IDNO

N.101827.MF


Description

Mrs. Fortes, Mrs Jones and Mrs Gibbs, whose husband Colonel G. H. Gibbs was W. J. A. Jones successor as CC, posed together at the meeting of the Chief Commissioner, W. J. A. Jones, with local chiefs at Zuarungu. The woman on the right is wearing jodphurs, short-sleeved shirt and brimmed hat. The other women are wearing European-style patterned dresses belted at the waist and brimmed hats. They are standing in a wooden framed ‘palaver’ hut covered with woven matting. In the background is a table and chair. [AF 16/4/2008]


Place

W Africa; Ghana; Upper East Region; Zaurungu [Gold Coast; Northern Territories]


Cultural Affliation

Tallensi


Named Person

Sonia L. Fortes; Mrs Jones; Mrs Gibb; W. J. A. Jones


Photographer

?Fortes, Meyer


Collector / Expedition

Fortes, Meyer


Date

24 November 1934


Collection Name

Fortes Collection


Source

Drucker-Brown, Susan


Format

Glass Negative Halfplate


Primary Documentation


Other Information

N.101822.MF - N.101832.MF were kept in the box now numbered C546/.

The inscription on the metal box numbered C545/ does not fully correspond with the contents.

Context: Zuarungu was, at the time of Fortes fieldwork, the colonial administrative head-quarters of Zuarungu District. Fortes acknowledges WJA Jones in the foreward of his book, “My wife and I owe a special debt of gratitude to the then Chief Commissioner Mr W.J.A. (now Sir Andrew) Jones for the keen interest he took in our work and for the many helpful arrangements he made to facilitate it. We have aalso to thank Sir Andrew and Lady Jones for many personal kindnesses. I owe my understanding of the spirit and methods of the colonial administration chiefly to Sir Andrewa and his officers. ” Fortes 1945, p.xiii. [Alicia Fentiman 16/4/2008]

Context: Fortes describes the area, “The district of Zuarungu is a typical portion of the Trans-Volta plateau. A number of bouldery hills from 100 to 500 feet high are scattered over is undulating surface. The most conspicuous are the Tong Hills, a small range stretching for about four miles just north of the river. The Tallensi occupy less than half of Zuarungu District” (Fortes, 1945, pp. 3-4). [Alicia Fentiman, 16/4/2008]

Bibliographical Reference: Fortes, Meyer, 1945. Dynamics of Clanship Among the Tallensi (London: Oxford University Press).

Bibliographical Reference: Fortes, Meyer, 1949. The Web of Kinship Among the Tallensi (London: Oxford University Press).

Bibliographical Reference: Fortes, Meyer, 1987. Religion, Morality and the Person: Essays on Tallensi Religion (London: Oxford University Press).

This catalogue record has been updated with the support of the Getty Grant Program Two. [Alicia Fentiman 16/4/2008]


FM:236477

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