IDNO
P.57224.RDG
Description
Group portrait of a Ngoni chief sitting with his wife while their two male slaves stand behind them. The chief wears a fez, European style shirt, striped wrap around skirt, and wrist ornaments. The woman wears a striped cloth cape over a plain wrap around dress, and two neck ornaments. In the background are adobe walls of circular hut.
Physical Condition: Print yellowing and surface dirt. Foxing on mount. [JD 12/6/2007]
Place
E Africa; Tanzania; south Nyanza; Bukumbi
Cultural Affliation
Ngoni
Named Person
Photographer
None
Collector / Expedition
?Catholic Missionary of Africa (White Fathers) [Compiler]; Ridgeway, William [Collector]
Date
circa 1882 - 1885
Collection Name
Ridgeway Collection
Source
Format
Cabinet Card
Primary Documentation
Other Information
P.57192.RDG to P.57260.RDG were found in C274/1/ which came from C274/. The latter was kept in Wooden Drawer VI.
Place: The mission of Kamoga is at Bukumbi, near the modern Tanzanian town of Mwanza. [Source: Dictionary of African Christian biography Online, JD 4/10/2006]
Context: The Catholic Missionary of Africa (White Fathers) first arrived in Equatorial Africa in Uganda in September 1878. “In order to secure postulants for baptism, the missionaries started to ransom enslaved children, as a provisional strategy. By August 1879 they had ten such orphans, and by April 1882, they had forty. They were offered hundreds of children each week, but their lack of resources prevented them from any extraordinary increase of numbers.” Due to increasing conflict in Uganda and threats to the missionaries lives, the White Fathers were ordered to leave Buganda. “On November 20, 1882, they set sail for the southern shore of Lake Victoria Nyanza. ... [and] spent nearly three years out of Uganda. The orphans were divided into two groups, one group forming the nucleus of the orphanage and mission of Kamoga (Bukumbi, near the modern Tanzanian town of Mwanza). The other group travelled south to Kipalapala, near Tabora, where an orphanage had already been founded.”
The Catholic missionaries returned to Uganda in June 1885, when “Mwanga sent a flotilla of canoes, with three hundred oarsmen to bring Mapeera and his missionary companions back to Buganda.” The missionaries were again forced to flee in September 1888, this time to Bukumbi. In 1889, the fathers again returned to Uganda, constructing the church on the summit of Rubaga Hill, the site of the former royal residence in Uganda. This Catholic Mission still exists in Uganda.
[Source: ‘Matrys of Uganda’ in Encyclopedia Britannica Online, JD 13/6/2007]
Bibliographical Reference: Father Lourdel: the Apostle of Uganda by Father J. Cussac of the White Fathers, 1969 (Bookshop Missionary Edition) [JD 13/6/2007]
This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [JD 2/7/2007]
FM:191874
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