IDNO
N.19083.ROS
Description
The King of Bunyoro seated (possibly on the throne?) on the porch of a building in the Royal enclosure? with seven members of the Sacred Guild? (six standing and one seated on one side of the King); all wearing kanzus (white tunics) covered by European-style jackets. To the left, the King’s wife? or daughter? is seated, wearing a kanzu (white tunic) and a necklace. The King’s throne (or chair? - not visible) is positioned centrally on two animal skins (one appears to be a leopard skin). In the left of the foreground a wooden bench is visible as well as a woven? grass? mat.
Physical Condition: Film is a slightly yellow colour.
Place
E Africa; Uganda; western Uganda; Western District; Bunyoro
Cultural Affliation
Banyoro (Bakitara)
Named Person
Andereya Bisereko Duhaga II (b. 1882 - d. 1924)
Photographer
?Roscoe, John R.
Collector / Expedition
Roscoe, John R. [Mackie Ethnological Expedition, Uganda, 1919 - 1920]
Date
1919 - 1920
Collection Name
Roscoe Collection
Source
Format
Film Negative Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
This negative was kept in an envelope marked C30/32/ by the cataloguer. The envelope was kept in box marked C30/ by the cataloguer.
Previously stored on Shelf 4, in group of 4 wooden boxes numbered 180.
Context: "The people of Kitara were a despotically ruled nation believing firmly in the supreme right of their King, who was regarded as something more than an ordinary man, as, indeed, approaching to the divine, for his power on earth was absolute and he had almost as great an influence over the heavenly powers. He was a completely autocratic ruler and all the wealth of the country, that is, the cattle, was regarded as belonging to him...
Though the king’s power was absolute he consulted in most matters a body of chiefs who were known as the Sacred Guild. These chiefs were his special advisors and protectors and were, to all intents and purposes, united as blood-brothers by a solemn ceremony of testing and admission to the Guild. This ceremony is described in the section on Inheritance, for the son of a chief of the Guild almost invariably inherited the right of admission, though he did not succeed directly to membership on his father’s death but had to go through the ceremony of admission. Two chiefs, Bamuroga, who was a member of the Guild and had charge of the kings’ tombs, and Munyawa, the head of the Royal clan, were the most powerful of all the chiefs and during the interval between the death of one king and the accession of another, these two governed the country” (Roscoe, 1923, p.52). [ED 2/10/2007]
Context: "Round the king’s enclosure were built the enclosures of the members of the Sacred Guild and other important chiefs, who thus protected the king from danger of sudden attack by any enemy. The chiefs of the Sacred Guild were a small body of special councillors, chosen, until quite recently, entirely from the Bahuma or pastoral people, who had to bind themselves to the king by a special and very stringent oath which was taken by drinking some milk from cows which were sacred to the king himself.” (Roscoe, J., 1923. The Bakitara (or Banyoro): The First Part of the Report of The Mackie Ethnological Expedition to Central Africa. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), p. 8). See also:
-Sacred Guild, gateway of, p. 75
-judgment of a member of, p.62
-herd, v. Nkorogi
-huts, p. 70, p. 100, p. 133, p. 146.
-guards of, p. 75
-names of, p. 80, p. 81
-rules of, p. 80, p. 81, p. 173. [ED 3/10/2007]
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Elisabeth Deane 9/1/2008]
FM:153733
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