Bamum (Shüpamom[ʃŷpǎˑmə̀m] "Bamum language"), or in its French spelling Bamoun, is one of the Benue–Congo languages of Cameroon, with approximately 420,000 speakers. The language is well known for its original script developed by King Njoya and his palace circle around 1895. Cameroonian musician Claude Ndam is a native speaker of the language and uses it in his music.
Phonology
Bamum has tone, long vowels and diphthongs, and coda consonants. The simple vowels are,
The noblewomen of Bamum.
Photographs from Fumban, the Bamum capital in modern-day Cameroon, by Anna Wuhrmann, a Swiss missionary worker at the Basel Mission who worked at the Fumban Mission Girls' School in the 1910’s, documenting her stay.
King Ibrahim Mbouombouo Njoya of Bamum, or simply King Njoya (c. 1860 - 1933), had up to 600 wives and up to 177 children. Njoya flirted heavily with both Christianity and Islam, while never truly giving up his traditional religion either. He built traditional schools to teach the Bamum script, Quranic schools to teach Arabic and allowed mission schools to teach German. Njoya’s daughters attended these mission schools where they were educated by Anna Wuhrmann, among others.
#Noble #NobleWomen #Royal #Ladies #women #Fumban #Bamum #Basel #mission #C...
published: 07 Aug 2022
Languages in Cameroon
Welcome to Akono, Cameroon. This village of approximately 4,000 people is located in the Center region of Cameroon, 55 kilometers from Yaounde. In Akono, the main local language is Ewondo. Despite this, there are many more languages spoken in this small village. In this video, Peace Corps Volunteer Maria Bennett sets out to discover just how many languages she can find within the town.
published: 01 Apr 2015
Bamum Writing System of Cameroon
The story of the Bamum Script of Cameroon.
How and when it was established and how it nearly became forgotten.
This video is made from the original audio podcast episode:
https://youtu.be/i321jyuZhFw
African Camp Fire Stories Podcast:
https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCv44_cXdLgRnvoe3v1V5tYg/videos
https://podcasts.apple.com/ie/podcast/african-camp-fire-stories/id1488381543
African Camp Fire Stories Podcast is available on iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Player.fm and other podcasting platforms.
Help the Bamum Script and Archives Project:
https://eap.bl.uk/project/EAP051
Join Our Online Community.
Facebook:
African History Times
African Camp Fire Stories
Instagram:
@African_History_Times
@African_History_ACFSPodcast
Twitter:
@AfricanCampFir1
#Cameroon #Bamu...
published: 18 Dec 2020
The King Who Created His Own Language | The Family Tree of the Mfons of Bamum (Cameroon)
In this video, I go over the family tree and history of the pretty obscure Kingdom of Bamum in Cameroon. Apologies for butchering many of the names in this video.
Learn the Bamum Script: https://omniglot.com/writing/bamum.htm
Download a (free) PDF of the family tree here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1-Rf9t91eUbNw3w-FuSmw6sE3ltxVwat4
If you would like to send a family tree you've created to me, please contact me at [email protected] and I'll showcase it in a folder here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1kJBObZVigfcdXlioXoKB_S0ijT_iSq45
Subscribe to my channel here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCraMAcm3uSqPUDUNfhDEvYQ?sub_confirmation=1
SOURCES:
https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/collections/objects/61121 (ARTWORK FOR THE MONARCHS)
https://en.wikipedia.org/...
published: 13 Jul 2021
Inspired by a dream - King Njoya’s Bamum scripts
Bamum is one of two dozens of African languages written in non-Latin and non-Arabic scripts. The Bamum people are an ethnic group in Cameroon with a unique writing system developed by their scholar-king in the late 1800s.
Starting around 1896, twenty-five-year-old King invented a writing system for his people’s language.
It was a dream-inspired script. He invited his subjects to give him simple signs and symbols, and from them he created a system that was at first pictographic, with 465 symbol characters, but then, over half a dozen drafts, became finally a syllabary of eighty characters.
