Respuesta :

HnC
They traced their decent from mothers, not fathers

Answer:

The answer to the question: What made a Bantu village matrilinieal, would be, that they believed ancestry and descent came from the mother´s side, not from the father. Thus, even if Bantu societies were not necessarily matriarcal, and women were mostly considered housewives, they were taken as a really important part of society, because it was through them that children inherited their ancestry, and could trace their origins, not through their fathers.

Explanation:

The Bantu peoples are a group that is believed to have migrated into most regions of Africa and spread out. Today, there are a lot of tribes from the Bantu in such countries as Congo, Zimbabwe, Sudan, and many others. Their commonality, really, was the spoken language they had and also that they believed that heritage, and ancestry, was passed down to children from women, not from men. Women, therefore, had a higher position than their counterparts on other tribes, and other regions of the world. Although still being considered mainly housewives, they were also allowed to enlist and serve militarily and even rule.

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