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         Hemba Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail

1. Musées Afrique
indigenous Knowledge in South africa . Lwalu, Tshokwe,Luba, Zela, hemba, Songye, Boyo Aquarelles de Joy Adamson peoples of Kenya .
http://www.unil.ch/gybn/Arts_Peuples/Ex_Africa/ex_Af_musaf.html
MUSEES Afrique Afrique du Sud Angola Botswana Burkina Faso ... Zimbabwe
ou plusieurs oeuvres majeures.
Afrique du Sud
Cape Town
South African National Gallery Government Avenue ma-di 10-17 Arts de la perle / Expositions temporaires Cape Town - Gardens South African Museum 25 Queen Victoria Street lu-di 10-17 terres cuites de Lydenburg San (peintures rupestres), Zimb abwe Tsonga , Khoikhoi, Sotho, Nguni, Shona, Lovedu... Exposition " Ulwazi Lwemvelo - Indigenous Knowledge in South Africa Cape Town - Rosebank University of Cape Town Irma Stern Museum Cecil Road ma-sa 10-17 Arts de Zanzibar et du Congo: Lega, Luba Durban Art Gallery City Hall lu-sa 8.30-16; di 11-16 Durban Local History Museum Aliwal Street East London East London Museum lu-ve 9.30-17; sa 9.30-12 Grahamstown Albany Museum. Natural Sciences and History Museums Somerset Street lu-ve 9-13 / 14-17; sa-di 14-17 Johannesburg MuseuMAfricA Newtown Cultural Precinct
Bree Street
ma-di 9-17 Histoire culturelle de l'Afrique australe. Peintures rupestres (Museum of South African Rock Art)

2. African Art On The Internet
Stanford University Libraries/Academic Information ResourcesCategory Regional africa Arts and Entertainment...... Bamana, Baule, Bwa, Dogon, Fang, hemba, Ibibio, Kongo twostory architecture, Islamand indigenous african cultures displays from 20 major peoples from West and
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/art.html
Topics : Art Search: Countries Topics Africa Guide Suggest a Site ... Africa Home See also: South African Art Photographs
Adire African Textiles - Duncan Clarke
History, background, and photographs of adire, adinkra, kente, bogolan, Yoruba aso-oke, akwete, ewe, kuba, and nupe textiles. The symbolism of images is often provided. One can purchase textiles as well. Clarke's Ph.D. dissertation (School of Oriental and African Studies) is on Yoruba men's weaving. Based in London. http://www.adire.clara.net
Afribilia
London-based dealer offers for sale African coins, military medals, bank notes, documents, badges, postcards, and other historical / political artifacts. Site of David Saffery. http://www.afribilia.com/
Africa e Mediterraneo (Roma : Istituto sindacale per la cooperazione allo sviluppo)
In Italian. A quarterly magazine about African culture and society. Has the table of contents. Topics covered: literature and theatre, music and dance, visual arts (painting, sculpture, photography) , cinema, immigration. Owned by Lai-momo, a non-profit co-operative. Contact:

3. VADA - Volkeren Stammen Peoples Tribes G - H
(Native American, USA). indigenous peoples in GUYANA (Europa Europe). hemba (Democratische Republiek Congo - Democratic Republic HOTTENTOT (Afrika - africa). HOUMA (Native American,
http://www.vada.nl/volkengh.htm

4. 1Up Info > Zaire > Peoples Of The Southern Uplands: Kasai-Shaba | Zaire Informat
the hemba cluster, and the HautKatanga cluster encompassing peoples of Haut-Shaba Officially Recognized Languages. Other indigenous Languages South africa. South Korea
http://www.1upinfo.com/country-guide-study/zaire/zaire65.html
You are here 1Up Info Zaire
History
People ... News Search 1Up Info
Zaire
Zaire
Peoples of the Southern Uplands: Kasai-Shaba
Zebra, common in the savanna regions of central and southern Zaire
Courtesy Zaire National Tourism Office A square-shaped thatched roof hut, typical of the Kasai-Oriental Region, provides shelter against the heavy rains. Extending across much of the southern savanna east of the middle reaches of the Kasai River are the Tshiluba- and Kilubaspeaking peoples. (Kiluba is the language of the Luba-Katanga as distinct from Tshiluba, the language spoken by the Luba-Kasai.) Vansina distinguishes three clusters: the Luba-Katangacomprising the Luba-Katanga proper, the Kaniok, the Kalundwe, and the Lomotwa; the Luba-Kasaicomprising the Luba-Kasai proper, the Lulua, the Luntu, the Binji, the Mputu, and the North Kete; and the Songye comprising the Songye proper and the Bangu-Bangu. losely related to the Luba-Katanga and living to their east are the Hemba, separately distinguished chiefly because, unlike the others, they are matrilineal. All of these peoples appear to have shared a tradition of chieftainship, but it was among the Luba-Katanga that more complex centralized states emerged as early as the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Elsewhere, the people and territory over which a chief ruled were much more restricted, and even among the Luba-Katanga local chiefs had a substantial degree of autonomy.