After part of Cameroon came under French control in 1919, books in the Bamum script were destroyed, and the teaching of the script in schools was banned.
Today the Bamum script remains a strong symbol ...
published: 06 May 2022
The Story of Jesus - Bamun / Bamoun / Bamoum / Bamum / Shupamem Language (Cameroon)
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God).
According to the Gospel of Luke.
(Cameroon) Bamun / Bamoun / Bamoum / Bamum / Shupamem Language.
God Bless You All.
published: 11 Oct 2012
Sauver les manuscrits Bamoun
Reportage
published: 23 May 2007
Bamum: Covid-19 Myth Busters from WHO in World Languages
This video narrates Covid-19 myth busters adapted from WHO in Bamum.
(i) Project website: https://covid-no-mb.org
(ii) Twitter handle: @CovidNoMB
(iii) Hashtag: #CovidNoMB
(iv) Email: [email protected]
(a) Translation by Dr. Solange Pawou Molu
(b) Narration by Maryam Klein
(c) Video created by Mana Ashida
(d) Project maintained by ICU Linguistics Lab and Dr. Seunghun J. Lee in Tokyo, Japan
(e) Designed and illustrated by Daehan Won of Studio C-clef in Seoul, Korea
published: 29 May 2020
Cameroon (Bamum) - Epic Song
Cameroon (Bamum) - Epic Song for Bamum Kings
[Music] No infringement of copyright is Intended.
[Image] Copyright may exists.
ArsX YouTube Channel:
https://www.youtube.com/user/opus888dei/videos
ArsX Facebook Page:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/ArsX/139774319506703
ArsX Website:
https://arsx.org/
#AfricanTraditionalMusic #Bamum #Cameroon
(09h)
The noblewomen of Bamum.
Photographs from Fumban, the Bamum capital in modern-day Cameroon, by Anna Wuhrmann, a Swiss missionary worker at the Basel Mission w...
The noblewomen of Bamum.
Photographs from Fumban, the Bamum capital in modern-day Cameroon, by Anna Wuhrmann, a Swiss missionary worker at the Basel Mission who worked at the Fumban Mission Girls' School in the 1910’s, documenting her stay.
King Ibrahim Mbouombouo Njoya of Bamum, or simply King Njoya (c. 1860 - 1933), had up to 600 wives and up to 177 children. Njoya flirted heavily with both Christianity and Islam, while never truly giving up his traditional religion either. He built traditional schools to teach the Bamum script, Quranic schools to teach Arabic and allowed mission schools to teach German. Njoya’s daughters attended these mission schools where they were educated by Anna Wuhrmann, among others.
#Noble #NobleWomen #Royal #Ladies #women #Fumban #Bamum #Basel #mission #Cameroon #Africa #history #AfricanHistory
The noblewomen of Bamum.
Photographs from Fumban, the Bamum capital in modern-day Cameroon, by Anna Wuhrmann, a Swiss missionary worker at the Basel Mission who worked at the Fumban Mission Girls' School in the 1910’s, documenting her stay.
King Ibrahim Mbouombouo Njoya of Bamum, or simply King Njoya (c. 1860 - 1933), had up to 600 wives and up to 177 children. Njoya flirted heavily with both Christianity and Islam, while never truly giving up his traditional religion either. He built traditional schools to teach the Bamum script, Quranic schools to teach Arabic and allowed mission schools to teach German. Njoya’s daughters attended these mission schools where they were educated by Anna Wuhrmann, among others.
#Noble #NobleWomen #Royal #Ladies #women #Fumban #Bamum #Basel #mission #Cameroon #Africa #history #AfricanHistory
Welcome to Akono, Cameroon. This village of approximately 4,000 people is located in the Center region of Cameroon, 55 kilometers from Yaounde. In Akono, the ...
Welcome to Akono, Cameroon. This village of approximately 4,000 people is located in the Center region of Cameroon, 55 kilometers from Yaounde. In Akono, the main local language is Ewondo. Despite this, there are many more languages spoken in this small village. In this video, Peace Corps Volunteer Maria Bennett sets out to discover just how many languages she can find within the town.
