Cunnison, Ian
Introduction
Ian Cunnison
Arrangement

Catalogue
1. Official and Academic Papers
2. Personal Papers
3. Research papers: (i) Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia)
Luapula valley and the Luunda people
Lunda field notes
Luapula field notes
Luapula field notes
Luapula field notes
Luapula field notes and Lunda genealogies
Luapula field notes
Lunda field notes
3. Research papers: (ii) Sudan
Humr
3. Research papers: (iii) General
4. Abyei Boundary Commission and Permanent Court of Arbitration
5. Articles, lectures, and books: (i) Rhodesia (now Zambia)
Lunda drafts
Articles by Ian Cunnison about Northern Rhodesia (Zambia)
Offprints of articles and lectures on Lunda (not by Cunnison)
Offprints of articles on Northern Rhodesia, Zambia and Zimbabwe (not by Cunnison)
5. Articles, lectures, and books: (ii) East and Central Africa
Offprints, mainly East and Central Africa
Offprints and Seminar Papers on Central African History
5. Articles, lectures, and books: (iii) Sudan
Offprints and papers by Mohamed Salih
6. Photographs: (i) Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia)
Luapula valley
Negatives
Cinefilm
6. Photographs: (ii) Sudan
Introduction
(a) Nomadic Movements
(b) Camps
(c) Tents
(d) Cattle
(e) Grazing & watering
(f) Cultivation
(g) Markets
(h) People
(i) Horses
(j) Giraffe hunt
(k) Drumming and dancing
(l) The end of a blood feud
(m) Contacts with other groups
(n) Miscellaneous short sequences
7. Audio material
8. Maps
(i) East Africa
(ii) Sudan
9. Printed material
Separated printed material now in Durham University Library
Reference code: GB-0033-SAD
Title: Cunnison, Ian
Dates of creation: 1890-[2012 x 2013]
Extent: 18 boxes
Held by: Durham University Library, Archives and Special Collections
Created by: Cunnison, Ian
Language: English, Arabic, French, Lunda

Ian Cunnison

(1923 - 2013)

1948-1951 Anthropological research among the Kazembe-Lunda (Luunda) people in the Luapula Valley, N. Rhodesia (Zambia)
1952-1955 Anthropological research among the Misīrīyah Ḥumr (Messiria Humr) people in S.W. Kordofan, Sudan
1955-1959 Lecturer, Manchester University
1959-1965 Head of the Social Anthropology Department, Khartoum University
1962-1966 Editor Sudan Notes and Records
1966-1989 Professor of Social Anthropology, Hull University


Arrangement

1. Offical and academic papers
2. Personal papers
3. Research papers
(i) Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia)
(ii) Sudan
(iii) General
4. Abyei Boundary Commission and Permanent Court of Arbitration
5. Articles, lectures, and books
(i) Rhodesia (now Zambia)
(ii) East and Central Africa
(iii) Sudan
6. Photographs
(i) Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia)
(ii) Messiria Humr of S.W. Kordofan, Sudan
(a) Nomadic movements
(b) Camps
(c) Tents
(d) Cattle
(e) Grazing and watering
(f) Cultivation
(g) Markets
(h) People
(i) Horses
(j) Giraffe hunt
(k) Drumming and dancing
(l) The end of a blood feud
(m) Contacts with other groups
(n) Miscellaneous short sequences
7. Audio material
8. Maps
(i) East Africa
(ii) Sudan
9. Printed Material

Accession details

Presented by Professor Cunnison, 1989 & 1991; Dr Sheila Cunnison, 2014. Deposited by Belinda and Judith Cunnison, 2019

Catalogue
1. Official and Academic Papers
SAD.751/1/1-44
1933 Jul
Paper by E.G. Sarsfield-Hall, Governor Khartoum Province entitled “Memorandum on the lay out and development of Khartoum, Khartoum North and Omdurman” Compiled with the assistance of I.G. Watson, Asst. Municipal Engineer
SAD.1099/1/1-81
1954, 1966
“Recommendations of the 12-man Committee to the Chairman of the Round Table Conference on the South”, with appendices; with (mimeo) map of Southern Sudan (1954)
Language: Arabic; English
SAD.751/1/46-51
1964
Statement by El Nazeer Dafaalla, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Khartoum to the staff of the university on Wednesday 4 Nov 1964 concerning the recent crisis which culminated in confrontation between students and police, the death of a student and the mass resignation of nearly all Sudanese staff
SAD.1099/2
1967-1985
Editorial and administrative correspondence relating to the journal Sudan Notes and Records, for which Cunnison acted as editor and then associate editor, including:
Review by Ali Ismail El Omarabi of the 50th volume in Sudan News, 15 February 1970, p.3;
Correspondence with Y.F. Hassan and authors concerning submitted articles, 1967-1975, by R.S. O’Fahey, E.E. Evans-Pritchard, W. James, J.L. Spaulding, Sherif El-Hakim, P. Harram, M.C. Jedrej, Abdel Ghaffar M. Ahmed, P. Kilner, H. Hurreiz, R.L. Hill, and including minutes of 1975 Editorial Committee meeting (71pp);
