves became a substantial source of revenue. Captives sold via the Zanzibar slave trade by Arab slave traders ended up in Portuguese Brazil or via the Indian Ocean slave trade in the Arabian Peninsula.
Although most Swahili living standards are far below those in the wealthiest nations, the Swahili are generally considered a relatively economically powerful group due to their history of trade. For instance, the United Nations has stated that the island of Zanzibar has a 25% higher per-capita GDP than the rest of Tanzania. This economic influence has led to the continued spread of Swahili culture and language throughout East Africa.
Architecture
Thought by many early scholars to be essentially of Arab or Persian style and origin, some contemporary academics have suggested that archaeological, written, linguistic, and cultural evidence might suggest an African genesis to Swahili architecture, which would be accompanied only later by enduring Arabic and Islamic influences in the form of trade and an exchange of ideas. Upon visiting Kilwa in 1331, the Berber explorer Ibn Battuta was impressed by what he witnessed there. He noted that "Kilwa is a very fine and substantially built town, and all its buildings are of wood" (his description of Mombasa was essentially the same). Local architecture included arches, courtyards, isolated women's quarters, mihrab, towers, and decorative elements on the buildings themselves. Many ruins can still be found near the southern Kenyan port of Malindi, in the ruins of Gedi.
See also
- Swahililand
- Swahili culture
References
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- "2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census Volume IV: Distribution of Population by Socio-Economic Characteristics" (PDF). Kenya National Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
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- Valeri, Marc (July 2007). "Nation-building and communities in Oman since 1970: The Swahili-speaking Omani in search of identity". African Affairs. 106 (424): 479–496. doi:10.1093/afraf/adm020.
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- Horton & Middleton 2000, p. [page needed].
- Brielle, Esther S.; Fleisher, Jeffrey; Wynne-Jones, Stephanie; Sirak, Kendra; Broomandkhoshbacht, Nasreen; Callan, Kim; Curtis, Elizabeth; Iliev, Lora; Lawson, Ann Marie; Oppenheimer, Jonas; Qiu, Lijun; Stewardson, Kristin; Workman, J. Noah; Zalzala, Fatma; Ayodo, George (2023). "Entwined African and Asian genetic roots of medieval peoples of the Swahili coast". Nature. 615 (7954): 866–873. Bibcode:2023Natur.615..866B. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-05754-w. PMC 10060156. PMID 36991187.
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- Mohamed, Mohamed Abdulla (2001). Modern Swahili Grammar. East African Publishers. p. 12. ISBN 9966-46-761-0. Retrieved 13 December 2017.
- "The People of the Swahili Coast". education.nationalgeographic.org. Retrieved 11 September 2023.
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- Horton, Mark (1996). Shanga: the archaeology of a muslim trading community on the coast of East Africa. The British Institute in Eastern Africa.
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Sources
- Horton, Mark; Middleton, John (2000). The Swahili: The social landscape of a mercantile society. Blackwell Publishers. ISBN 978-0-631-18919-0.
External links
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- The Story of Africa: The Swahili — BBC World Service
- Swahili culture
- Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911. .