Welcome to Akono, Cameroon. This village of approximately 4,000 people is located in the Center region of Cameroon, 55 kilometers from Yaounde. In Akono, the main local language is Ewondo. Despite this, there are many more languages spoken in this small village. In this video, Peace Corps Volunteer Maria Bennett sets out to discover just how many languages she can find within the town.
The story of the Bamum Script of Cameroon.
How and when it was established and how it nearly became forgotten.
This video is made from the original audio pod...
The story of the Bamum Script of Cameroon.
How and when it was established and how it nearly became forgotten.
This video is made from the original audio podcast episode:
https://youtu.be/i321jyuZhFw
African Camp Fire Stories Podcast:
https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCv44_cXdLgRnvoe3v1V5tYg/videos
https://podcasts.apple.com/ie/podcast/african-camp-fire-stories/id1488381543
African Camp Fire Stories Podcast is available on iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Player.fm and other podcasting platforms.
Help the Bamum Script and Archives Project:
https://eap.bl.uk/project/EAP051
Join Our Online Community.
Facebook:
African History Times
African Camp Fire Stories
Instagram:
@African_History_Times
@African_History_ACFSPodcast
Twitter:
@AfricanCampFir1
#Cameroon #Bamum #AfricanHistoryTimes
#AfricanHistoryPodcast
#africancampirestoriespodcast
The story of the Bamum Script of Cameroon.
How and when it was established and how it nearly became forgotten.
This video is made from the original audio podcast episode:
https://youtu.be/i321jyuZhFw
African Camp Fire Stories Podcast:
https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCv44_cXdLgRnvoe3v1V5tYg/videos
https://podcasts.apple.com/ie/podcast/african-camp-fire-stories/id1488381543
African Camp Fire Stories Podcast is available on iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Player.fm and other podcasting platforms.
Help the Bamum Script and Archives Project:
https://eap.bl.uk/project/EAP051
Join Our Online Community.
Facebook:
African History Times
African Camp Fire Stories
Instagram:
@African_History_Times
@African_History_ACFSPodcast
Twitter:
@AfricanCampFir1
#Cameroon #Bamum #AfricanHistoryTimes
#AfricanHistoryPodcast
#africancampirestoriespodcast
In this video, I go over the family tree and history of the pretty obscure Kingdom of Bamum in Cameroon. Apologies for butchering many of the names in this vide...
In this video, I go over the family tree and history of the pretty obscure Kingdom of Bamum in Cameroon. Apologies for butchering many of the names in this video.
Learn the Bamum Script: https://omniglot.com/writing/bamum.htm
Download a (free) PDF of the family tree here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1-Rf9t91eUbNw3w-FuSmw6sE3ltxVwat4
If you would like to send a family tree you've created to me, please contact me at [email protected] and I'll showcase it in a folder here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1kJBObZVigfcdXlioXoKB_S0ijT_iSq45
Subscribe to my channel here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCraMAcm3uSqPUDUNfhDEvYQ?sub_confirmation=1
SOURCES:
https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/collections/objects/61121 (ARTWORK FOR THE MONARCHS)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rulers_of_the_Bamum
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Bamum
http://www.afropedea.org/kingdom-of-bamum
#History #Africa #Monarchy #FamilyTree #Genealogy
In this video, I go over the family tree and history of the pretty obscure Kingdom of Bamum in Cameroon. Apologies for butchering many of the names in this video.
Learn the Bamum Script: https://omniglot.com/writing/bamum.htm
Download a (free) PDF of the family tree here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1-Rf9t91eUbNw3w-FuSmw6sE3ltxVwat4
If you would like to send a family tree you've created to me, please contact me at [email protected] and I'll showcase it in a folder here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1kJBObZVigfcdXlioXoKB_S0ijT_iSq45
Subscribe to my channel here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCraMAcm3uSqPUDUNfhDEvYQ?sub_confirmation=1
SOURCES:
https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/collections/objects/61121 (ARTWORK FOR THE MONARCHS)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rulers_of_the_Bamum
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Bamum
http://www.afropedea.org/kingdom-of-bamum
#History #Africa #Monarchy #FamilyTree #Genealogy
Bamum is one of two dozens of African languages written in non-Latin and non-Arabic scripts. The Bamum people are an ethnic group in Cameroon with a unique writ...
