Kafo
The Kafo or Kafu was one of the most basic political units of Mande society in the pre-colonial period. It was a confederation of villages headed by a hereditary chief or kafo-tigi.
Structure
In Mandinka society the lu (extended family) is the basic unit, and is led by a fa (family head) who manages relations with other fa. A dugu (village) is formed by a collection of lu, and the dugu is led by the fa of the most important lu, aided by the dugu-tigi (village head or fa of the first lu that settled there). A group of dugu-tigi form a kafu. The Keita clan initially held the status of kafu-tigi before Sundiata's expansion and the creation of the title mansa for the ruler of the Mali Empire.[1]
Kafo-tigi
The kafo-tigi was generally the head of the first family established on the land. Their primary role was to protect the kafo and its people from foreign invasion and enforce the laws. While their power was supreme in theory, in reality it was constrained by the dugu-tigi of the other villages and the heads of important families and caste groups.[2][3]
Examples
References
- ^ Cannos-Donnay, Sirio (2019). "Mali Empire". Oxford Research Encyclopedia: African History.
- ^ Meillassoux, Claude (1963). "Histoire et institutions du "kafo" de Bamako d'après la tradition des Niaré". Cahiers d'Études Africaines. 4 (14). Retrieved 16 August 2025.
- ^ Cissoko, Sekene Mody (1983). "Formations Sociales et État En Afrique Précoloniale : Approche Historique". Présence Africaine. 127. Retrieved 11 November 2024.