Zangon Kataf (Tyap: Nietcen A̱fakan) is the name of a town and a local government area in Kaduna State, Nigeria. It is the seat of the Agwatyap, the chief of the Atyap people. The Ayet Atyap annual cultural festival is held in the grounds of the chief's palace.
Zangon Kataf is a town founded by the Atyap people circa 1767. The earlier settlement was said to have been established to accommodate the Hausa itinerary traders who began traversing the region about that time, in the days of the trans-Saharan trade and later became a very important stop point for long-distance traders from Hausaland and Kanem-Borno travelling south to today's southern Nigeria and Gonja in today's northern Ghana. Its market was said to have grown into being the third largest across the area which was to later become Northern Nigeria region (1914-1967).
The official name was derived from the Hausa word zango (an itinerary settlement) and Kataf (the Hausa exonym for the Atyap or Tyap speaking people). Meanwhile, the unofficial Tyap name was derived from nietcen (visitors) and A̱fakan (the sub-clan of the Aminyam clan of Atyap, on whose land the itinerary settlement was established). The Tyap name could be somehow equated in meaning to the original Hausa name for the settlement, Zangon Fatake. Fatake is a Hausa word meaning "itinerant traders", while zango is their itinerary settlement.
The town is mainly inhabited by ethnic Hausas, and Hausa-speaking Kanuris, Nupes and other muslim groups like Yoruba and Alago, with a few Atyap muslims.
The town is home to one of the earliest Native Authority (NA) schools in Southern Zaria (now Southern Kaduna), established in 1937; and was the seat of the District Head. Zangon Kataf district was the most important in the old Zaria Province during the British colonial period, after Zaria, due to its large population and huge human and natural resources.
The term Maba̱ta̱do (Mah-buhd-uh-doh), losely pronounced "Mabarado" (Mah-buh-ruh-doh) used sometimes to refer to the dialect of Tyap spoken around that region, refers to an ancestrial assembly point of Atyap elders from each of the four clans (of the Atyap proper) where important matters of the land including the deliberation to establish the itinerary settlement, were held. The Mabatado is located due southeast of the town.
Since the creation of Zangon Kataf LGA from Kachia LGA and the location of the headquarters in the neighbouring town of Zonkwa in 1989, the importance of the town, however, shrank immensely.
The seat of the Atyap chiefdom and the palace of the paramount ruler of the Atyap is situated in Atak Njei, located on the bank of the Kaduna River, with Zangon Kataf town on the opposite flank of the river.
Zangon Kataf can be reached via land and air.
If you are arriving from Kaduna, you can board a vehicle going to Samaru Kataf. When you get there, you board another going to Zangon Kataf.
One could take an Uber or airport cab from the airport to the Sani Abacha Mega Bus Terminal in Karu, Nasarawa State. One gets a vehicle from the garage to Kafanchan at a fare of between ₦2,500 and ₦3,000. If you came via Keffi-Barde-Jagindi road, you should stop at Samaru Kataf junction at Agban in Kagoro, to board a vehicle to Zangon Kataf. But if you came through the Keffi-Barde-Kwoi road to Kafanchan, stop at NEPA Roundabout road motor park. But if the car stops before getting there, take a motorbike at ₦100 to get there. From there, you board a car going to Zangon Kataf at a price of about ₦500.
You can get to Zangon Kataf town through any of the following means like on motorbike, bicycle or foot, which would take longer.
Most visitors to the town do go to sleep in Kafanchan where the hospitality industry is more advanced, or nearby Kagoro with moderately good accommodations for visitors.
Cellular networks like MTN, Glo, 9mobile and Airtel are used here. The network strengths vary from one part of the town to the other.
The following towns are nearby Zangon Kataf:
Primary administrative division