Bamum is one of two dozens of African languages written in non-Latin and non-Arabic scripts. The Bamum people are an ethnic group in Cameroon with a unique writing system developed by their scholar-king in the late 1800s.
Starting around 1896, twenty-five-year-old King invented a writing system for his people’s language.
It was a dream-inspired script. He invited his subjects to give him simple signs and symbols, and from them he created a system that was at first pictographic, with 465 symbol characters, but then, over half a dozen drafts, became finally a syllabary of eighty characters.
After part of Cameroon came under French control in 1919, books in the Bamum script were destroyed, and the teaching of the script in schools was banned.
Today the Bamum script remains a strong symbol of identity for the Bamum people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bamum_script
Music:
Kevin MacLeod: Whimsy Groove. Lighter and more fun small drum ensemble. Tumba, Conga, Quinto, Bells, and lots of Marimba.
mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Whimsy%20Groove.mp3. Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Kevin MacLeod: Slow Heat. Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Kevin MacLeod: Kumasi Groove (plus flugelhorn). Small drum ensemble based loosely on west African styles. This version also features a be-bop flugelhorn solo. Tumba/Conga/Quinto/Marimba/Shakers/etc. mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Kumasi%20Groove%20Flugelhorn.mp3. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Kevin MacLeod: Dubakupado. Dubakupado Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0. mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Dubakupado.mp3
Kevin MacLeod: Accralate. African-inspired lazy drum ensemble. Feel change in the middle; Tempo change near the end. Lots of polyrhythms. This piece exhibits some phantom notes athat you hear, but don't really exist. Hard to explain. Batu, Conga, Marimba, Agogo, Cowbell, Clave. mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Accralate.mp3. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Bamum is one of two dozens of African languages written in non-Latin and non-Arabic scripts. The Bamum people are an ethnic group in Cameroon with a unique writing system developed by their scholar-king in the late 1800s.
Starting around 1896, twenty-five-year-old King invented a writing system for his people’s language.
It was a dream-inspired script. He invited his subjects to give him simple signs and symbols, and from them he created a system that was at first pictographic, with 465 symbol characters, but then, over half a dozen drafts, became finally a syllabary of eighty characters.
After part of Cameroon came under French control in 1919, books in the Bamum script were destroyed, and the teaching of the script in schools was banned.
Today the Bamum script remains a strong symbol of identity for the Bamum people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bamum_script
Music:
Kevin MacLeod: Whimsy Groove. Lighter and more fun small drum ensemble. Tumba, Conga, Quinto, Bells, and lots of Marimba.
mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Whimsy%20Groove.mp3. Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Kevin MacLeod: Slow Heat. Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Kevin MacLeod: Kumasi Groove (plus flugelhorn). Small drum ensemble based loosely on west African styles. This version also features a be-bop flugelhorn solo. Tumba/Conga/Quinto/Marimba/Shakers/etc. mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Kumasi%20Groove%20Flugelhorn.mp3. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Kevin MacLeod: Dubakupado. Dubakupado Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0. mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Dubakupado.mp3
Kevin MacLeod: Accralate. African-inspired lazy drum ensemble. Feel change in the middle; Tempo change near the end. Lots of polyrhythms. This piece exhibits some phantom notes athat you hear, but don't really exist. Hard to explain. Batu, Conga, Marimba, Agogo, Cowbell, Clave. mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Accralate.mp3. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God).
According to the Gospel of Luke.
(Cameroon) Bamun / Bamoun / Bamoum / Bamum / Shupamem Language.
G...
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God).
According to the Gospel of Luke.
(Cameroon) Bamun / Bamoun / Bamoum / Bamum / Shupamem Language.
God Bless You All.
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God).
According to the Gospel of Luke.
(Cameroon) Bamun / Bamoun / Bamoum / Bamum / Shupamem Language.
