IDNO
DG.144915.SHP
Description
"The Headman of Samada village and the village folk. 18 August '38."
Place
S Asia; Tibet; Samada
Cultural Affliation
Named Person
Photographer
Shepheard, Ken
Collector / Expedition
Date
18 August 1938
Collection Name
Shepheard Collection
Source
Shepheard Rogers, Patricia
Format
Album Print Black & White
Primary Documentation
Other Information
Related Archive: Noted in Shepheard's diary 'Some Notes of Ken Shepheard on his expedition to Lhasa, Tibet, in September - October 1938' p.19,
"18 August 1938 ...
Arrived Samada - where a river at least 2,000,000 galls./hr flows down cultivated valley about 1 mile broad. This river starts in ponds and before being joined by the Thumba Rub Chu is about 300,000 galls./hr.
Found a dance going on in the village and after lunch went and had a look.
Were welcomed by the local and made to sit in seats of honour and drink “chang”. The dance performed by five professionals and a band of one drum and one cymbals player was a mixture of Khuttack, Scotch and Russian.
Locals much amused at our expense especially the belles of the village. Appeared to be ignorant of cameras and had great fun looking through the view finders of ours.
I invited the leaders of local society to tea and rum punch at 8 a.m. tomorrow.
“Chang” served out of priceless brass flagon and the server drank some to show it was O.K. All village there -- near the largest chorten -- and eating tsambo and drinking tea and chang out of lovely Tibetan cups with lids.
The “Raja” in a grand lamp shade hat in dark orange colour with cord edging and his wife (?) was the cleanest and comliest of the belles. The dancers dressed in dark red plus fours and grey-stripped home spun blouses, Tibetan boots and three of them, in masks -- triangular in shape and blue background with red stripe for a nose and eye slits. A skirt covered with strings ending in pompons over the plus fours made rapid whirls most effective.
Most of the locals ever so dirty but very cheerful.
Peas grown all down this valley as well as barley and mustard." [JD 26/01/2020]
FM:282819
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