Correspondence with Yusuf Fadl Hasan, editor, C. Hurst, T.E.L. Eley, J.L. Cloudsley-Thompson, P.G.P. Denham concerning editorial content, printing and distribution, 1967-1977 (55pp);
Correspondence with G.N. Sanderson concerning future of Sudan Notes and Records, 1978-1979 (5pp);
Minutes of Sudan Notes and Records Editorial Committee meetings, 1983, 1985 (mimeo, 2pp)
SAD.1099/3-8
1948-2010
Academic correspondence
SAD.1099/3
1948-1961
Letters to Cunnison from Mwata Kasembe, 1948-1949, 1961-62; Betty and Desmond Clark at the Rhodes-Livingstone Museum, 1948-1961; I. Schapera, 1950; Clyde Mitchell, 1950-60; K. Stevenson White and others at the Secretariat and Publications Bureau, Lusaka, 1950-58, with list of Bemba, Mambwe and Lala publications on sale in September 1955
SAD.1099/4
[1950]-1962
Letters to Cunnison, with some copy replies, from C. Varley [c. 1950]; W. (Bill) Densham, 1952-1955; E.E. Evans-Pritchard, 1952-1961; J.-P. Lebeuf (in French), 1955; Jack Goody, 1956; Fr Grévisse (in French), 1957; E.D. Mwape, 1957; C.J. (Jack or Jacques) Chiwale, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute, 1957-1961; A.M. Shah, 1957-1959; L.H. Gann, National Archives of Rhodesia and Nyasaland, 1958; J.P. Singh (Uberoi), 1959-1962, with examiners’ reports on Singh's M.A. thesis for Manchester, 1958
Language: English, French
SAD.1099/5
1959-1998
Letters to Cunnison, with some copy replies, from Neville and Rada Dyson-Hudson, 1959-1962; Edith Turner, 1959; G.N. Das (postcard), 1959; Robert Murphy, 1959; D. Villey (in French), 1959; J. Van Velsen, 1960-1; W.J.M. Mackenzie, 1960; T. Lupton, 1960; W.V. Brelsford, 1961; J. Stengers, 1962-63; H.D. Ng’wane, 1963; Douglas Jones, 1965-66; A.D. Roberts, 1966; M. Ruel, 1969-1970; P. Lang, 1972; T. Thomas, 1972; John Burton, including introduction from Bill Watson, 1975-76; P.B. Freshwater (including Margaret Carey) concerning the papers of his grandfather, 1984-1985, 1998
Language: English, French
SAD.1099/6
1988-1998
Letters to Cunnison, with some copy replies, from Philip Gatter 1988; Luise White, 1992, including copy of seminar paper “Vampire priests of Central Africa. Or, African debates about labor and religion in colonial northern Zambia”; Paul Cocks, 1992-94, including thesis proposal on “Social anthropology and colonial ideology in British Central Afrcia ca. 1940-1965”; A.L. Epstein, 1992; Nick ?Meadows, Sudan Desk, Oxfam 1992; Barbara Michael 1996-98
SAD.1099/7
1997-2003
Letters and emails to Ian and Sheila Cunnison, with some copy replies, from Elizabeth Colson, 1997, 1999, 2003 (5pp); Svend White, 1997 concerning research on Baggara/Dinka relations; Giacomo Macola, with SOAS project paper “The eastern Lunda kingdom of kazembe, Zambia”, and post-doc research proposal “Ethnicity and the writing of history in colonial Zambia and Zimbabwe”, 1998-2000; Christopher M. Annear, 2003-04; Lyn Schumaker (email), 2003
SAD.1099/8
1964-2010
Obituaries, and appreciations:
Dr James Cunnison (1884-1964): newspaper clipping (father of Ian Cunnison), 1964; Glasgow University Gazette, no. 44, March 1964;
Sir Edward Evans-Pritchard (1902-1973): newspaper clipping, [1973]; letter from W.J. [?Wendy James], [1973];
Milan Stuchlik (1932-1980): magazine cutting, [1981];
Victor Witter Turner (1920-1983): cutting from The Times, 2 January 1984;
Jaap van Velsen (1921-1990): cutting from the Guardian, 25 May 1990;
Philip Larkin (1922-1985): reviews of Andrew Motion's Philip Larkin: a writer's life (Observer, 28 March 1993) and BBC drama “Love again” (New Statesman, 4 August 2003); Appreciation of Larkin by Anthony Thwaite, “Toad of toad Hull” (New Statesman, 12 July 2010);
Godfrey Lienhardt (1921-1993): cutting from the Guardian, [November 1993]; copy programme for “A celebration of the life and work of Godfrey Lienhardt” at Wolfson College, Oxford, 7 May 1994;
J. Clyde Mitchell (1918-1995): cutting from the Guardian, 30 November 1995;
Ladislav Holý (1933-1997): cutting from Anthropology Today, vol. 13, no. 3, June 1997;
Bill Epstein (1924-1999): cutting from the Guardian, 11 February 2000;
Isaac Shapera (1905-2003): cutting from the Guardian, 2 July 2003:
Programme for a memorial service for Dr Peter Glover Forster at Middleton Hall, Hull University, 4 October 2003, with copy of the eulogy by Colin Craighton and covering note from Craighton;
Margaret Ebbage (1914-2004): copy cutting from the Scotsman, 2 February 2004 (sister of Ian Cunnison);
John Arundel Barnes (1918-2010): cutting from Anthropology Today, vol. 26, no. 6, 6 December 2010
SAD.1099/9, SAD.1100/1-2
1951-2000
Institutional correspondence