God Bless You All.
This video narrates Covid-19 myth busters adapted from WHO in Bamum.
(i) Project website: https://covid-no-mb.org
(ii) Twitter handle: @CovidNoMB
(iii) Hash...
This video narrates Covid-19 myth busters adapted from WHO in Bamum.
(i) Project website: https://covid-no-mb.org
(ii) Twitter handle: @CovidNoMB
(iii) Hashtag: #CovidNoMB
(iv) Email: [email protected]
(a) Translation by Dr. Solange Pawou Molu
(b) Narration by Maryam Klein
(c) Video created by Mana Ashida
(d) Project maintained by ICU Linguistics Lab and Dr. Seunghun J. Lee in Tokyo, Japan
(e) Designed and illustrated by Daehan Won of Studio C-clef in Seoul, Korea
This video narrates Covid-19 myth busters adapted from WHO in Bamum.
(i) Project website: https://covid-no-mb.org
(ii) Twitter handle: @CovidNoMB
(iii) Hashtag: #CovidNoMB
(iv) Email: [email protected]
(a) Translation by Dr. Solange Pawou Molu
(b) Narration by Maryam Klein
(c) Video created by Mana Ashida
(d) Project maintained by ICU Linguistics Lab and Dr. Seunghun J. Lee in Tokyo, Japan
(e) Designed and illustrated by Daehan Won of Studio C-clef in Seoul, Korea
Cameroon (Bamum) - Epic Song for Bamum Kings
[Music] No infringement of copyright is Intended.
[Image] Copyright may exists.
ArsX YouTube Channel:
https://ww...
Cameroon (Bamum) - Epic Song for Bamum Kings
[Music] No infringement of copyright is Intended.
[Image] Copyright may exists.
ArsX YouTube Channel:
https://www.youtube.com/user/opus888dei/videos
ArsX Facebook Page:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/ArsX/139774319506703
ArsX Website:
https://arsx.org/
#AfricanTraditionalMusic #Bamum #Cameroon
(09h)
The noblewomen of Bamum.
Photographs from Fumban, the Bamum capital in modern-day Cameroon, by Anna Wuhrmann, a Swiss missionary worker at the Basel Mission who worked at the Fumban Mission Girls' School in the 1910’s, documenting her stay.
King Ibrahim Mbouombouo Njoya of Bamum, or simply King Njoya (c. 1860 - 1933), had up to 600 wives and up to 177 children. Njoya flirted heavily with both Christianity and Islam, while never truly giving up his traditional religion either. He built traditional schools to teach the Bamum script, Quranic schools to teach Arabic and allowed mission schools to teach German. Njoya’s daughters attended these mission schools where they were educated by Anna Wuhrmann, among others.
#Noble #NobleWomen #Royal #Ladies #women #Fumban #Bamum #Basel #mission #Cameroon #Africa #history #AfricanHistory
Welcome to Akono, Cameroon. This village of approximately 4,000 people is located in the Center region of Cameroon, 55 kilometers from Yaounde. In Akono, the main local language is Ewondo. Despite this, there are many more languages spoken in this small village. In this video, Peace Corps Volunteer Maria Bennett sets out to discover just how many languages she can find within the town.
The story of the Bamum Script of Cameroon.
How and when it was established and how it nearly became forgotten.
This video is made from the original audio podcast episode:
https://youtu.be/i321jyuZhFw
African Camp Fire Stories Podcast:
https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCv44_cXdLgRnvoe3v1V5tYg/videos
https://podcasts.apple.com/ie/podcast/african-camp-fire-stories/id1488381543
African Camp Fire Stories Podcast is available on iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Stitcher, Player.fm and other podcasting platforms.
Help the Bamum Script and Archives Project:
https://eap.bl.uk/project/EAP051
Join Our Online Community.
Facebook:
African History Times
African Camp Fire Stories
Instagram:
@African_History_Times
@African_History_ACFSPodcast
Twitter:
@AfricanCampFir1
#Cameroon #Bamum #AfricanHistoryTimes
#AfricanHistoryPodcast
#africancampirestoriespodcast
In this video, I go over the family tree and history of the pretty obscure Kingdom of Bamum in Cameroon. Apologies for butchering many of the names in this video.