This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Swahili people news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2025 Learn how and when to remove this message The Swahili people Swahili Waswahili و سو ح يل comprise mainly Bantu Afro Arab and Comorian ethnic groups inhabiting the Swahili coast an area encompassing the East African coast across southern Somalia Kenya Tanzania and northern Mozambique and various archipelagos off the coast such as Zanzibar Lamu and the Comoro Islands 9 11 Swahili Waswahili و سو ح يل Waungwana و ؤ ن ڠو ان Regions with significant populationsTanzania particularly Zanzibar KenyaComorosSomaliaMozambiqueSwahili Coast and archipelagosc 1 2 million Tanzania996 000 citation needed Kenya56 074 Mozambique Somalia Comoros4 000Diasporac 0 8 million Saudi Arabia400 000 Madagascar113 000 Oman100 000 United States90 000LanguagesSwahiliArabicEnglishPortugueseFrenchReligionIslam Sunni Shia Sufism Ibadi Related ethnic groupsComoriansBajunisShiraziBravaneseArabsLemba The original Swahili distinguished themselves from other Bantu peoples by self identifying as Waungwana the civilised ones In certain regions such as Lamu Island this differentiation is even more stratified in terms of societal grouping and dialect hinting at the historical processes by which the Swahili have coalesced over time More recently through a process of Swahilization this identity extends to any person of African descent who speaks Swahili as their first language is Muslim and lives in a town of the main urban centres of most of modern day Tanzania and coastal Kenya northern Mozambique or the Comoros The name Swahili originated as an exonym for the language derived from Arabic سواحل romanized Sawahil lit coasts with Waungwana as the endonym Modern Standard Swahili is derived from the Kiunguja dialect of Zanzibar Like many other world languages Swahili has borrowed a large number of words from foreign languages particularly administrative terms from Arabic but also words from Portuguese Persian Hindi Spanish English and German Other older dialects like Kimrima and Kitumbatu have far fewer Arabic loanwords indicative of the language s fundamental Bantu nature Swahili served as coastal East Africa s lingua franca and trade language from the ninth century onward Zanzibari traders intensive push into the African interior from the late eighteenth century induced the adoption of Swahili as a common language throughout much of East Africa Thus Swahili is the most spoken African language used by far more than just the Swahili people themselves 12 DefinitionThis article s factual accuracy may be compromised due to out of date information The reason given is A genetic study published on 29 March 2023 confirmed the presence of significant Iranian origin ancestry in the Y chromosomal DNA of medieval inhabitants of the Swahili coast strongly supporting elements of the Persian admixture origin story Therefore this section which currently rejects the Persian admixture narrative needs to be updated to reflect recent findings Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2023 The Swahili people originate from Bantu inhabitants of the coast of Southeast Africa in Kenya Tanzania and Mozambique These Bantu speaking agriculturalists settled the coast at the outset of the first millennium Archaeological finds at Fukuchani on the northwest coast of Zanzibar indicate a settled agricultural and fishing community from the 6th century CE at the latest The considerable amount of daub found indicates timber buildings and shell beads bead grinders and iron slag have been found at the site There is evidence of limited engagement in long distance trade a small amount of imported pottery has been found less than 1 of total pottery finds mostly from the Persian Gulf and dated to the 5th to the 8th centuries The similarity to contemporary sites such as Mkokotoni and Dar es Salaam indicate a unified group of communities that developed into the first centre of coastal maritime culture The coastal towns appear to have been engaged in Indian Ocean trade at this early period and trade rapidly increased in importance and size between the mid 8th and the 11th century A local 15th century genealogy the Kilwa Chronicle identifies the rulers and founders of the costal cities as immigrants from the Persian city of Shiraz in the 11th century This forms the basis of the Shirazi era origin myth that proliferated along the coast at the turn of the millennium citation needed A 2022 DNA study that obtained samples from 80 Muslim graves from cities across the region found the maternal ancestry of the studied population was primarily of East African lineages principally Bantu and Pastoral Neolithic while the majority of the male heritage was Asian Some academics reject the authenticity of the primarily Persian origin claim pointing to the relative rarity of Persian customs and speech lack of documentary evidence of Shia Islam