SAD.1099/9
1951-1971
Correspondence between Cunnison and various insititutions, including: R.J. Crisp, for African Drum, 1951; D.H. Kay of Macmillan & Co, 1955-56; C.H. Fone, Foreign Office, concerning Cunnison’s request to see the early Sudan Intelligence Reports, 1958; Clarendon Press, concerning the publication of Baggara Arabs, 1964-71, including contract and royalty statements; letters from E. Fahima, E. Colson, E. Peters, F. Barth, E. Marx, 1966-1971; review of Baggara Arabs from Journal of Semitic Studies (vol. 12, Autumn 1967), Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies (vol. 30, no. 2, 1967), Anthropol (vol. 61, 1966), Geographical Review (vol. 58, no. 1, 1968), Man (vol. 2, pt 1, 1967), Genève - Afrique (vol. 4, no. 2, 1967), Middle East Journal (Summer 1967), L'Homme (no. 7, 1967), American Anthroploogist (no. 70, 1968), Race (vol. 9, no. 4, April 1968), L'Anthropologie (vol. 72, nos 3-4, 1968), Middle Eastern Studies (April 1968), Biblioteca Orientalis (vol. 25, no. 1/2, January-March 1968), New East (vol. 17, 1967), Afrika und Ubersee (band 53, heft 1, 1969), Arab Report and Record (16-31 July 1969), Bijdragen Tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde (1969) with typescript copy, Zeitschrift für Ethnologie (band 95, heft 1, 1970)
SAD.1100/1
1966-2000
Correspondence between Cunnison and various insititutions including with Manchester University Press and the Institute for African Studies, University of Zambia concerning the publication and reprinting of Luapula Peoples of Central Africa, 1966-78; J.D. Fage, editor of The Journal of African History concerning copyright of articles in the journal, 1966; L.W. Hesse, Encyclopaedia Africana, 10 May 1967; Abdel Ghaffar M. Ahmed concerning his publications, 1972-75; Junta de Investigações do Ultramar concerning King Kazembe, 1974; Holt, Rinehart and Winston of Canada concerning photo permission, 1975; Josephine Hartly on temporary cessation of publication of Sudan Update, 3 September 2000
SAD.1100/2
1966-1985
Folder of letters of recommendation for Rida Niblock, née Abdalla (1966-1985); Fahima Zahir (1967-1969); and Abdel Ghaffar Mohamed Ahmed (1972-1982)
Access restricted under terms of the Data Protection Act 2018 until 2054
2. Personal Papers
SAD.1100/3
1950-2013
Biographical material relating to Cunnison, including: entry in the Association of Social Anthropologists (ASA) Members Register, 1969 (1p, photocopy); 8 letters, dated between 7 November 1950 and 16 July 1955, between the Civil Secretary’s Office (later the Ministry of Interior), Khartoum, and Cunnison, dealing with the details of his contract to carry out a study of the Baggara; 2 letters from the War Office, 4 and 13 May 1953, concerning Lt. I.G. Cunnison of Royal Artillery and his changed status given his residency overseas; letter of appointment as Lecturer in Social Anthropology in the University of Manchester, dated 21 October 1955, as from 1 November 1955 to 30 September 1958; contract with the University of Khartoum appointing Cunnison as Senior Lecturer, 22 May 1959; E.N. Dafaalla, Vice Chancellor, University of Khartoum, acknowledging Cunnison's letter of resignation, 18 July 1965, with letter of appreciation dated 22 March 1966; letter of appointment to Chair of Social Anthropology at the University of Hull, 9 December 1965, with list of Cunnison publications 1950-1966; Cunnison bibliography 1950-1979; draft letter to Michael ? with family and professional news [c. 1999]; letter from Richard Fardon on election of Cunnison as an Honorary Member of the ASA, 19 April 2004; letter from Shummo Hurgas with Humr news, 15 March 2006; form letter concerning 2011 renewal of RAI membership; Cunnison biographical timeline and personal interests; Cunnison order of funeral service, Chanterlands Crematorium, Hull, 26 June 2013
3. Research papers: (i) Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia)
Luapula valley and the Luunda people
1904-1991, predominantly 1948-1951
SAD.1010/2/1-19
1990-1991
List of 305 Luapula valley photographs (1948-1951), with captions, donated by Cunnison to the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, with related correspondence.
Lunda field notes
SAD.1011/1
1948-1950
Lunda field notes (file II), on the following topics: spirits, witchcraft, ancestor worship, hunter's magic and songs, butwa, fishing and hunting, fishing camps, fishing statistics (1932-1949), wildlife, praise songs (fish, birds, animals), topography, tribe and custom, Bemba text on buteko, DNB on Mbeba, court staff.
Typed notes cut out and pasted on foolscap pages according to topic.