Learn the Bamum Script: https://omniglot.com/writing/bamum.htm
Download a (free) PDF of the family tree here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1-Rf9t91eUbNw3w-FuSmw6sE3ltxVwat4
If you would like to send a family tree you've created to me, please contact me at [email protected] and I'll showcase it in a folder here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1kJBObZVigfcdXlioXoKB_S0ijT_iSq45
Subscribe to my channel here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCraMAcm3uSqPUDUNfhDEvYQ?sub_confirmation=1
SOURCES:
https://artmuseum.princeton.edu/collections/objects/61121 (ARTWORK FOR THE MONARCHS)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rulers_of_the_Bamum
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Bamum
http://www.afropedea.org/kingdom-of-bamum
#History #Africa #Monarchy #FamilyTree #Genealogy
Bamum is one of two dozens of African languages written in non-Latin and non-Arabic scripts. The Bamum people are an ethnic group in Cameroon with a unique writing system developed by their scholar-king in the late 1800s.
Starting around 1896, twenty-five-year-old King invented a writing system for his people’s language.
It was a dream-inspired script. He invited his subjects to give him simple signs and symbols, and from them he created a system that was at first pictographic, with 465 symbol characters, but then, over half a dozen drafts, became finally a syllabary of eighty characters.
After part of Cameroon came under French control in 1919, books in the Bamum script were destroyed, and the teaching of the script in schools was banned.
Today the Bamum script remains a strong symbol of identity for the Bamum people.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bamum_script
Music:
Kevin MacLeod: Whimsy Groove. Lighter and more fun small drum ensemble. Tumba, Conga, Quinto, Bells, and lots of Marimba.
mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Whimsy%20Groove.mp3. Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
Kevin MacLeod: Slow Heat. Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 Licensehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Kevin MacLeod: Kumasi Groove (plus flugelhorn). Small drum ensemble based loosely on west African styles. This version also features a be-bop flugelhorn solo. Tumba/Conga/Quinto/Marimba/Shakers/etc. mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Kumasi%20Groove%20Flugelhorn.mp3. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Kevin MacLeod: Dubakupado. Dubakupado Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0. mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Dubakupado.mp3
Kevin MacLeod: Accralate. African-inspired lazy drum ensemble. Feel change in the middle; Tempo change near the end. Lots of polyrhythms. This piece exhibits some phantom notes athat you hear, but don't really exist. Hard to explain. Batu, Conga, Marimba, Agogo, Cowbell, Clave. mp3: http://aux.incompetech.com/music/royalty-free/mp3-royaltyfree/Accralate.mp3. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
The Story of the Life and Times of Jesus Christ (Son of God).
According to the Gospel of Luke.
(Cameroon) Bamun / Bamoun / Bamoum / Bamum / Shupamem Language.
God Bless You All.
This video narrates Covid-19 myth busters adapted from WHO in Bamum.
(i) Project website: https://covid-no-mb.org
(ii) Twitter handle: @CovidNoMB
(iii) Hashtag: #CovidNoMB
(iv) Email: [email protected]
(a) Translation by Dr. Solange Pawou Molu
(b) Narration by Maryam Klein
(c) Video created by Mana Ashida
(d) Project maintained by ICU Linguistics Lab and Dr. Seunghun J. Lee in Tokyo, Japan
(e) Designed and illustrated by Daehan Won of Studio C-clef in Seoul, Korea
Bamum (Shüpamom[ʃŷpǎˑmə̀m] "Bamum language"), or in its French spelling Bamoun, is one of the Benue–Congo languages of Cameroon, with approximately 420,000 speakers. The language is well known for its original script developed by King Njoya and his palace circle around 1895. Cameroonian musician Claude Ndam is a native speaker of the language and uses it in his music.
Phonology
Bamum has tone, long vowels and diphthongs, and coda consonants. The simple vowels are,