Rendille
Permanent URI for this communityhttps://kencorpus.ke/handle/123456789/19
Rendille is a Cushitic language spoken by approximately 96,000 camel pastoralists in the Kaisut Desert, Marsabit County (2019 Kenya Census). Related to Somali within the Sam subgroup of Lowland East Cushitic — the classification established by Bernd Heine in The Sam Languages (1978) — it has been heavily influenced by Nilotic Maa (Samburu) through centuries of inter-community contact.
The Ariaal, a bilingual Rendille-Samburu community of mixed Cushitic and Nilotic descent, represent a documented case study in contact linguistics: they commonly speak Samburu in daily life while retaining Rendille in ritual and inter-community contexts (Joshua Project: Rendille, Ariaal in Kenya; Spencer 1973, via Cambridge University Press). Rendille oral tradition includes camel-management knowledge, a star-based calendar system governing pastoral movements and ceremonies, and oral poetry traditions including camel-praise songs (Begin North Adventures: Rendille Tribe; 101 Last Tribes: Rendille). Sonnet 4.6