The Hororo or Bahororo are a Bantu-speaking ethnicity mainly residing in the north of the former Kigezi District in southwestern Uganda.[1] In 1905, they were described by a British officer as a "quiet, inoffensive people" who owned cattle.[2] They are made up mostly of the Hima ethnic group and the Bantu ethnic group. They reside mainly in Rujumbura in southwestern Uganda and are related to the Banyankole, Banyoro, Batooro, Songora and Tutsi peoples respectively. Rujumbura was ruled by the BeeneKirenzi sub-clan with Omukama Karegyesa as their last king. The Bahororo speak a dialect of Nkore-Kiga, Ruhororo. They are subdivided into clans that are similar to those of the kingdom of Ankole. Unlike Ankole, which was ruled by the Hinda clan, Mpororo was led by the Bashambo clan.
^Bamunoba, Y.K.; B. Adoukonou (1979). La mort dans la vie africaine: la conception de la mort dans la vie africaine. Unesco. p. 64. ISBN978-2-7087-0364-3.