in the Muslim literature on the Swahili coast and instead a historic abundance of Sunni Arab related evidence The documentary evidence like the archaeological for early Persian settlement is likewise completely lacking The most likely origin for the stories about the Shirazi is from Muslim inhabitants of the Lamu archipelago who moved south in the 10th and 11th centuries They brought with them a coinage tradition and a localized form of Islam These African migrants seem to have developed a concept of Shirazi origin as they moved further southwards near Malindi and Mombasa along the Mrima coast the longstanding trade connections with the Persian gulf gave credence to these myths In addition because most Muslim societies are patrilineal one can claim distant identities through paternal lines despite phenotypic evidence to the contrary The so called Shirazi tradition represents the arrival of Islam in these eras one reason it has proven so long lasting Extant mosques and coins demonstrate that the Shirazi were not Middle Eastern immigrants but northern Swahili Muslims They moved south founding mosques and introducing coinage and elaborately carved inscriptions and mihrabs they should be interpreted as indigenous African Muslims who played the politics of the Middle East to their advantage Some still use this foundation myth a millennium later to assert their authority even though the myth s context has long been forgotten The Shirazi legend took on new importance in the 19th century during the period of Omani domination Claims of Shirazi ancestry were used to distance locals from Arab newcomers since Persians are not viewed as Arabs but still have Islamic pedigree The emphasis that the Shirazi came very long ago and intermarried with indigenous locals ties this claim to the creation of convincing indigenous narratives about Swahili heritage without divorcing it from the ideals of being a maritime culture There are two main theories about the origins of the Shirazi subgroup of the Swahili people One thesis based on oral tradition states that immigrants from the Shiraz region in southwestern Iran directly settled various mainland ports and islands on the eastern African seaboard beginning in the tenth century By the time of Persian settlement in the area the earlier occupants had been displaced by incoming Bantu and Nilotic populations More people from different parts of the Persian Gulf also continued to migrate to the Swahili coast over several centuries thereafter and these formed the modern Shirazi The second theory also posits that they came from Persia but first settled in the Horn of Africa In the twelfth century as the gold trade with the distant entrepot of Sofala on the Mozambique seaboard grew the settlers are said to have moved southwards to various coastal towns in Kenya Tanzania northern Mozambique and the Indian Ocean islands By 1200 CE they had established local sultanates and mercantile networks on the islands of Kilwa Mafia and Comoros along the Swahili coast and in northwestern Madagascar More recent studies support the Swahili origin myth indicating that Asian ancestry includes components associated with Persia and India with 80 90 of the Asian DNA originating from Persian men This quote needs a citation Modern Swahili people speak the Swahili language as a mother tongue which belongs to the Bantu branch of the Niger Congo family The language contains loanwords from Arabic ReligionIslam established its presence on the southeast African coast around the 9th century coincident to Bantu traders both settling on the coast and tapping into the Indian Ocean trade networks The Swahili people follow the Sunni denomination of Islam Large numbers of Swahili undertake the Hajj and Umrah from Tanzania Kenya and Mozambique Traditional Islamic dress such as the jilbab and thob are also popular among the Swahili The Swahili also are known for their use of divination which has adopted some syncretic features from underlying traditional indigenous beliefs For instance they believe in djinn and many men wear protective amulets featuring verses from the Qu ran citation needed Divination is practiced through Qur anic readings Often the diviner incorporates verses from the Qur an into treatments for certain diseases On occasion he or she instructs a patient to soak a piece of paper containing Qur anic verses in water With this ink infused water literally containing the word of Allah the patient will then wash his or her body or drink it to cure themselves of affliction The only people permitted to become medicine givers in the culture are prophets and teachers of Islam Some Swahili people practice Christianity LanguageSwahili Arabic script on a one pysar coin from Zanzibar c 1299 AH 1882 CE Swahili Arabic script on a carved wooden doorway at Lamu in KenyaSwahili Arabic script on wooden door in Fort Jesus Mombasa Kenya The Swahili language is a member of the Bantu subgroup of the Niger