Ngulu Rainmaking;
A note on the Kalungwisi;
Mipashi ya bantu;
Witchcraft Nganga and Abalashi;
Rain ceremonies, ngulu, ancester w., kusomona;
Ngulu Fibolya, ngulu;
Rainmaking, Ngulu & Chiefs;
Rain ceremonies;
First fruit & sowing;
Kasesema;
Kasesema & Mfumu ya mipashi;
Kasesema and mfumu ya mipashi;
Ngulu etc;
Mfumu ya mipashi;
First-Fruits (Mwawamukupa);
Miscellany on religion etc.;
Banyama;
WT & RC & PB banyama;
Muchape witchfinders;
Bacapi;
Mfumu ya;
mipashi Divines;
Kasesema dance;
Shinganga;
Mfumu ya mipashi & kasesema;
Witches & bramba;
Witchcraft & Europeans;
Buloshi;
Witchcraft: action taken in case of disease caused by a witch;
Witchcraft;
Ancestor worship;
Ancestor worship, Nshipa (Notes on Nsholo’s shrine);
Tulubi, Kanwari;
Religion Islam;
Bakalwe;
Medicines;
Muti wa bacishi;
Miti ya bakashyana;
Bacishi medicines;
Medicines;
Magic, Nkula;
Medicines;
Magic;
Fishing medicines, Cassava medicine;
Diseases;
Kulembe nyembo;
Malumbo;
Malumbo ya bantu;
Nyimbo sha bakalwe;
Bakaluwe Hunting;
Shinganga;
Malumbo ye miti;
Months of Old;
The seasons;
Malumbo;
Lunda Local Government, 14 December 1950;
Butwa;
Butwa, Writing at Kilwa;
Butwa;
Bulindu (Women’s secret soc.);
White population (Katabulwe);
Topography, Fishing Camps (Kasikisis) Topography Poll Org. Fishing;
Topography (Meru);
Travelling by Canoe;
Village history, Fishing & Tribute;
Fishing methods;
Fishing;
Canoe building Labour Org.;
Fishing Village headman;
Fishing camps preliminary description;
Amatumba fishing;
Canoe building Labour org.;
Notes on Fish and Fishing taken on tour to Kampemba, May 1949;
Fishing Canoe building;
Fishing Misc Notes on night on Luapula;
Fishing Camps;
Fishing Village headman;
Fishing;
Miscellany on economics & fish;
Canoe ownership;
Fish Control Regulations;
Fishing Camps: Ntoto Ya Mwatishi & Isokwe;
Material Culture Woods;
Bushila pali M.K.;
Animals not eaten;
Pol. Org Border villages. Fishing;
Birds and fish not eaten;
Fishing & hunting;
Firstfruit and sowing ceremonies;
Chisoma Ownership and fishing;
Land ownership Fishing etc. ceremonies of Kabundebunde;
Fising and Hunting Ceremonies;
Ukufungula isabi;
Bene ba calo tribute ukufungule sabi;
Case of Chitimuna;
Shila chiefs Ukufungula isabi;
Fishing ritual at Mofwe;
Fishing Ukufungula isabi tribute;
Fishing Ukufungla;
Ukufungule sabi;
Cisenga; Fish;
Fish identification;
Met. Rainfall at Kasenga Hospital (1941-49);
Premier Notes au suject de la Migration des Pumbu (Labeo sp) in the Mweru-Luapula District: 1949;
by F. Matagne;
Malumbo ye sabi;
The Lion Ceremony kunyante nkalamo;
Lions etc.;
Action on death of elephant or hippo. Bakalulua;
Akamba;
City ritual. Cingoyi: bubanshi ukufwa cifimba. Mwalo;
Topography Hunting Village dist.;
Identification of Material received from the Rhodes-Livingston Institute: Livingstone;
Letter from P.K. Nockels for Asst. Conservator of Forests, 19 May 1949;
Crop Names;
Malumbo ye fyoni;
Bird Praises: translations;
Malumo ye nama;
Malumbo ya bukonde;
Birds of the Luapula Valley, observed 1948-9;
Place names;
Topography Topography Labour Org.;
Topography DC’s visit;
General miscellany;
Names;
The name Shila Kinship & success;
Bucishinga;
Tribes & Customs;
Buteko bwa mu calo ca Lunda;
Court staff of Kazembe;
Kazembe Admin Court;
Ntambi;
Clans;
Ngoma courts;
Tribes & customs;
Clan and tribe inheritance;
Letter from John Sharman, Kampala, 3.i.58;
First impressions;
First interviews;
Letter to Cunnison from Kwate Kazembe, 13 March 1949 accompanying a small present of a sheep;
Newspaper clipping on the Bemba language;
History, mukoa, pol org, chieftainship;
Rights of Way, Boma employees;
White Population, Economics (First impresion of Greeks)

Correspondence with: P.K. Nockels of the Forest Office, Northern Rhodesia; John Sharman; W. Singleton Fisher; J.B.W. Anderson; Kazembe (historical MS); Yamba; C. Jacques Chiwale; D. Kimble.
Reading notes: The idea of history, Collingwood; Halbwachs' Memory and society; Before philosophy, Frankfort; Tallensi myth and history; Malinowski and the myth [Myth in Primitive Psychology ].
Luapula field notes
SAD.1011/2
[1948-1951]
Luapula notes from lit[erature] (file III). Typescript and manuscript.
