Endongo
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia


The endongo is a musical instrument, considered the national instrument of the Baganda people of Uganda. It is a member of a family of [[]] which can be found, with variations, in many areas throughout East Africa. The endongo is specifically a Kiganda plate lyre, with the face of the bowl covered with the skin of either a monitor lizard or Indian condor.
The endongo is found within the interlacustrine area of Uganda, which are “the kingdom-states around the northern, western, and northern shores of Lake Victoria and the area between Lake Victoria and the chain of lakes: Lake Albert, Lake Edward, Lake Kivu and Lake Tanganyika”.[1] The bowl lyre present in Uganda is played by two particular tribes, the Basoga, who name the instrument entongoli, and the Baganda, who call it the endongo.[2]
The bowl lyre can be heard at school festivals, and at weddings when playing music to lead a divorce dance. It is mainly played by men such as griots (or praise-singers), and is played either solo or to accompany songs of praise. Today, few endongos are manufactured as it is considered one of the most difficult instruments to make.[2]
How or when the lyre was introduced to the area that is now Uganda is unknown.[2] Wachsmann (1971) speculates that the instrument emerged with the Luo migrations from Sudan in the late 15th and early 16th centuries. It was then adopted by the Basoga, and afterwards, finally reached the court of the Baganda King Mutesa I.[3]