Congo family Its closest relatives include Comorian spoken on the Comoros Islands and the Mijikenda language of the Mijikenda people in Kenya With its original speech community centred on Zanzibar and the coastal parts of Kenya and Tanzania collectively a seaboard referred to as the Swahili Coast Swahili became the tongue of the urban class in the African Great Lakes region and eventually went on to serve as a lingua franca during the post colonial period GeneticsIn 2022 DNA was extracted analyzed and compared in 80 samples taken from people buried between 1250 and 1800 CE in towns that were mostly along the Swahili Coast in modern Kenya and Tanzania It is believed that these people were Swahili elites because they were buried in cemeteries near the main mosques Before 1500 CE inhabitants of the region carried both African and Asian Near Eastern ancestry which was mainly Persian related with more than half of their DNA originating from African ancestors and another large portion from Asian ancestors The male ancestors of elite Swahili people were a mix of approximately 83 Asian and 17 African about 90 of the Asian DNA was Persian and the rest was Indian The female ancestors of Swahili elites were about 97 African and 3 Asian This is consistent with the narrative of the Kilwa Chronicle After this time Arabian ancestry becomes more prevalent which correlates with the archaeological and historical record of interactions with Southern Arabia Oman EconomyFor centuries the Swahili depended greatly on trade from the Indian Ocean and they played an important role as middlemen between southeast central and southern Africa as well as the outside world Trade contacts have been noted as early as 100 CE by early Roman writers who visited the southeast African coast in the 1st and 2nd centuries CE Trade routes extended from Kenya to Tanzania into modern day Congo along which goods were brought to the coasts and sold to Arab Indian and Portuguese traders Historical and archaeological records attest to Swahilis being prolific maritime merchants and sailors who plied the southeast African coastline to lands as far away as Arabia Persia Madagascar 110 India and China Chinese pottery and Arabian beads have been found in the ruins of Great Zimbabwe During the height of the Middle Ages ivory and slaves became a substantial source of revenue Captives sold via the Zanzibar slave trade by Arab slave traders ended up in Portuguese Brazil or via the Indian Ocean slave trade in the Arabian Peninsula Although most Swahili living standards are far below those in the wealthiest nations the Swahili are generally considered a relatively economically powerful group due to their history of trade For instance the United Nations has stated that the island of Zanzibar has a 25 higher per capita GDP than the rest of Tanzania This economic influence has led to the continued spread of Swahili culture and language throughout East Africa ArchitectureThought by many early scholars to be essentially of Arab or Persian style and origin some contemporary academics have suggested that archaeological written linguistic and cultural evidence might suggest an African genesis to Swahili architecture which would be accompanied only later by enduring Arabic and Islamic influences in the form of trade and an exchange of ideas Upon visiting Kilwa in 1331 the Berber explorer Ibn Battuta was impressed by what he witnessed there He noted that Kilwa is a very fine and substantially built town and all its buildings are of wood his description of Mombasa was essentially the same Local architecture included arches courtyards isolated women s quarters mihrab towers and decorative elements on the buildings themselves Many ruins can still be found near the southern Kenyan port of Malindi in the ruins of Gedi See alsoSwahililand Swahili cultureReferences Swahili facts information pictures Encyclopedia com articles about Swahili Encyclopedia com Retrieved 11 April 2017 2019 Kenya Population and Housing Census Volume IV Distribution of Population by Socio Economic Characteristics PDF Kenya National Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 2 May 2021 Swahili Worldwide distribution Worlddata info Retrieved 24 July 2021 Valeri Marc July 2007 Nation building and communities in Oman since 1970 The Swahili speaking Omani in search of identity African Affairs 106 424 479 496 doi 10 1093 afraf adm020 Akorbi Dev 23 March 2020 Popular African Languages in the United States Akorbi Retrieved 24 July 2021 The People of the Swahili Coast 23 March 2020 Kusimba Chapurukha M Walz Jonathan R 2024 Africa Tropical Swahili Archaeology Encyclopedia of Archaeology Second ed pp 226 233 doi 10 1016 B978 0 323 90799 6 00168 3 ISBN 978 0 323 91856 5 Laviolette Adria 2008 AFRICA EAST Swahili Coast Encyclopedia of Archaeology pp 19 21 doi 10 1016 B978 012373962 9 00302 2 ISBN 978 0 12 373962 9 The People of the Swahili Coast education nationalgeographic org