Gbudwe

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Gbudwe Bazingbi (c.1835), also known as Yambio,[1] was the Azande King in South Sudan from 18701905.[2]

His real name was Mbio, which means 'a kind of small antelope'. He had renamed himself "Gbudwe" (also "Gbudue"), meaning 'to tear out a man's intestines'.[citation needed]

Bornc. 1835
DiedFebruary 10, 1905 (aged c. 70)
Service years1870-1905
RankKing Of Azande
Gbudwe
King Gbudwe in the early 1900s
Bornc. 1835
DiedFebruary 10, 1905 (aged c. 70)
Service years1870-1905
RankKing Of Azande
Conflicts
  • Battle Of Burekiwe

Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard quotes a description of King Gbudwe of the Azande:

"King Gbudwe was a short man, though not excessively short... he was stout also... His breasts protruded like those of a woman... His eyes were little protruding eyes, and they sparkled like stars. When he looked at a man in anger they were terrible; then they went grey like ashes... When he approached people from afar you could not mistake King Gbudwe. He was a marvelous prince."[3]

He was unusual among Azande kings in preferring to lead from the front, and as a young man, he often took part in the fighting in person. He possessed a magic whistle, which was said to guarantee victory if blown before a battle. He encouraged his men to eat the Arabs they killed, although cannibalism was probably not normal Azande practice.

Relationship with other societies

Death

References

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