IDNO
P.9281.ACH1
Description
On Catalogue Card: “Boro tribesmen”.
On Catalogue Card for duplicate image LS.26719.WHI: "N.W. Amazon. 175.27.
3 Boro tribesmen."
A group portrait of three Boro men posing facing the camera standing outdoors. The men are wearing moh-hen (loin-cloths), with the man on the left also wearing upper-arm ligatures and a piece of string or cloth tied round his waist. The man at the centre has long hair, the others have short hair. In the background is part of a malokas (Indian communal house). [TC 09/06/1999, updated JD 01/10/2019]
Place
S America; Colombia; North West Amazon
Cultural Affliation
South American Indian; Witotoan; Boro [Bora; Meamuyna; Meamuina; Miraña; Miranya; Mirane; Miranha; Miragua; Miraño; Mirania]
Named Person
Photographer
?Whiffen, Thomas William
Collector / Expedition
Date
?1905 - 1909
Collection Name
Mounted Haddon CollectionWhiffen Collection
Source
Format
Print Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
Publication: Reproduced in Whiffen, T. W., 1915 as Pl. X with the caption “Boro tribesmen”. [TC 01/06/1999]
Publication: Reproduced in Paternoster, G. S., 1913 opposite page 128, with the caption “A Huitoto Capitan and Two of his Nacion.” [TC 01/06/1999]
Related Image: A duplicate print is at the RAI, reference 36126, and annotated by Whiffen in pencil on the reverse with "Boro."
Photocopies of Whiffen prints at the RAI are held in the UCMAA archive, reference W19/1/3. See Whiffen Collection record for further details on RAI collection. [TC 09/06/1999, updated JD 02/10/2019]
Context: Whiffen explains that "the men wear little or nothing but what the Witoto call a moh-hen, that is, a strip of beaten bark-cloth carried from front to rear between the legs and tucked in at either end over a string or strap of bark-cloth bound about the waist" (Whiffen, T. W., 1915: 72). He informs us that "the Amazonian boy is first provided with a breech-cloth when he is five years old. His earliest lesson is in its manufacture, for every Indian fashions his own clothing" (ibid: 73). He then describes how the loin-cloth is manufactured and notes that it is never removed "in the sight of man or woman" and is buried with a man when he dies (ibid: 74). Steward notes that boys and men "wear a bark-cloth breech-clout after the age of five or six years (1963: 753). [TC 01/06/1999]
Bibliography Reference: Whiffen discusses Indian communal houses (malokas) at length (Whiffen, T. W., 1915: 40-48). He notes that in the homestead "there is but one great house, thatched and ridge-roofed like a gigantic hay-rick ... this is the home of some three score Indians" in which "there are no divisions for each family" (ibid: 40). He notes that the house is a temporary dwelling which falls into disrepair and is burnt every two to three years, at which point the inhabitants move to new location (ibid: 41-42). He then discusses how the site is chosen and the building constructed (ibid: 42-44). He notes that "the far end of the house - where there is usually another small entrance - is the portion reserved for the chief and his family" (ibid: 46) and that "each family has its own fire" (ibid: 47), with their hammocks slung around it and possessions slung in the rafters above. He explains that "at ordinary times there will be possibly from fifty to sixty people in the tribal house, but on the occasion of any festivity as many as two hundred will crowd in" (ibid: 48). He also provides plans and diagrams of the house (ibid: 41, 43, 45,46) and an illustration of the type of palm used for thatching (ibid: pl. VI). Menimehe houses, he notes, are "more open" than those of other groups (ibid: 51). [TC 01/06/199]
Bibliography Reference: Steward also discusses Witotoan villages and houses, explaining that "the typical Witotoan community consists of a single large multifamily house, though some villages have several large houses" and that these are built on "a dry site ... some distance from the river" (1963: 752). Plate 81 depicts a "Witoto communal house" similar to those depicted in the Whiffen Collection photographs. Steward notes that "the sociopolitical unit is the exogamous, patrilocal community which usually occupies a single large house and is divided into family groups. Local exogamy seems to prevail even when the community has several houses" (ibid: 755). Steward and Faron (1959: 314) also discusses Witotoan houses. More recent analyses, such as that by Hugh-Jones on Barasana cosmology, demonstrate that the Indian house can be interpreted structurally as a significant metaphorical representation of the cosmos, myth and society (Hugh-Jones.S. 1979). [TC 01/06/199]
FM:143931
Images (Click to view full size):