Villages in Kashiba April 51, typescript (1p)
Typewritten Luunda field notes, 1948-9 (24pp):
Village History, Kilwa Island History;
Nshipa Medicine;
Disease and causes;
Rainmaking;
History;
Ngulu;
Rain ceremonies;
Witchcraft;
Medicines for fishing;
Ancestor worship;
Bachilumbu;
Nganga;
First-fruits and sowing ceremonies;
Witchcraft Funerals;
Matumba fishing;
Magic

Lunda field notes on genealogy, 1951, typescript & handwritten (5pp)
Bibliographic research notes:
“A Tentative Note on the Dynasties in the Luba-Lunda Sphere of Influence”, Survey of African Chronoloogy and Genealogies, mimeo (3pp) (with handwritten note “Who wrote this?”);
Handwritten notes on Labrecque, “Histoire des M.K. Chefs Lunda du Luapula 1700-1945”, Lovania 16-18 (1949-51) (12pp);
Outline of Reigns, handwritten (2pp);
Luapula District Trial Chronology of Colonisation, handwritten (1p);
Notes on KZ-Yeke, handwritten (1p);
Small myanso, handwritten (2pp);
The Human Geography of Mweru Luapula Province, typescript (11pp);
Kilwa Island on Lake Mweru, British Central Africa Gazette, Aug 15, 1895 (typed transcript) (3pp);
Notes from Public Record Office F.O.2, typescript, (2pp);
Lunda. History: extracts from the BCA Gazette (2pp);
Native Affairs reports (extracts), 1935-1938, 1947 (4pp);
Notes on Sharpe, A., “A journey to Garengange”, Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society , n.s. XIV, 1892, handwritten (1p);
Philpot, Roy “[‘Makumba’ ], the Baushi tribal god”, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 1936, typescript (2pp);
Stienon, “Notes concernant le tribu Baushi”, Congo 1926, typescript (1p);
Trapnell: Ecological Report of N.E.R. [North-eastern Rhodesia], typescript (4pp);
Notes on “Alfred Sharpe’s travels in the Northern Province and Katanga”, Northern Rhodesia Journal III, 3, 1952, handwritten (4pp);
Lundas: Skeleton of Tribal History (MS), typescript (3pp);
Brelsford: Copperbelt Markets (1p);
White: Historical background of the Balovale tribes, typescript (1p);
Notes on Van den Byrang, Notice Historique sur les Balunda, Congo, 1937, handwritten (5pp);
Notes on F. Grévisse, Centre d'Etudes des Probleémes Sociaux Indigènes 1946-7 & 1950, handwritten (11pp);
Notes on Bowdich, The Discoveries of the Portuguese, 1824, typescript (2pp);
Notes on Cameron, Across Africa, 1874-5, typescript (2pp);
Notes on Shutt, Reisen im Südwestlichen Becken des Congo , 1881, typescript (4pp);
Notes on Max Buchner, “Im Reiche des Muatiamvo und seine Nachbarländer”, Deutsche Geographische Blätter VI 1883, typescript (5pp)
Luapula field notes
SAD.1011/3
[1948-1951]
Luapula notes (loose papers) (file 3), on the following topics: Kazembe death and succession, mutentamo, insignia, mixes of Kazembe, pol[itics] misc., Myanso and Mayanga, Lunda notables, Kazembe history, other histories, Shila history, Tribute, City sections. Typed notes cut out and pasted on foolscap pages according to topic.
Lunda field notes, 1951, Bana ba mfumu, typescript (5pp)
The Coming of Chibinda and the Wanderjahre of the Lunda Chiefs, 8.3.51 (‘from Vic’), typescript (3pp)

Lunda field notes (1949-51) (125pp):
Lunda Pride;
Parable about Chiefdom;
Murder (in the past);
Witchcraft & Law (in the past);
Old-time courts;
Army;
Parable about chiefdom;
Kazembe - boasting rank;
Bufumu;
Offence of mukalunda against mwata;
Killing of chief;
Deaths of past Kazembe;
Political revenge;
Buloshi & Bufumu;
Succession of chief;
Kazembe and his ancestors;
Myanso;
Royal drums;
Mutentamo Court org[anization];
Kazembes’ clans;
Kalulua Canuma wa mfumu;
Nyinamfumu;
Bacanuma Kazenbes’ mothers;
Bupyani bwakwa Kazembe;
The council;
Mutentamo to receive stranger;
Mutentamo for Gore-Brown;
Lunda dress;
Mwata on insignia;
Action in case of sickness Mbala;
Ubuta wa bufumu;
Succession of chief;
Worship of Kazembes;
City ritual (Kambwali);
Mutentamo wa kupyanika;
Cipango basano kasaka;
Kazembe’s wives;
The harem;
Chiefs and mwaris;
Mwari;
Odd notes on pol[itics];
Mayanga of bana ba mfumu,
Bulunda and bwina Klistu;
Amayanga;
Kalulua;
Drums;
Kalilo na kakuni;
Myanso;
Outside chiefs;
Councillors;
Circumcision;
Bukashiba;
Bushakadyata;
Bena Kalyanabene;
Bukashinge;
Musanda;
Bukankoroto;
Kalandala;
Nswanamulopwe;
Bunswanamulopwe;
Bakosa and other clan;
Succession;
The Bena Ngalaopopo;
Bakosa;
Kazembe’s clans;
Kola Clans Bulunda Choosing Kazembe;
Mwinempada;
Calo te ca pa kanyina;
Bacilolo;
Lunda Ranks;
Domicile of bakalulua;
History of Mwatas by Aram Lukwesa;
Mwansabombwe;
Lunda history;
Kazembe and MY;
Lunda history;
History: Kilwa;
Lukanga;
Lukanga Histroy;
History mpembwe;
History of Mofwe;
Kasembes;
Cinkonkole XIII;
History;
Chieftainship of Lubunda;
History;
Kabimbi History;
History;
Shila history;
Mununshi;
History;
Kilwa History;
Kaindu’s history;
History of Mununshi;
History (Nshimba);
The Bashimba of Kasebula;
History Kazembe district: ownership;
History;
History Technique of changing ownership of country;
History;
History (Kapale - nsoka);
Mwabo History;
History;
Kabundebunde mushi wa calo;
Ukwisa kwa bena Nsoka written by Mukange;
Shila History;
History;
Makndwe’s History (Bwirile);
Owners of the country;
Aspects of Mulwe history;
Inheritance of Nkuba;
Shila History;
Yeke History;
History Lukwesa chiefdom;
Tribute;
Mulambo & Mufungo;
Land;
Tribute;
Finganda;
Bemba tribute;
Mulambo;
The Bashimba of Kasebula;
Ownership of country;
Nkalamo bana ba mfumu bene ba calo;
Abasangwa Bene ba mpanga Buluunda;
Composition of city Xn;
Villages of pali Mubanga;
City plan;
Chibuiri-chikolwe Mukoa village dist[rict]
Luapula field notes
SAD.1011/4
[1948-1951]
Luapula notes (file IV), including the following topics: Mukowa, kinship terms, death - succession - inheritance, weddings, marriage - prohibition degrees, cisamgu, baunde, divorce, headman succession, village medicines, village splits.
