ǂKá̦gára

ǂKá̦gára or ǂKáʻgára (pronunciation ) is a character in ǀXam (San) mythology associated with lightning.

Mythology

A story recorded in the 19th century tells of ǂKá̦gára falling out with his brother-in-law ǃHãunu (pronunciation ). ǂKá̦gára came to fetch his sister and take her home, but ǃHãunu pursued them. ǃHãunu began to throw lightning at ǂKá̦gára, but ǂKá̦gára was unhurt and threw lightning back. ǃHãunu died slowly, thundering, while ǂKá̦gára went to sleep, also thundering.[1] The story is told to young children to explain lightning and thunder during a storm.[2]

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gollark: If you change it slightly, you can patent the *new* thing, not the *old* one.
gollark: That... is not how patents work.
gollark: It seems really weird that nobody is making cheaper insulin, considering that patents on it have probably expired by now. Are there difficult regulatory hurdles?
gollark: Possibly. Arguably it doesn't inherently have one but is just assigned one by humans.

See also

  • 469705 ǂKá̦gára, an astronomical body named after ǂKá̦gára, and its large moon ǃHãunu. (The likely pronunciations of these names are described there.)
  • San mythology

References

  1. Wilhelm Heinrich Immanuel Bleek; Lucy Lloyd; Gregory McNamee (2001). "ǂKá̦gára and ǃHãunu, Who Fought Each Other with Lightning". The Girl Who Made Stars: And Other Bushman Stories. Daimon. p. 82. ISBN 3-85630-599-8.
  2. W H I Bleek (2009). Specimens of Bushman Folk-Lore. Abela Publishing Ltd. p. 73. ISBN 1-907256-13-X.
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