5. Africa South Of The Sahara - Culture And Society
An annotated guide to internet resources on african culture and society.Category Regional africa Society and Culture...... Bamana, Baule, Bwa, Dogon, Fang, hemba, Ibibio, Kongo twostory architecture, Islamand indigenous african cultures web site for her course peoples and Cultures
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/culture.html
Topics Search: Countries Topics Africa Guide Suggest a Site ... Africa Home See also: Countries
Adire African Textiles - Duncan Clarke
History, background, and photographs of adire, adinkra, kente, bogolan, Yoruba aso-oke, akwete, ewe, kuba, and nupe textiles. The symbolism of images is often provided. One can purchase textiles as well. Clarke's Ph.D. dissertation (School of Oriental and African Studies) is on Yoruba men's weaving. Based in London. http://www.adire.clara.net
Africa e Mediterraneo (Roma : Istituto sindacale per la cooperazione allo sviluppo)
In Italian. A quarterly magazine about African culture and society. Has the table of contents. Topics covered: literature and theatre, music and dance, visual arts (painting, sculpture, photography), cinema, immigration. Owned by Lai-momo, a non-profit co-operative. Contact: redazione@africaemediterraneo.it [KF] http://www.africaemediterraneo.it
Africa: One Continent. Many Worlds
Extensive site for the traveling art exhibit from the Field Museum, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County

6. African Education On The Internet
An annotated guide to internet resources on education in and about africa. audience." Includes stories from africa. http peoples Database which includes the Ashanti, Bamana, Baule, Bwa, Dogon, Fang, hemba, on the indigenous Selected Essays 19811998 "
http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/ed.html
Topics Education Search: Countries Topics Africa Guide Suggest a Site ...
Women
Please send corrections to:
The update on each page refers to the date that particular page was last edited.
Different pages are updated on different days.

7. Africa Architect
Exposition "Ulwazi Lwemvelo indigenous Knowledge in South africa" Lwalu, Tshokwe, Luba, Zela, hemba, Songye, Boyo, Bembe, Lengola, Kumu, Aquarelles de Joy Adamson "peoples of Kenya"
http://www.africa-architect.com/architect/galerie.htm
"architecte en tunisie"
Pour combiner plusieurs mots, séparez-les par un espace :
architecte en tunisie "entreprise batiment civile "
Find an architect

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About Us News 3D Technology ... Web Zine
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Galerie
Galery

Afrique Afrique du Sud Angola Bénin Botswana ... Zimbabwe Les ethnies indiquées en rouge sont celles dont les musées possèdent une
ou plusieurs oeuvres majeures. Afrique du Sud
Cape Town
South African National Gallery Government Avenue ma-di 10-17 Arts de la perle / Expositions temporaires Cape Town - Gardens South African Museum 25 Queen Victoria Street lu-di 10-17 Ethnographie et archéologie de l'Afrique australe: terres cuites de Lydenburg San (peintures rupestres), Zimbabwe Tsonga , Khoikhoi, Sotho, Nguni, Shona, Lovedu... Exposition "

8. HOME TEST PAGE
There is a peoples Database which includes the Bamana, Baule, Bwa, Dogon, Fang, hemba,Ibibio, Kongo story architecture, Islam and indigenous African cultures
http://www.msu.edu/~metzler/matrix/dream/humanities.html
LIST OF IMPORTANT AFRICA-RELATED WEB SITES Introduction Culture Current Events Economics ... Society ART
12th International Triennial Symposium on African Art , St. Thomas, Virgin Islands April 25-29, 2001
Conference sponsored by the Arts Council of the African Studies Association (U.S.). http://itsdev.appstate.edu/triennial/
Adire African Textiles - Duncan Clarke
History, background, and photographs of adire, adinkra, kente, bogolan, Yoruba aso-oke, akwete, ewe, kuba, and nupe textiles. The symbolism of images is often provided. One can purchase textiles as well. Clarke's Ph.D. dissertation (School of Oriental and African Studies) is on Yoruba men's weaving. Based in London. http://www.adire.clara.net
Africa: One Continent. Many Worlds
Extensive site for the traveling art exhibit from the Field Museum, Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County, and others. Includes video, photographs on the history and art of the Royal Palace of the Bamum (Cameroun), conflict resolution among the BaKongo (Congo-Brazzaville and Kinshasa, Angola), Benin history through elephant tusks and Benin bronzes, metal working, use of gold weights, commerce across the Sahara, the market in Kano (Nigeria), men's hats, combs/jewelry, rock art, a Liberian folk tale, the role of masks, drums, kora music from Senegal, the elephant as a royal animal, and more. Has a