Luunda field notes. Typed notes cut out and pasted on foolscap pages according to topic:
Lupa Mukoa village org[anization];
Ancestor worship;
Mukoa;
Bash ishi;
Bwali Clan origins;
Bena Ngoma;
Linked clans;
Ilyashi lya Bena Mfula by Befulo Mundubi;
Bena bowa;
Mikowa;
Luapula Kinship Terminology;
Kinship miscellany;
Cisambamukowa or iconamukowa;
Succession tobolola;
Perpetual names;
Succession ceremonies mufuba;
Death of unmarried man;
Will;
Kinship Utufumyamfwa Amapumachulu;
Citobamakuli and Kupupawafwa;
Kinship certain repercussions on death of wife;
Kinship Icito (death of wife and successor refused by her family);
Kinship Kupyanika;
Sororal inheritance;
Inheritance;
Bupyani mwana wa katumbe;
Topolola (payment in wife inheritance);
Kuloba kwa mashina;
Kinship (sororate);
Succession kuloba kwa mashina naming;
Kinship Ukusanshye mililo;
Wife inheritance;
Kita bafwa;
Kukowela kulya mfwa;
Succession & Inheritance;
Property Lunda cirie;
Isambwe lya mfwa;
Kushilaushya;
Death of Shakadyata;
Kinship mpokeleshi;
Kinship Kuposele mfwa;
Funerals;
Death of Mkua Anas;
Divination;
Marriage;
Chibale wedding;
Kinship ‘Kusubulo muko’;
Incest degrees;
Marriage prohibited degrees;
A marriage notice;
Nyimbo sha Sisungu;
Songs;
Marriage;
Copperbelt marriage;
Bridewealth;
Mafunde ya cupo;
Marriage;
Cisungu ceremony;
Wife inheritance;
Mako;
Kufumya umwana pakati kutola mwana kupesela mpese;
Marriage akale mu medicine;
kulya icisungu kukowela;
Kinship adultery;
Divorce;
Adultery with unmarried woman;
Cilangomulilo;
Sterility and divorce;
Gardens & divorce;
Mwana we bele;
Bwali;
Divorce;
Kulya cisungu;
Case of Maluba Mumfundileni divorce Mukolo & Mwinga;
Divorce;
Ncila;
New moon;
Kusobola;
Ukwandama;
Twins;
Inheritance outside clan;
Kwilumba imikowa:
Ibeli: bampundu;
Rites of passage;
Kapopop;
Kusonte lifumo;
Kinship Belief in birth of child;
Adultery Lishiku Witchcraft;
Kinship sleeping arrangements (boys);
The domestic scene Katatala;
Children’s villages;
Headman succession;
Isambwe of death mishingo of death divination of death;
Malilo of Chubulwa burial lukunku property;
Headman succession;
Kishinsha mwinemushi;
Headman succession;
Succession of widows;
Headman succession;
Ukufumya of Chubulwa;
Kasesma;
Village medicines;
Nshipa village headman;
Muti wa nsompo;
Headman succession;
Death of headman Inongo ya mushi;
Inongo;
Nshipa lukomo lwa mushi;
Inongo ya mushi;
Village medicines;
Nshipa;
Village medicines (incl[uding] chief’s);
Village headman Witchcraft;
Village moves;
Cabu & cibolya gardens;
Village headmen;
A village split;
Village division;
Change of clan;
Change of village;
Village composition;
Chipepa village composition;
Mwinempanda village;
Village composition;
City Zxns;
Fitente;
Village composition

Loose pages: Marriage First impressions of bwinga; Marriage (Bwinga); Marriage (3pp); Marriage (2 pp clipped together); Marriage Law (1p); Slavery Kinship Law (1p)
Luapula field notes and Lunda genealogies
SAD.1012/1
[1948-1970s]
Loose papers of Luapula field notes and draft manuscripts.
