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The following descriptions of camps, lodges and hotels will help you to get to know
more about accommodation facilities on offer ... |
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| more
about Accommodation |
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Free & Easy is an innovative accommodation voucher pass system, aimed at offering the independent traveler to Namibia the maximum flexibility and savings possible ... |
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| More About Free & Easy |
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The Damara; The
Herero; The Himba; The Kavango;
The Nama; The Owambo;
The Rehoboth Basters; The Topnaars;
The Tswanas; The Whites; Clans
& Clusters |
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| The Bushmen (San) |
| There are approximately 35 000 Bushmen in Namibia.
Also referred to as the San. These hunter-gatherers are the earliest
known inhabitants of Namibia. The Bushmen occupy only remote areas
in eastern Namibia and the Kalahari Desert in Botswana. The wealth
of Bushmen rock paintings and engravings found in mountains and hills
throughout Namibia are proof of their former habitation of |
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parts
of the country. The oldest engravings date back
28 000 years. Examples are the
famous "White Lady" painting of the Brandberg and the rich galery
of rock paintings at Twyfelfontein. |
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The Caprivians
Approximately 86 000 people live in the Caprivi (known as Caprivians),
on the northeastern extension of Namibia, which borders on Angola,
Zambia and Botswana. Most Caprivians are subsistence farmers who
make their living on the banks of the Zambezi, Kwando, Linyanti
and Chobe
rivers. In addition to fishing and hunting, they keep cattle and
cultivate the land. When the Zambezi and Chobe rivers come down
in flood, more
than half of Eastern Caprivi may be flooded. During this period
the Caprivians use their makoro (dugout canoes) to traverse the routes,
normally utilised by trucks and pedestrians. |
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The Coloureds
Like the Basters, Namibia's Coloured community has its origins in
the Cape Province of South Africa, although a large percentage
are
descendants from local intermixing. The Coloureds are genetically
very similar to the Basters and they also speak Afrikaans as a
home
language. While a small group of Coloureds practice stock farming
in the south of the country, most of them live in towns such as Windhoek,
Keetmanshoop, Lüderitz, Kalkveld
and Karasburg. A fairly large community lives in Walvis Bay,
where they
are fishermen. The Coloureds are relatively well educated and are
found in a wide range of professions, such as the civil service,
education
and the building trade. |
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The Damara
While there are only about 117 000 Damara in Namibia, they belong
to one of the oldest cultural groups in the country. Today many
Damara
work on farms, in mines and in urban centres as teachers, clerks
and officials. Some of Namibia's most eloquent politicians are
Damara.
In 1973 an area of approximately 4.7 million hectares was proclaimed
as Damaraland, with Khorixas as the administrative capital. Today
only a quarter of the total Damara population lives within the
boundaries
of this region, which became part of the Erongo Region after independence. |
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| The Herero |
| The Herero are a pastoral cattle-breeding people
who migrated to Namibia several centuries ago. After inhabiting
Kaokoland
for some 200 years, a large number of Herero migrated further south
and then eastwards, eventually establishing themselves in the northern-central
areas of the country. Today the Herero number over 130 000.
Despite the suppression of their traditional culture, confiscation
of |
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lands and the restrictions of labour laws,
the remaining Herero have managed to keep their
bonds of family life, tribal solidarity and national consciousness
alive. The annual Herero
Festival demonstrates this on Maharero Day, in August when various
units of paramilitary organisations parade before their leaders,
in full dress through the streets of Okahandja. |
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| The Himba |
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| An ancient tribe of semi-nomadic pastorals, many
of whom still live and dress according to ancient traditions, the
Himba live in scattered settlements throughout the Kunene Region.
They are tall, slender and statuesque people, characterised especially
by their proud yet friendly bearing. The homes of the Himba are
palm leaves and plastered with mud and dung. |
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The Kavango
Forming the border between Namibia and Angola for more than 400 km, is the
Okavango River, lifeline of the Kavango people. An estimated 183 000 Kavangos
make a living from fishing, tending their cattle and cultivating sorghum,
millet and maize. Closely related to the Owambo, the Kavango also originate
from the large lakes of East Africa. The traditional economy in Kavango
is based on a combination of horticulture and animal husbandry. Today thousands
of young Kavangos work as migratory labourers on farms, in mines and in
urban centres. |
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The Nama
The only true descendants of the Khoikhoi in Namibia are the Nama, whose
ancestors originally lived north and south of the Orange River. The Nama
have much in common with the Bushmen, sharing their linguistic roots and
to some extent their features. Numbering approximately 117 000, the Nama
consist of thirteen Nama tribes or groups. Nama's have a natural talent
for music, poetry and prose. Nama women are highly skilled in sewing. Kaross
floor rugs or blankets of sewn skins of domestic animals or antelopes are
a specialty. |
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The Owambo
Owambo is a collective name for a number of tribes living in central northern
Namibia and southern Angola. Four of the tribes live in the Kunene Province
in southern Angola and eight in northern Namibia. The latter form the largest
language group in the country. Numbering approximately 913 000, they represent
just under 51% of Namibia's population. The Owambo practice a mixed economy
of agriculture and animal husbandry and today’s workforces in the
mining and fishing industries consist primarily of Owambo. The Owambo have
always played an active role in politics and Namibia's ruling party. SWAPO
which is led by President Sam Nujoma, the first president of independent
Namibia. |
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The Rehoboth
Basters
The Rehoboth Basters originate from the first European settlers to the Cape,
who came into contact with the indigenous Khoisan people and bore children
with mixed blood origins called "coloureds" or "bastards".
In 1868 a group of some 90 Baster families moved to Namibia from the Cape,
eventually settling at the hot-water springs called Rehoboth. Today the Baster
community consists of approximately 72 000 people. Their home language is
Afrikaans and at their own request they are registered as Rehoboth Basters.
While they are traditionally stock and crop farmers, today many of them are
involved in other sectors of the community, especially, the building trade. |
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The Topnaars
Described by anthropologists as the modern descendants of the oldest population
group in Namibia, the Topnaars are a hardy group of Nama people who have
lived on the banks of the Kuiseb River for many years. Belonging to the
Khoikhoi people, they speak the Nama language with its guttural clicks
and high musical pitch. |
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The Tswanas
Numbering approximately 7 800, the Tswana are the smallest cultural group
in Namibia. They are related to the Tswana of Botswana and the northern
Cape Province. Namibia's Tswana live in a triangle, with a line between
Epukiro and Aminuis in the east as its base and extending to Walvis Bay,
its vertex, in the west. Most Tswana, however, live in the Gobabis district,
where they are involved in farming, many of them having bought farms north
and south of the town. |
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The Whites
About 98 000 Namibians of European descent currently live in Namibia, of
whom approximately two-thirds speak Afrikaans, one quarter German and the
rest mostly English and, to a lesser extent, Portuguese. The majority of
Whites live in the urban, central and southern parts of the country. English
was selected as Namibia's official language and Afrikaans, the common vernacular
language, was retired to a secondary position after serving with German
as one of three official languages for some 60 years. Most of Namibia's
Whites are involved in commerce, manufacturing, farming, professional services
and to a diminishing extent, the civil service. |
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Namibia has a dry climate typical of a semi-desert country where
droughts are a regular occurrence. Days are mostly warm to very hot, while
nights are generally cool. |
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about Weather |
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Namibia is a long haul destination with plenty travel options, so it's worth planning ahead to get the best out of your journey. |
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| more Travel Tips |
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Namibia, the thirstland
wilderness, offers a selection of the finest photographic opportunities.
This land of contrast and beauty is ... |
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about Photography |
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