IDNO

P.48902.ACH2


Description

A three-quarter length seated frontal portrait of two men holding placards annotated with their cultural group identification; the first on the left from Bamashe and the man on the right from Barotse. Another three men and a corrugated iron building, possibly a government building?, is in the background. [JD 19/10/2009]


Place

S Africa; Zambia; Zimbabwe; Western Zambia; Kwando River; Victoria Falls [Rhodesia]


Cultural Affliation


Named Person


Photographer

Hartland, Ethel (Miss)


Collector / Expedition

Hartland, E. Sidney [The British Association South African Meeting, 1905]


Date

1905


Collection Name

Unmounted Haddon Collection


Source


Format

Print Black & White


Primary Documentation


Other Information

The print was found in envelope now marked C157/2/4/. This envelope was found in drawer 2 of the green cabinet. The entire cabinet was previously numbered as “batch 143” and is now re-numbered C157/ by the transcriber.

Related Archive: The cover page (proof copy) of a book “Specimens of Bushman Folklore” collected by the Late W.H.I. Bleek and L.C. Lloyd. Published by George Allen and Company, London., and two pages of photographs annotated in Haddon’s handwriting- “Stow- the native Races of S. Africa” were found with the set. See archive reference.

Place: The Place field was previously recorded as being “Africa; ?South Africa”, but the series has been identified as being taken at Victoria Falls, and Kwando is in Western Zambia. The Place field has been amended accordingly. [JD 16/10/2009]

Publication: Image published in ‘35. Notes on Some South African Tribes’ by E. Sidney Hartland, in ‘Man’, Vol. 7, (1907), pp. 49-50, plate D, with the following caption:
“Photographs of some Bantu Tribes; Bamashe, Barotse.”
With the following text on p.49:
“When the British Association met in South Africa in 1905 specimens of several Bantu tribes were kindly brought together at the Victoria Falls by the Government of Rhodesia for anthropological study. Time was short, and only admitted of a few measurements and photographs. The following is a list of the tribes represented, and the accompanying plate is from photographs taken by Miss Hartland:- ...
Bamashe.- A tribe living on the Kwando (Portuguese territory). ...
Barotse.- Circumcision is not a Barotse custom.” [Source: www.jstor.org, JD 19/10/2009]

Related Archive: The following archives relating to Ronald Charles Greenwood 1879 - c.1950 are held at Durham University Library: Account by Lt Col R.C. Greenwood entitled ‘Escape in the grass’, of persecution of the Dinka tribe by Arabs in Bahr al-Ghazal Province and an escape by Greenwood from the Arabs. Copy of an original found in provincial headquarters, Juba in 1941; and ‘Memoirs of Lt. Col. R.C. Greenwood, 1911’. [Source: http://flambard.dur.ac.uk, JD 19/10/2009]


FM:183552

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