Gembu, Nigeria
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Gembu is a town on the
Mambilla Plateau The Mambilla Plateau is a plateau in the Taraba State of Nigeria. The Mambilla Plateau has an average elevation of about above sea level, making it the highest plateau in Nigeria. Some of its villages are situated on hills that are at least above ...
in
Taraba State ) , image_map = Nigeria - Taraba.svg , map_alt = , map_caption = Location of Taraba State in Nigeria , coordinates = , coor_pinpoint = , coordinates_footnotes = , ...
of
Nigeria Nigeria ( ), , ig, Naìjíríyà, yo, Nàìjíríà, pcm, Naijá , ff, Naajeeriya, kcg, Naijeriya officially the Federal Republic of Nigeria, is a country in West Africa. It is situated between the Sahel to the north and the Gulf o ...
. It is the headquarters of
Sardauna Sardauna Local Government Area is located in the extreme southeast of Taraba State in Nigeria. It sits atop the Mambilla Plateau, which is dotted by other towns such as Maisamari and Nguroje. The capital of the LGA is Gembu, which is the pri ...
Local Government Area A local government area (LGA) is an administrative division of a country that a local government is responsible for. The size of an LGA varies by country but it is generally a subdivision of a State (administrative division), state, province, divi ...
(formerly "Mambilla" LGA) in Taraba State. Sitting at an average elevation of about above sea level, it is among the highest elevated towns in Nigeria.


History

It was believed from antiquity that the first inhabitants of the entire Mambilla Region were the descendants of the Bantu ancestors,who are known to have inhabited the region by 5000 BC (Zeitlyn & Connell, 2003). They constitute the
Bantu people The Bantu peoples, or Bantu, are an ethnolinguistic grouping of approximately 400 distinct List of ethnic groups of Africa, ethnic groups who speak Bantu languages. They are native to 24 countries spread over a vast area from Central Africa to Sou ...
who stayed home in the Mambilla region after the
Bantu expansion The Bantu expansion is a hypothesis about the history of the major series of migrations of the original Proto-Bantu-speaking group, which spread from an original nucleus around Central Africa across much of sub-Saharan Africa. In the process, t ...
across Africa between 3000 BC and 1500 AD. These are represented in this town by the Mambilla people who founded it.


Location

Gembu, the administrative name of the Mambilla Town of Bommi, was taken from the name of a former monarch of the town known as 'Gelmvu'. The town is found on the Mambilla Plateau, in the south-eastern part of Taraba state, close to the border separating Nigeria and Cameroon. Bantuists believe that the people inhabiting the Mambilla Region and their neighbours are descendants of the Proto-Bantu ancestors who inhabited the region generally before the Bantu expansion. They constitute the Bantu or Bantoid people who remained after the great split and Bantu expansion across Africa beginning after 2000 BC (being described as 'the Bantu who stayed at home'). The following is an excerpt from the book ''The Mambilla Region in African History''.
By far the most significant event in African pre-history is the ethnogenesis and spread of the Bantu-speaking peoples associated with the Mambilla Region of the Nigeria-Cameroon borderlands (the Mambillobantu Region) in west-central Africa. The Bantu expansion, which many authorities believe to have begun from this region after 2000 B.C until about 1500 AD, led to the ramification of over one-third of Africa by the same category of Africans, the Bantus, covering some thirty African countries today. Most of the people existing in the central and southern Nigeria-Cameroon border region, southern Cameroon, central, eastern and southern Africa today are a result of the Bantu expansion from the this region or the result of a fusion between the Bantu migrants and Nilo-Saharans and Cushites (as in a few communities in East Africa) or Bantu and Pygmies (as in some communities in central Africa). One in every three Africans today is Bantoid. The Mambilla Region itself was not totally evacuated and the area is still occupied by the Macro-Bantu-speaking Mambilloid peoples who represent the remnants of that great African expansion.
Bommi Town (Gembu) is about from the Kyiumdua or
Donga River The Donga River is a river in Nigeria and Cameroon. The river arises from the Mambilla Plateau in Eastern Nigeria, forms part of the international border between Nigeria and Cameroon, and flows northwest to eventually merge with the Benue River in ...
valley.


