Missionary Contributions to Bantu Languages in Tanzania
James Thomas Last (1850–1933) and the Vidunda language
This paper deals with linguistic work by the lay missionary James Thomas Last (1850–1933), who was among the first Europeans to live up-country in what is now Tanzania. In the course of a seven-year stay he was exposed to African languages which have only partly been known outside Africa. Last collected linguistic data that culminated 1885 in the publication of the Polyglotta Africana Orientalis. This book is a collection of 210 lexical items and sentences elicited in or translated into 48 African languages, and supplemented by entries for some other languages. In order to demonstrate the relevance as well as the inconsistencies of this missionary’s contribution, special attention is paid to the book section on the Vidunda language currently spoken by approximately 10,000 people in Central Tanzania. It turns out that approximately 75 per cent of the Vidunda entries are still acceptable today. The data even provides insight into the grammatical set-up of Vidunda (e.g., the noun classes and constituents of the noun phrase). Less relevant are the verbal paradigms. In a nutshell, Last produced material which had for many years been the sole source of lexical and grammatical information about the Vidunda language.
References
Beidelman, Terence O.
1982 Colonial Evangelism: A socio-historical study of an East-African mission at the grassroots. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.

Cust, Robert Needham
1883 A Sketch of the Modern Languages of Africa. 21 vols. London: Trübner & Co.

Cust, Robert Needham
1885 “
Preface”.
Last 1885: xi–xii.

Guthrie, Malcolm
1970–1971 Comparative Bantu. Vol. 3/21. Farnborough: Gregg International.

Krapf, Johann Ludwig
1850 Vocabulary of Six East African Languages: Kisuahéli, Kiníka, Kipokómo, Kikámba, Kihiáu, Kigalla. Tübingen: Ludwig Friedrich Fues.

Krapf, Johann Ludwig
1852 A Vocabulary of the Kihiau Language. London: Seeley, Service & Co.

Last, Joseph Thomas
1885 Polyglotta Africana Orientalis: Or a comparative collection of two hundred and fifty words and sentences in forty-eight languages and dialects spoken south of the Equator and additional words in nineteen languages. London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.

Last, Joseph Thomas
1886 Grammar of the Kaguru Language, Eastern Equatorial Africa. London: Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge.

Legère, Karsten
1988 “
C. G. Büttner und die ‘Zeitschrift für afrikanische Sprachen’”.
Asien, Afrika, Lateinamerika 16:6.1036–1048.

Maho, Jouni Filip & Bonny Sands
2002 The Languages of Tanzania: A bibliography (=
Orientalia et Africana Gothoburgensia, 17.) Gothenburg: Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis.

Petzell, Malin
2008 The Kagulu Language of Tanzania: Grammar, texts and vocabulary. (=
East African Languages and Dialects, 19.) Cologne: R. Köppe.

Pott, August Friedrich
1852 Review of Krapf (1850).
Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft 61.331–348.

Orientierungsheft
1911 Militärisches Orientierungsheft für Deutsch-Ostafrika. Dar es Salaam: Verlag der “Deutsch-Ostafrikanischen Rundschau”.

R. N. L.
1934 “
Obituary: Joseph Thomas Last”.
The Geographical Journal 83:4.352.

Struck, Bernhard
1921 “
Die Einheitssprache Deutsch-Ostafrikas”.
Koloniale Rundschau 41.164–196.

Cited by
Cited by 2 other publications
[no author supplied]
2013.
Current Bibliography of the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences, 2013.
Isis 104:S1
► pp. i ff.

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 24 september 2023. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers.
Any errors therein should be reported to them.