The Shilluk (Shilluk: Chollo) are a major Luo Nilotic ethnic group that resides in the northeastern Upper Nile state of South Sudan on the western bank of the White Nile River in Upper Nile. Before the Second Sudanese Civil War, the Shilluk also lived in settlements on the northern bank of the Sobat River, close to where the Sobat joins the Nile in the defunct Sobat district and in particular Anakdiar district today. The defunct Sobat district was made up of the Current Baliet County and Akoka County, and the indigenous residents of these counties are people of Ngok Lual Yak and Dongjol. Shilluk(chollol) with their different clans, are residing in Obwa lelo and Anakdiar on the Eastern White Nile banks and around the northern Sobat River confluence with the White Nile along both banks of Sobat River eastward up to Doma North of Sobat and Ashweel South of Sobat River. And also, these chollo people are residence of the some parts of White Nile eastern Bank up to the border of the Sudan in Renk county today.
The Shilluk are the third-largest ethnic group of southern Sudan, after the Dinka and Nuer.
Their language is called Dhøg Cøllø, dhøg being the Shilluk word for language and mouth. It belongs to the Luo branch of the Western Nilotic subfamily of the Nilotic languages.
History
Shilluk kingdom
The Shilluk people formed today's Shilluk Kingdom in southern Sudan in 1454. Historically, it was a patriarchal monarchy led by a reth from the divine lineage of the culture hero Nyikang, who is believed to affect the nation's health. Their society was once somewhat hierarchical, with castes of royals, nobles, commoners, and enslaved people. Today, the Shilluk government is a democracy, with an elected headman voted in by a council of hamlet heads.
In urban areas like Juba, these customs persist in modified forms. One chief noted that families may accept smaller payments—such as three goats or a modest cash sum—making marriage more accessible to youth. Public celebrations are held in communal spaces, with community contributions reinforcing collective involvement. Despite economic and social shifts, Shilluk marriage continues to emphasize respect, kinship, and cultural continuity.
Religion
Most Shilluk have converted to Christianity, while some still follow the traditional religion or a mixture of the two; a few have converted to Islam. The Episcopal Church of Sudan dates the event to the late 19th century, when the Church Mission Society first began to send missionaries.
Colonial policies and missionary movements have divided Shilluk into Catholic and Protestant denominations. The Catholic Church historically proselytized on the western bank of the Nile. It ran mission stations at Lul, Detwoc, Tonga, and Yoynyang. In contrast, the American Inland Mission ran a mission station at Doleib Hill, located south of Malakal on the eastern side of the Nile but situated on the Sobat River. The Shilluk were a minority in the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM) for most of the Second Sudanese Civil War, their number peaking in the late 1980s and the pre-ceasefire fighting in 2004.
Physique
The Shilluk, along with the Dinka, have been considered some of the tallest people in the world. In an investigation between 1953 and 1954, D. F. Robers reported that Dinka Ruweng males were, on average, 181.3 cm (5 ft 11 1⁄2 in) tall, while Shilluk males averaged 182.6 cm (6 ft 0 in). General characteristics among the Nilotic people include long legs, narrow bodies, and short trunks, adaptations to South Sudan's hot climate.
However, in 1995, male Shilluk refugees in southwestern Ethiopia were, on average, 172.6 cm (5 ft 8 in) tall. The study suggests that Nilotic people "may attain greater height if privileged with favorable environmental conditions during early childhood and adolescence, allowing full expression of the genetic material." These refugees were displaced due to the Sudanese civil wars in their country from 1955 to the present.
Recent history
During the summer of 2010, the Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA), in an attempt to disarm the tribe and stop a local Shilluk rebellion, burned several villages and killed an untold number of civilians in South Sudan's Shilluk Kingdom. Over 10,000 people were displaced during the rainy season and sent fleeing into the forest, often naked, without bedding, shelter, or food. Many children died from hunger and cold.
Violence broke out again in late 2022.
Footnotes
References
- This section discusses number systems in Dhok-Chollo.
External links
- The Shilluk people, their language and folklore (1912) [https://archive.org/details/shillukpeoplethe00west_0]
- The Gateway to Shilluk Community
- Library of Congress Photo of two Shilluk men, dated 1936
- Mayhem in Sudan's Shilluk Kingdom
- Shilluk, Dhocolo in South Sudan
