- Fang (Batı Afrika halkı)
Fang (Batı Afrika halkı) (Topical Term)
- Fang (African people)
- Earlier heading: Fan (African people)
- Earlier heading: Fang (West African people)
- Mpangwe (African people)
- Pahouin (African people)
- Pahuin (African people)
- Pamue (African people)
- Pangwe (African people)
- Broader heading: Bantu-speaking peoples
- Broader heading: Ethnology Cameroon
- Broader heading: Ethnology Congo (Brazzaville)
- Broader heading: Ethnology Equatorial Guinea
- Broader heading: Ethnology Gabon
Ethnologue, 2020 (Fang, a language of Equatorial Guinea [fan]; UF Pahouin, Pamue, Pangwe; Autonym: Fang; Classification: Niger-Congo, Atlantic-Congo, Volta-Congo, Benue-Congo, Bantoid, Southern, Narrow Bantu, Northwest, A, Ewondo-Fang (A.75); Also spoken in: Cameroon, Congo, Gabon. In Cameroon there is a dialect of Fang called Fang (Okak) as well as an unrelated language called Fang [fak] spoken by 4,000 people)
Wikipedia, March 13, 2020 (The Fang people, also known as Fãn or Pahouin, are a Central African ethnic group found in Equatorial Guinea, northern Gabon, and southern Cameroon. Representing about 85% of the total population of Equatorial Guinea, concentrated in the Río Muni region, the Fang people are its largest ethnic group. The Fang are also the largest ethnic group in Gabon, making up about a quarter of the population.)
TR-AnTOB AU 13.08.2025