-
Adumu, also
known as the
Maasai jumping dance, is a type of
dance that the
Maasai people of
Kenya and
Tanzania practice.
Young Maasai warriors generally...
- the
Adumu, or aigus,
sometimes referred to as "the
jumping dance" by non-Maasai. (Both
adumu and
aigus are Maa
verbs meaning "to jump" with
adumu meaning...
-
Maasai men
perform adumu, the
traditional jumping dance....
- Wotimigbinin; Zion;
Amapere Ese Odo
Arogbo IV 352109
Adoloseimo II;
Adoloseimo III;
Adumu-Uba; Agbedigbaran; Aserejugbini; Biagbini; Gboinbo; Itaita; Kurukurugbini;...
-
Maasai wearing traditional clothes named Matavuvale while performing Adumu, a
traditional dance...
- men in
purple suits jumping up and down in
unison is a
reference to the
adumu Maasai jumping dance of
Kenya and Tanzania, a
ceremony in
which men in a...
- Usokun-Degema, Ogurama, Tombia, Ke, Bille,
Obuama and Bukuma.
Other villages are;
Adumu-ama, Angalabio, Elem-Sangana, Fouche, Idama, Kala-Degema, Obuama, Old-Bakan...
- in Agbor."
Specific notable African dances,
divided by region, include:
Adumu: a
Maasai jumping dance performed during the warriors'
coming of age ceremony...
-
Varadarajan Nee
Samanamevaru composed by G.N.
Balasubramaniam Karunanu Nanu kĀp
Ādumu composed by Dr. M.
Balamuralikrishna Sri
Lakshmi Ramana Narayana composed...
-
black men in
suits jumping up and down in
unison is a
reference to the
adumu Maasai jumping dance of
Kenya and Tanzania, a
ceremony in
which men in a...