IDNO

N.19560.ROS


Description

Half-length frontal portrait of a man from the Bambwa tribe in the Ruwenzori region, seated on a wooden? box with a white screen in the background. He wears cloth in the toga-style and he wears no other ornaments.


Place

E Africa; Uganda; ?Luenzori


Cultural Affliation

?Bambwa


Named Person


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 C31/179/ by the cataloguer. The envelope was kept in box marked C31/ by the cataloguer.
Previously stored on Shelf 4, in group of 4 wooden boxes numbered 180.

Publication: Similar image published in Roscoe, J., 1924. The Bagesu and other tribes of the Uganda Protectorate: The Third Part of the Report of the Mackie Ethnological Expedition to Central Africa. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.), p. 147, Plate XXIII, with the caption: "Man of the Bambwa tribe”. [ED 18/2/2008]
Context: "The Bambwa were a mountain tribe living on the western slopes of the Ruwenzori range. They were a turbulent people and were never completely subdued, though in the past they were regarded as free-men under the King of Kitara. Their subservience, however, though nominally the head-man of a clan was accountable to his over-lord, only meant that from time to time small presents and submissive messages were sent to Kitara or sometimes to Toro.
Neighbouring tribes declared that the Bambwa were cannibals; and though the people themselves denied this, the evidence pointed to the truth of the assertion. In fact when I visited the western slopes of the mountain some twenty-two years ago, I found them actually using human flesh. They were also in the habit of filing their teeth to points, which was said by their neighbours to be a sign of cannibalism” (Roscoe, J., 1924. The Bagesu and other tribes of the Uganda Protectorate: The Third Part of the Report of the Mackie Ethnological Expedition to Central Africa. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.), pp. 147 - 155). [ED 27/9/2007]

This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Elisabeth Deane 27/9/2007]


FM:154210

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