Kaole
- Wɔakyerɛw nsɛm yi wɔ Akuapem kasa mu
Kaole yɛ ɔman abakɔsɛm beae a ɛwɔ Bagamoyo Mansin mu wɔ Pwani Mantam mu wɔ Tanzania. Beae no wɔ abakɔsɛm mu kurow Bagamoyo apuei fam akwansin abiɛsa wɔ India Po no mpoano. Swahilifo abo dedaw a wɔde akorade ayɛ a efi afeha a ɛto so 13 ne afeha a ɛto so 16 ntam no wɔ mpɔtam hɔ. Amamfõ no bi fi afeha a ɛto so 13 mu na ɛwɔ asɔredan abien ne adamoa 30.[1]
Wɔde akorade abo a wɔde abo adum a ɛhyɛ adamoa no bi agyirae na esii adamoa a ɛwɔ Kaole no. Sɛnea ɛhɔnom atetesɛm kyerɛ no, adamoa no bi yɛ mpɔtam hɔ sodifo a na wonim wɔn sɛ "diwanis" no adamoa. Wogye di sɛ "Diwanis" yɛ Sheikh Ali Muhamad al-Hatim al-Barawi asefo. Wɔasisi tete nneɛma akorae ketewaa bi, baabi a wɔda nneɛma bi a wohuu wɔ amamfõ no mu adi. Saa nneɛma yi bi yɛ Chinafo de ma enti ɛma wonya tete aguadi mu abusuabɔ ho adanse.[2][3][4]
Abakɔsɛm
sesaMfiase no, wɔtraa Kaole wɔ afeha a ɛto so 8 mu sɛ aguadi kurow. Anka mangrove nnua, sandalwood, ebony ne asonse bɛyɛ nneɛma atitiriw a wɔde di gua. Na wɔde nnua na esisi Kaolefo atrae dodow no ara, na ɛmaa ɛnyɛ den sɛ abo asɔredan ne adamoa no. Akyiri yi, Zaramofoɔ a wɔwɔ mpɔtam hɔ no frɛɛ beaeɛ no Kaole, a ɛkyerɛ "kɔ na hwɛ".[5] Nea odii kan suaa Kaole Amamfõ no ho ade ne Britania fam tutufo Neville Chittick, bɛyɛ afe 1958.[2]
Hwɛ eyi nso
sesaNsɛm a wɔde gyinaa so
sesa- ↑ Pollard, Edward (2011). "Safeguarding Swahili trade in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries: a unique navigational complex in south-east Tanzania". World Archaeology. 43 (3): 458–477. doi:10.1080/00438243.2011.608287. JSTOR 41308511. S2CID 161668324.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Kaole ruins". PlanetWare. Archived from the original on 16 July 2010.
- ↑ Bwasiri, Emmanuel J. (1 December 2011). "The challenge of managing intangible heritage: Problems in Tanzanian legislation and administration". South African Archaeological Bulletin. 66 (194): 129–135. JSTOR 23631415.
- ↑ Masele, Frank (2012). "Private Business Investments in Heritage Sites in Tanzania: Recent Developments and Challenges for Heritage Management". The African Archaeological Review. 29 (1): 51–65. doi:10.1007/s10437-012-9105-0. JSTOR 41486788. S2CID 161108176.
- ↑ Another place, south of Dar es Salaam, has a name with a similar origin: Gezaulole, meaning "try and see".