IDNO

LS.140583.TC1


Description

On Catalogue Card: Uganda Ba-Teso Teso. XLIX.Uganda 35. 54.T.4, 5.
Teso (jadam) women dancing with drum. (2 slides)


Place

E Africa; Uganda; Eastern Region; Teso


Cultural Affliation

Nilo-Hamites; Teso [Ba-Teso]


Named Person


Photographer

Haddon, Ernest Haddon


Collector / Expedition


Date

circa 1905


Collection Name

Teaching Slide Collection


Source


Format

Lantern Slide Black & White


Primary Documentation


Other Information

Place: "The Teso country, through which I now had to pass, is entirely different from the Bunyoro side, for it is flat with rocky hillocks dotted about, the grass is short, and the few trees to be seen are stunted and yield poor timber. The people also are quite different in language and appearance, for the tribes here belong to what are commonly called the Nilotic races. Both men and women go about nude, the men without even an attempt at clothing, while the women’s attire, where there is any, consists of small aprons of beads or string fringes four inches wide and six inches long. ... This is one of the chief cotton-growing districts, and I found single fields extending over several miles. There is a cotton company at Soroti who plough large tracts of land with motor ploughs and then let the ploughed land out to natives who sow it with cotton, paying the company for the work done with a certain proportion of their crop. The surplus grown they sell to the planters for payment in Indian currency, rupees and cents, but, as in the case of the porters and their payment, the only use they seem to have for cash is the payment of their taxes. Until they have learned the use of articles which they cannot produce for themselves and have been educated up to the standards of Western requirements, the payment offered by the planters is of no real value to them and offers no inducement to them to work.
For their own consumption the people grow millet, maize and sweet potato. They live in small villages which they encircle with growing fences of cactus or euphorbia. Owing to the dryness of the land wood is scarce and poor, and, as the people do not care to bring it from long distances, they build their bee-hive huts to the best of their ability with the frailest timber." (Roscoe, J., 1922. The Soul of Central Africa: An Account of the Mackie Ethnological Expedition. (London: Cassell and Co.), p. 234 - 235). [ED 21/12/2007, from record P.18125.ROS, JD 16/05/2018]


FM:277945

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