The Serer people are a West Africanethnoreligious group.[4][5] They are the third-largest ethnic group in Senegal, making up 15% of the Senegalese population.[6] They are also found in northern Gambia and southern Mauritania.[7]
The Serer people originated in the Senegal River valley at the border of Senegal and Mauritania, moved south in the 11th and 12th century, then again in the 15th and 16th centuries as their villages were invaded and they were subjected to religious pressures.[8][9][10] They have had a sedentary settled culture and have been known for their farming expertise and transhumant stock-raising.[9][11]
The Serer people have been historically noted as an ethnic group practicing elements of both matrilineality and patrilineality that long resisted the expansion of Islam,[12][13][14][15][16] fought against jihads in the 19th century, then opposed the French colonial rule.[17][18][19] In the 20th century, most of them converted to Islam (Sufism[20]), but some are Christians or follow their traditional religion.[17] The Serer society, like other ethnic groups in Senegal, has had social stratification featuring endogamous castes and slaves,[21][22][23] although other historians, such as Thiaw, Richard and others, reject a slave culture among this group, or at least not to the same extent as other ethnic groups in the region.[24][25][26]
The Serer people are also referred to as Sérère, Sereer, Serrere, Serere, Sarer, Kegueme, Seereer and sometimes wrongly "Serre".
^Agence Nationale de Statistique et de la Démographie. Estimated figures for 2007 in Senegal alone
^Natural Resources Research, UNESCO, Natural resources research, Volume 16, Unesco (1979), p. 265
^Kalis, Simone, Médecine traditionnelle religion et divination chez les Seereer Sine du Senegal, La connaissance de la nuit, L'Harmattan (1997), p. 299, ISBN2738451969
^Lamoise, LE P., Grammaire de la langue Serer (1873)
^Becker, Charles: Vestiges historiques, trémoins matériels du passé clans les pays sereer, Dakar (1993), CNRS-ORSTOM [2]
^Gastellu, Jean-Marc, Petit traité de matrilinarité. L'accumulation dans deux sociétés rurales d'Afrique de l'Ouest, Cahiers ORSTOM, série Sciences Humaines 4 (1985) [in] Gastellu, Jean-Marc, Matrilineages, Economic Groups and Differentiation in West Africa: A Note, O.R.S.T.O.M. Fonds Documentaire (1988), pp 1, 2–4 (pp 272–4), 7 (p 277) [3]
^Dupire, Marguerite, Sagesse sereer: Essais sur la pensée sereer ndut, KARTHALA Editions (1994). For tim and den yaay (see p. 116). The book also deals in depth about the Serer matriclans and means of succession through the matrilineal line. See pp. 38, 95–99, 104, 119–20, 123, 160, 172–74, ISBN2865374874[4]