Retrieved 7 January 2025 Wynne Jones Stephanie LaViolette Adria 16 October 2017 The Swahili World Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 43016 2 Spear Thomas 2000 Early Swahili History Reconsidered The International Journal of African Historical Studies 33 2 257 290 doi 10 2307 220649 JSTOR 220649 Horton amp Middleton 2000 p page needed Brielle Esther S Fleisher Jeffrey Wynne Jones Stephanie Sirak Kendra Broomandkhoshbacht Nasreen Callan Kim Curtis Elizabeth Iliev Lora Lawson Ann Marie Oppenheimer Jonas Qiu Lijun Stewardson Kristin Workman J Noah Zalzala Fatma Ayodo George 2023 Entwined African and Asian genetic roots of medieval peoples of the Swahili coast Nature 615 7954 866 873 Bibcode 2023Natur 615 866B doi 10 1038 s41586 023 05754 w PMC 10060156 PMID 36991187 Horton amp Middleton 2000 p 46 Horton amp Middleton 2000 p 20 Bakari 2001 70 full citation needed De V Allen J 1982 The Shirazi Problem in East African Coastal History Paideuma 28 9 27 JSTOR 41409871 Horton amp Middleton 2000 p 59 Horton amp Middleton 2000 p 61 Meier Prita 2016 Swahili Port Cities The Architecture of Elsewhere Indiana University Press p 101 ISBN 978 0 253 01909 7 JSTOR j ctt19zbzjj Anthony Appiah Henry Louis Gates 2010 Encyclopedia of Africa Oxford University Press p 379 ISBN 978 0 19 533770 9 Derek Nurse Thomas Spear Thomas T Spear 1985 The Swahili Reconstructing the History and Language of an African Society 800 1500 University of Pennsylvania Press pp 70 79 ISBN 0 8122 1207 X Kaplan Irving 1967 Area handbook for Kenya American University Washington D C Foreign Area Studies pp 38 amp 42 Retrieved 28 November 2016 J D Fage Roland Oliver 1975 The Cambridge History of Africa Volume 3 Cambridge University Press pp 201 202 ISBN 0 521 20981 1 Chittick Neville 1965 The Shirazi Colonization of East Africa The Journal of African History 6 3 275 294 doi 10 1017 S0021853700005806 JSTOR 180168 Mohamed Mohamed Abdulla 2001 Modern Swahili Grammar East African Publishers p 12 ISBN 9966 46 761 0 Retrieved 13 December 2017 The People of the Swahili Coast education nationalgeographic org Retrieved 11 September 2023 Tanzania Hajj pilgrims stranded BBC News 12 December 2007 Kenya Mombasa Pilgrims Jam Airport for Hajj Trip 19 November 2009 Retrieved 11 April 2017 via AllAfrica hajinformation com Swahili People Archived from the original on 18 September 2006 Retrieved 16 September 2006 self published source Swahili Bantu of East Africa Coast Pray Africa Frawley William J 2003 International Encyclopedia of Linguistics p 181 doi 10 1093 acref 9780195139778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 513977 8 Daniel Don Nanjira African Foreign Policy and Diplomacy From Antiquity to the 21st Century ABC CLIO 2010 p 114 BBC Languages Swahili A Guide to Swahili 10 facts about the Swahili language bbc co uk Retrieved 5 December 2024 Joanne Silberner 12 April 2023 What s the origin of the long ago Swahili civilization Genes offer a revealing answer NPR Ichumbaki Elgidius B Munisi Neema C 2024 Kilwa and its Environs Oxford Research Encyclopedia of African History doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780190277734 013 1008 ISBN 978 0 19 027773 4 Collins Robert Burns James 2007 A History of Sub Saharan Africa Cambridge University Press pp 109 112 ISBN 978 0 521 86746 7 Bulliet Richard Crossley Pamela Headrick Daniel Hirsch Steven Johnson Lyman October 2006 The Earth and Its Peoples A Global History Vol 2 Wadsworth Publishing p 381 ISBN 978 1 4390 8477 9 The East African Slave Trade BBC BBC accessed 15 February 2012 The Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume 3 Part 2 By Sir H A R Gibb pg 206 2001 accessed 15 February 2012 Swahili Chinese interaction The Cambridge History of Africa From c 1050 to c 1600 By J D Fage pg 194 1977 Cambridge Publications accessed 15 February 2012 Garlake 2002 184 185 full citation needed UNdata record view Per capita GDP at current prices US dollars UN org Retrieved 11 April 2017 Quintana Morales Erendira M Horton Mark 2014 Fishing and Fish Consumption in the Swahili Communities of East Africa 700 1400 CE Internet Archaeology 37 doi 10 11141 ia 37 3 urban research net 2000 Retrieved 11 April 2017 Horton Mark 1996 Shanga the archaeology of a muslim trading community on the coast of East Africa The British Institute in Eastern Africa Ibn Battuta Travels in Asia and Africa 1325 1354 Medieval Sourcebook Retrieved on 2007 08 28 Ruins of the walled city of Gedi Kenya Leisure health and housing Port Cities PortCities org uk Retrieved 11 April 2017 SourcesHorton Mark Middleton John 2000 The Swahili The social landscape of a mercantile society Blackwell Publishers ISBN 978 0 631 18919 0 External linksWikisource has the text of the 1905 New International Encyclopedia article Swahili Wikimedia Commons has media related to Swahili people The Story of Africa The Swahili BBC World Service Swahili culture Swahili Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911