Africa, المجلد 65،الأعداد 3-4Oxford University Press, 1995 Includes Proceedings of the Executive council and List of members, also section "Review of books". |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 22
الصفحة 456
... grave . There are four different locations for graves among the Kasena ( see Fig . 2 ) . There is the normal ancestral or foundational burial house , didongo ( literally , ' old rooms ' ) , which is usually the first site of the ...
... grave . There are four different locations for graves among the Kasena ( see Fig . 2 ) . There is the normal ancestral or foundational burial house , didongo ( literally , ' old rooms ' ) , which is usually the first site of the ...
الصفحة 459
... grave is seen as a house for the deceased . When the grave has been dug , one of the bayɛ smokes it out by burning some special powder . Every bayaa must have this kind of powder . The smoking may take several minutes . After the ...
... grave is seen as a house for the deceased . When the grave has been dug , one of the bayɛ smokes it out by burning some special powder . Every bayaa must have this kind of powder . The smoking may take several minutes . After the ...
الصفحة 469
... grave is in her courtyard , whereas that of a man is in the cattle yard and visible to all visitors . Children of the deceased woman can sit on the grave , as they would sit on their mother's lap . These two graves not only signal the ...
... grave is in her courtyard , whereas that of a man is in the cattle yard and visible to all visitors . Children of the deceased woman can sit on the grave , as they would sit on their mother's lap . These two graves not only signal the ...
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
activities African Agadez animals arid authority become Boorana burial burial room calves cattle cent central chiefs clan colonial concern continue culture death deceased discussion District economic educated ethnic example fact funeral Ghana given grave herds identity important Institute interests International issue Kenya land living London Maasai males marriage means meetings milk Niger nobles northern NYDA organisation particular pastoral period person political population practices present problems production projet question Qwaqwa referred region relations relationship religious response result ritual role rural sexual smiths social society Sotho South southern strategies structures suggest Swazi tion traditional Tuareg University University Press village Waso Boorana West women young youth associations zone