The non-Semitic Caucasoid people of North Africa who since prehistoric times have inhabited Barbary the Mediterranean coastlands from Egypt to the Atlantic. Their language, present-day Berber (a member of the Hamito-Semitic or Afro-Asiatic language family), is written in both Arabic and Berber characters and is spoken by about 10 million people: about one-third of Algerians and nearly two-thirds of Moroccans. Berbers are mainly agricultural, but some are still nomadic.
The Berber, who include the
Tuareg, the Kabyles, and the Shawiya, were progressively Islamized from the time of the Arab invasion in the 7th century. They are mainly mixed pastoralists and agriculturalists, some groups being nomadic pastoralists. Although some desert groups have a hierarchical social structure, most are remarkably egalitarian. Today many have moved to the towns to become traders and labourers.
© RM 2012. Helicon Publishing is division of RM.