9. JAIC 1992, Volume 31, Number 1, Article 2 (pp. 03 To 16)
intention in this paper to ascertain an indigenous perspective how Male and femalefigures, Chamba peoples, Nigeria Ancestor sculptures like hemba figures (fig
http://aic.stanford.edu/jaic/articles/jaic31-01-002.html
JAIC 1992, Volume 31, Number 1, Article 2 (pp. 03 to 16)
THE EXHIBITION AND CONSERVATION OF AFRICAN OBJECTS: CONSIDERING THE NONTANGIBLE
STEPHEN P. MELLOR
1 INTRODUCTION
Some specific examples in African art where nontangible attributes might have an effect on treatment decisions can be seen in the following:
  • Should we look inside a Yoruba beaded crown (fig. 1), considered to be the premier piece of divine regalia, to mend the textile lining (fig. 2), or lend slides of its interior to the education department, when in cultural context it is forbidden for anyone, including the king, to view the interior? Should we secure loose and detached fragments of sacrificial patination on a Bamana Komo headdress (fig. 3), when the amount and thickness of this incrustation (fig. 4) are directly related to the degree and effectiveness of its cultural power? How do we justify the public exhibition of an Igala shrine figure (fig. 9), which would have been restricted from public view and seen only by people of a specific age, sex, or initiate?
  • Fig. 1. Crown, Yoruba peoples, Nigeria, Glass beads, basketry, textile, vegetable fiber, metal, H 30 ¾ in (78. 1cm). NMAfA 24-1989-01 (private lender). Photograph by Jeffrey Ploskonka

    10. A F R I B E A T
    capodasta (open string).” These performers were Lubahemba. a new accompainmentto an indigenous form of and Tumbuka; these are also all heptatonic peoples.
    http://www.afribeat.com/archiveafrica_hughtracey_newrelease1.html
    World Online homepage News Sport Money High Tech Travel Leisure Music Entertainment Motoring
    Archive Africa
    Hugh Tracey historic recordings
    Cape Jazz 1959 - 1963 The preservation of grace - the Buena Vista Social Club From the foot of the Shrine of Fela Kuti ... Ubuyile - Jazz coming home radio documentaries Past, present and future are inextricably linked. And the music of Africa reflects this in its experiences and realities. There are some exciting archives that capture this, private collections that represent it and slowly fading oral histories that tell of all the pains, tragedies and triumphs.
    ArchiveAfrica is a portal for all of this, to network throughout the world in the interests of bringing all this material to one resource that can document, distribute and facilitate research.
    swp-records
    forest music congo 1952 origins of guitar music, southern congo and northern zambia tswana and sotho voices ... sound samples
    Historical recordings by Hugh Tracey
    Origins of Guitar Music
    sound samples
    accompany details of the tracks below. Read about the piece of music and listen to it)
    In the new urban culture during the fifties in the copper mining towns of Katanga province in southern Congo and on the Copperbelt in northern Zambia, the guitar became an important status symbol. The Katanga guitar style came from the rich likembe tradition of the Luba peoples, whereas on the Zambian Copperbelt the guitar songs are very diverse - being either traditionally based or heavily influenced by the mainly American music, popular in the fifties, played by the radio station specifically set up for African broadcasts. An exciting document, with some famous names such as Mwenda Jean Bosco and George Sibanda, of the emergence of a new sound.

    11. SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY--TO BE CONTD--AAAS 342
    the growth, gifts and diversities of indigenous African. oratory women's songdancein hemba Funerary performance that are common Sub-Saharan African peoples.
    http://aaas.ohio-state.edu/dka/342bib1.htm
    AAAS 342: music, religion and ritual in africaGUIDES
    1. Sample Research Proposals

    2. Sample Research Topics (See Appendix of Coursepack)
    3. SELECTIVE BIBLIOGRAPHY
    HANDOUTS/REVIEW ITEMS/QUESTIONS
    Review Questions up to MidTerm
    (see ALSO hardcopy distributed in class).
    REVIEW FOR FINALS