People

Originally, the only inhabitants of Bommi were the 'Bom-bo' or Tungbo Clan of the Mambilla. They constitute the true Bommi people. The Bommi are the central group of the wide Tungbo which include the Mbubo, Ngebo (from Lenge to as far northwest as Tumbuà, Jimau, Nasò, Ngùng, Yénájù Plain, and Furrmi), Gulkal, Mverip, Kwubo, and their Saan Cradle from which point they all expanded. Splinters from the Tungbo are also to be found in Liimila (Mbamnga), Mvurr (Warwar), Tem, Niggi, and Ngunochin. Today, Bommi Town (Gembu), being the headquarters of a Local Government Area, has attracted a population diverse in ethnic makeup, which has resulted in the town taking a
cosmopolitan Cosmopolitan may refer to: Food and drink * Cosmopolitan (cocktail), also known as a "Cosmo" History * Rootless cosmopolitan, a Soviet derogatory epithet during Joseph Stalin's anti-Semitic campaign of 1949–1953 Hotels and resorts * Cosmopoli ...
shape. People coming from different parts of Nigeria have made the town their home. Cameroonian immigrants can also be found in the town. The local government area, known as "Mambilla" throughout its ancient and contemporary history, was renamed "Sardauna" by the then Col. Jega, related to the "Sardauna of Sokoto" Ahmadu Bello, when he came as Military Governor of former Gongola State in 1976. This misnomer was quashed in the Second Republic (1979-1983) and the ancient name of "Mambilla" was restored. However, on his second coming in 1984, Jega arbitrarily re-imposed the name "Sardauna", a chieftaincy title, on this Local Government Area (previously successively known as "Mamberre" Highlands in precolonial times, "Mambilla Landschaft" in German times, and "Mambilla Area", "Mambilla District", "Mambilla-Gashaka Native Authority", "Mambilla Division" and "Mambilla Local Authority" in British and post-British times). Jega imposed the misnomer of "Sardauna" notwithstanding that it was unhistorical and non-autochthonous. It is why Mubi, Ganye, Toungo, Michika and all other areas formerly known as "Sardauna Province" resumed the use of their proper and autochthonous names. The
Mambila The Mambilla or Mambila people of Nigeria live on the Mambilla Plateau (in 'Sardauna' local government area of Taraba State in Nigeria). A small fraction of Mambilla migrants left the Mambilla Plateau for the Ndom Plain (also known as northern Tik ...
people make up the largest single ethnic group in the town, followed by the Kaka, and then the Hausa-Fulanis, the main
cattle Cattle (''Bos taurus'') are large, domesticated, cloven-hooved, herbivores. They are a prominent modern member of the subfamily Bovinae and the most widespread species of the genus ''Bos''. Adult females are referred to as cows and adult mal ...
rearers of the plateau. The Mambilla people, the denizens of this Plateau, were the only inhabitants of the town until colonial rule set in. They are thought to have been in this region for the past five millennia. On the other hand, the first Kaka (Yamba) probably arrived the Plateau in "early German times" but remained unnoticed until 1928,Percival, 1938 while the first isolated grazing visits by the Fulani nomads were in the late 1920s. According to Percival, "No Fulani settled on the Mambilla Plateau until after the British occupation". It is estimated that 85% of the Mambilla Plateau is composed of the Mambilla Group and these number over 500,000 worldwide.'Mambilla Summit", 2004 There are also several minor groups, mainly businessmen and women from other parts of Nigeria and Cameroon, who can be found doing business in the Mambilla Plateau, such as the Igbos, Hausas, Bansos, and Kambus.


Accessibility

Although in the past, roads leading to Bommi Town (Gembu) on the Mambilla Plateau were poorly maintained and travelling to the town from other parts of Nigeria was difficult, the transport problems improved radically with the construction of the Mambilla Highway linking the plateau to the lowlands west and north of it. The road works begun by the Taraba State Government in 2012 have added a greater prospect of ease of communication with the rest of Nigeria.


References

{{coord, 6, 43, 0, N, 11, 15, 0, E, display=title Populated places in Taraba State