Male representative of South Ethiopid
Female representative of South Ethiopid

Description

The southernmost Ethiopid, common between Lake Victoria and Lake Tanganyika, especially in Rwanda, Burundi, but also Uganda, Tanzania, and Eastern DR Congo. In its purest form in Tutsi. Also common in Hema. Sometimes in various Bantu populations, especially Herero who migrated to Namibia from the Rift Valley some centuries ago, also Zulu, even Khoikhoi. Experienced a dramatic reduction in the 1990s due to the Tutsi genocide.

Physical Traits

Skin: Dark brown, sometimes medium brown Hair: Tight-curly or kinky Height: Very tall, almost reaching Dinkaid standards Build: Ectomorph, hyperbrachyskelic Skull: Dolichocephalic Head Shape: Orthocranic Nose: Mildly leptorrhine or mesorrhine, sometimes convex Face: Sharp facial features Other: Scant body hair, relatively full lips, mild prognathy possible

Dark brown, sometimes medium brown skin, tight-curly or kinky hair. Very tall, almost reaching Dinkaid standards, ectomorph, hyperbrachyskelic. Dolichocephalic, orthocranic with mildly leptorrhine or mesorrhine, sometimes convex nose. Sharp facial features. Body hair is scant, the lips relatively full. Mild prognathy possible.

Geographic Distribution

Distribution map showing areas where South Ethiopid is found
Distribution map showing presence between Lake Victoria and Lake Tanganyika, particularly in Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda, Tanzania, Eastern DR Congo, among Tutsi, Hema, and related populations.
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Literature References

Biasutti (1967) called it Tutsi type, an Ethiopid variety. Originally defined South Ethiopid by Eickstedt (1934, 1943, 1951), who had included Maasai. Also used by Baumann (1952) and Hirschberg (1974). Baumann's (1975) Fumid that found among Bantu nobles can be integrated. Cole (1965) regarded them an admixed Hamitic type.

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