    Review items for finals, aaas 342 spring 2001
    PART 1GENERAL
    1. Summarize in a paragraph (i.e., in about 5 sentences or more) the ways in which African music in closely tied to society, culture, and specific contexts
    2. Just list THREE of the COMMON FEATURES of Sub-Saharan African music as outlined in the coursepack text and charts
    3. similaries between African-American Pentecostal church experiences and those of indigenous African healing/ritual settings 4. Give TWO indigenous terms (i.e., from two African societies) that refer to the Supreme God (see coursepack, intro materials and glossaries to essay) 5. Give an example that shows that traditional religion in African is innovative and adaptive 6. Draw a diagram/CHART showing the HIERARCHY OF the world of spirits/gods (e.g., nature spirits, ancestors, etc.) in Africa—you must show your own critical insight, drawing on materials covered in class and from your own understanding 7. List the THREE STAGES often encountered in initiation rites

    12. Hugh Tracey Recordings: Part 2 / RootsWorld Recording Review
    Hasai, Luluwa, Songye, LubaKatanga, hemba) 1952 began encouraging the use of indigenousAfrican musical Katanga mine culture where peoples lived together
    http://www.rootsworld.com/reviews/tracey2.shtml
    KANYOK AND LUBA
    OTHER MUSICS FROM ZIMBABWE
    Southern Rhodesia (Ndau, Sena Tonga, Shona) 1948, '49, '51, '57, '58, '63
    SOUTHERN AND CENTRAL MALAWI
    Nyasaland (Mang'anja, Cewa, Yao) 1950, '57, '58
    NORTHERN AND CENTRAL MALAWI
    Nyasaland (Tonga, Tumbukwa, Cewa) 1950, '57, '58
    All titles published by SWP Records, The Netherlands
    Hugh Tracey (1903–1977) is one of the pillars of the discipline that still limps under the title of "ethnomusicology." Tracey's contributions as a primary researcher and field recorder are standing the test of time. His "Sound of Africa" series issued 210 recordings, published by the International Library of African Music (ILAM), which he had founded. These CDs are reissued recordings selected from that series and offer a glimpse of what has until now been mostly available only in academic archives. Tracey's work began with the Shona of Zimbabwe but expanded far beyond that region of Africa. It was a remarkable time for Africa, as it shifted or prepared to shift from its history as colonized territories. In their own way, Tracey's recordings also document the history of recording machines used for remote fieldwork. Tracey's first, in the 1930s, involved a clockwork-powered machine that cut a groove in an aluminum disc. Not till much later did he attain stereo recording capability with a Nagra. His microphone technique was to seek out the sound he wanted, hand holding the microphone to capture a spontaneous field mix that comes through superbly on these recordings. Tracey, it seems, sought to capture and document a cross-section of society in the tribal villages, schools, workplaces and anywhere else he found music. That wasn't always the most proficient performer.

    13. 1Up Info > Zaire > Peoples Of The Savanna: Southeastern Zaire | Zaire Informatio
    peoples of the Savanna Southeastern Zaire. communities the Bemba cluster, the Hembacluster, and
    http://www.1upinfo.com/country-guide-study/zaire/zaire63.html
    You are here 1Up Info Zaire
    History
    People ... News Search 1Up Info
    Zaire
    Zaire
    Peoples of the Savanna: Southeastern Zaire
    In eastern Shaba, stretching from the border with Tanzania and Zambia roughly to the Lualaba River, Vansina has distinguished three sets of communities: the Bemba cluster, the Hemba cluster, and the Haut-Katanga cluster encompassing peoples of Haut-Shaba Subregion (formerly Haut-Katanga). Settlement patterns are geographically fragmented so that representatives of one cluster live cheek by jowl with representatives of another or constitute an enclave in another group's territory. The area has a long history of conquest and conflict. Most of the peoples of Haut-Shaba were subjects of the Kazembe Kingdom of Luapula, an offshoot of the Lunda Empire whose center was farther west. The Kaonde, the southwesternmost people in the Haut-Katanga cluster, living in present-day Lualaba Subregion (of Shaba Region), were ruled by still another Lunda king. After the middle of the nineteenth century, a group of long-distance traders, the Nyamwezi of central Tanzania, established the Yeke Kingdom, which lasted for thirty years. The introduction of new cultural elements by the Yeke and their trading activities both east and west had longer-range effects than the establishment of their political rule itself. All of these kingdoms came to an end before the beginning of the twentieth century, leaving their people with polities of much smaller scale. The political pattern that preceded the institution of kingship and outlasted it was based on chiefs of the earth, basically ritual offices essential for maintaining fertility, and, occasionally, political chiefs.

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