Musambadrime, Mwehua bibliography index card (manuscript, 1p);
Kazembe, draft entry for Encyclopaedia Africana, 21 July 1967 (3pp);
The Lunda Court of Kazembe (2pp);
An Interregnum in the Dynasty of the Eastern Lunda (3pp);
Kazembe and the Yeke (handwritten draft, 2pp);
Letter from Clyde [Mitchell] to Cunnison, comments on a paper, [?1951] (4pp);
Letter from Max [Gluckman] to Cunnison, comments on paper on Lunda village, 20 March 1951 (handwritten, 4pp);
Draft outline of book/paper (handwritten, 1p);
Comments on a manuscript (author unknown) (handwritten, 2pp);
Draft introduction to book on the Lunda kingship of Kazembe (4pp);
“Mwata Kazembe celebrates his decade on the throne in Mwansabombwe”, Zambia Daily Mail, August 10, 1971, p.4;
Handwritten list of western surnames (1p);
Nkambo genealogy (handwritten 2pp);
“Ubutwa Bwa Bena Africa Na Matontonkanyo Ya Misango Ya Fye” (photocopy, 4pp) with handwritten translation as “The Butwa of the Africans and thoughts about worthless customs” (9pp);
Note on Inheritance of widows of Kazembe XIV (so far), 4 February 1951 (2pp);
Field note on the road to Lunda Royal Graves, 7 September 1948 (1p);
Bena Mfula of Kembe - Malakata - Katopola (handwritten, 1p);
Balumbu of Mutumbwa (handwritten genealogy, 2pp);
Diagram 5: (a) plan of part of capital of Kazembe IV, after Gamitto; (b) plan of present capital (handwritten, 2pp);
Diagram 1: Luapula Lunda version of the first chiefs of Kola and the first Mwata Yamvos with their relationships to the Kazembes (handwritten, 1p);
Skeleton genealogy of the Kazembes, showing derivation of their mothers (handwritten, 1p);
Diagram 5: (a) plan of part of capital of Kazembe IV, after Gamitto; (b) plan of present capital (handwritten, 2pp), a second copy affixed on reverse to p. 223 of a typescript text;
Hand drawn map (endorsed Map IV) of the Lower Luapula Valley with villages c. 1890, according to information of old people, marked in coloured ink (mimeo, 1p);
Handwritten list of villages (1p);
Sketch map (page 3) of the Lower Luapula Valley showing distribution of villages (manuscript, 1p);
Genealogy of Chinawezi Kantanje (handwritten, 1p);
Draft genealogy of Chinawezi Kantanje (handwritten, 2pp);
List of names (handwritten, 2pp);
Untitled handwritten genealogies (1p);
Lists of Lunda villages, noting years and cause of foundation, tribe and headmen (handwritten, 14pp);
Lists of Lunda villages, noting years and cause of foundation, tribe and clan (typescript and manuscript, 14pp);
List of [numbers of words for types of object / animal] comparatively by district (handwritten, 1p)
Table of census presentees and absentees, by village, from sample census (handwritten, 1p)
Field note on Shila History, 1949 (1p);
Field note on Kilwa Island history, 1948 (1p)
Luapula field notes
SAD.1012/5
1948-1950
Field notes, 1948. Typed notes, some loose and some cut out and pasted on foolscap pages, arranged according to topic.
Typed notes on the mourning ceremony of Chief Kasembe, recorded by I. Kalima (1950);
Topography of Kilwa Island;
History, political organisation;
Boma people;
Prices etc.;
Gardens;
Kinship, ‘Kwingisha muke mu nganda’;
Cisungu;
Kinship, feeding arrangements, Lukondwa and kuputulo bwali;
Archaeology;
Village perimeter fences;
Mununga;
History;
Makwe Nakafwaya, village history;
Arabs;
History of Lupembe Lumbwe;
“Bulendo bwaka Mwata Mubanga 1875”, by Adam Lukwesa (2pp); Mfumu Chitoto Kafununa;
Cursing at mwata, LMS, Church and state;
Disrespect to chiefs;
British South Africa Company etc.;
Early history, royal graves, Mil Org;
Cilolos, Kasembe;
Bamwinamashamo;
Kazembe's court - miscellaneous;
Chiefs, Sendama, administration;
Chiefs, courts and capitals;
Chief's court, first impressions;
Absence of chief;
Kazembe - accession, short description of what happened;
History, political organisation;
Matola village history;
Nkobekwa village history, Nshipa, Death of headman (2pp);
Cabirikila village histories;
Kinship, Nchila, Kapopo;
Divorce, Nkuba (curse);
Mushika (org. of Musemba);
Marriage (chief), Iteu;
Administration, leprosy;
Leprosy;
Village organisation - distribution of gardens;
Village organisation, headman, labour organisation;
Land tenure, Village District;
Land tenure;
Canoe building, labour organisation, village headman;
Economics, cooperation;
Traders;
Rice, land tenure;
Tea-rooms versus African hospitality;
Topography, hunting, history;
Mukoa, history, topography;
Mwanamwesi village organisation, magic (Nashipa), hunting (2pp);
Kambwali village headman (2 headmen at once);
Mukoa and Chikolwes, village headman;
Village histories: Cembo; Cipulumushi, and Bemba; Kalipese; Kapambwe; Semiwe; Chikumbi; Shanyemba;
Mukanso village history, early history, royal graves;
Village histories: Mushingo; Sindano; Sikasonde; Sumaile; Cikashe; Toka; Kasonso; Kasumpa;
Muselu village history (second attempt), Nshipa;
Village histories: Muyebea; Muyai;
Seketen village history, Muchika, Cisinga history;
Village histories: Kasheta; Mumpundu (and Lunde); Mwanamwesi; Yenga; Katuna; Citondo; Candwe; Mulumba; Kaseka; Katuta;
Mubamba village history, Shila history (2pp);
Village histories: Mulumbikapambwe; Sikapmbwe;
Menso village history, kinship;
Cisukulu village history, headmen, marriage;
Village histories: Cashele; Mumba; Mutiwanama; Kasiketi; Munshi; Lekeshya; Mukange (2pp); Cipakila; Muselu (2pp); Cipayeni; Cimenge; Bupina;
Kampampi village history, history, Lupwa-Mukoa, Impoko;
Mukumbwa village history, Shila and Lunda history;
Mulwe village history, Mukoa, Lupwe, village organisation;
Lubansa village history, Bwinempanda;
Mpuya village history, Ngulu, barter (2pp);
Kazembe village history, history;
Mfwayenda village history;
Mulumbwa village history, Shila history, [illegible];
Mumbolo village history (Lungu);
Village histories: Chishimikwa (or Luka); Koni (2pp);
Lendengoma village history, Mahommedanism;
Kasao village history, headwoman;
Village histories: Chomba; Cubulwa;
Nsholo village history, Ngulu;
Village histories: Ndaso; Matungu (or Sikitabe); Kalasa;
Katanda village history, ?ngulu? Kabwebwe;
Lushinga village history (Tabwa);
Senkwe village history, Bona Bwiilile;
Village histories: Kaweme; Elodi;
Mukamba village history, Shila history;
Village histories: Matabisi; Kambikambi; Kanyanta;
Mulalami village history, Lungu setup;
Village histories: Simapemba; Mutumbwa; Nalile;
Magic;
Magic, hunting;
Religion, Mohammedanism;
Mukoa;
Mukoa and Mutundu;
Lupwa and Cisaka;
Lupwa, Cikota, Mukowa;
Names, kinship, [illegible];
Kambwali early history;
Nkole Island history;
Tribal relations, Shila history;
Headman, Deahts, Mukoa, kinship;
The Luapula Council for African Affairs, 6 February 1949 (2pp);
Vernacular newspaper clippings, 26 September 1950 (2pp);
Native education;
Education & Missions;
Proverbs (smapinda);
Agenda for a meeting of the Lunda National Association, 6 February 1949;
Food meeting under PM, Oct 1950;

“Second Annual Report on Local Education”, Lunda Local Government, Kawambwa, 30 August 1950 (8pp)
Lunda field notes
SAD.1014/1
1949-1951
Field notes, including vernacular texts with English translations, cut out and pasted on legal size sheets; newspaper clipping from vernacular press:
“The nkumbu [calls made on the mondo drum] of the Luapula Lunda”: Kazembes, Kaluluas and aristocrats, miscellaneous (typescript, 8pp legal);
Nkumbu phrases, provided by Charlie White, written on Lusaka Secretariat headed paper (handwritten, 1p)
Analysis of nkumbu
Nkumbu, from various sources, including Mwata's written list
Mulandu wapwa
Nyimbo sha bufumu
Nyimbo sha bufumu bwaka Mwata Kazembe ukufuma ku Kola kwabo, by Alan Lukwesa
Malumbo ya Bakazembe
Muselo, kusumyo muselo
Ibuki
Lukano
Kazembes, insignia, court
Icota
Bufumu, cota and fence
ba cikwasa
Bufumu, cisoka
Village headman, chiefs' insignia
Death of Kazembe
Medicine of city, coni, mwari
Nakabutula
kutuba mwata mfwa
Mwata, food taboos
Lunda fires, death of kalulua's wives
Makwe
Mwari
Kazembe's wives
Bunakafwaya, Bumwari
Ntombo
Basano, kusonte lifumo
Kazembe's widows, divorce of Kazembe's wives
Case of Kalumbu
Kinship, chief's succession
Lunda clans, succession
Mothers of bakazembe
Nyinamfumu, bacanuma, half-Z marriage of Kazembe
imbala, bacanuma
bakalulua, wives
Llumbwe
Abana ba mfumu, by Adam Lukwesa
Succession of mwata
Death of mfumu
Mwata, succession
Mwata succession and death, kulumba ishina
Death of Kashyobwe
Mwata, death, sickness, succession
lwango, Buloshi and bufumu
Death of Mwata Kazembe
Mwata Kazembe Chinyanta XIV, by Adam Lukwesa
Succession of Mwata Kazembe XV Mwansabombwe-Kawambwa
Bupyani
Bupyani bwakwa Kazembe, by Adam Lukwesa
Death of Mwana wa mfumu
Provisional programme for the installation ceremony of Mwata Kazembe XVI at Mwansabombwe, 10 August 1957
Ubupyani bwa mfumu mwata Kazembe Kanyembo Mpalumema no. (16) XVI pa 10 August 1957 (Installation of Mwata Kazembe Kanyembo Mpalumema no. (16) XVI on 10 August 1957. Biography), by Enoch D. Mwape Luensha, Lunda Fisheries Councillor
Newspaper cuttings: “Mwata Kazembe Atomboka”, R. Chikonde; “Umweo Wakwa Mwata Kazembe”; picture of Chief Mwata Kazembe [Shadreck Chinyanta Nankula] (d. 26 October [1950])
SAD.1012/4
[1948-1956]
Lunda genealogies (manuscript)
SAD.1012/6
1904-1929
Notes by Rev. Will Freshwater, London Missionary Society at Kafulwe, “Manners and Customs of the Babemba”, with related copy correspondence with Mr Barnard from 1928; notes by Freshwater on History of the Balunda, Death of Kazembe in 1904 (manuscript); notes on the Vasila Tribe (different manuscript)
SAD.1012/2
[1948-1951]
Bibliographic research notes: Gouldsbury and Seane: The great plateau of Northern Rhodesia, 1912 (3pp); W.G. Robertson, An Introductory Handbook to the Language of the Bemba People, 1904 (handwritten, 2pp); various publications (handwritten, 9pp); F.R. Holmes, Through Wildest Africa, 1925 (1p); Le Courier de l’Apostolat Monastique: Le Bulletin des Missions, 1937 (1p); various publications (handwritten, 7pp); Crossed out draft notes (handwritten, 1p);
Sketch map of Mugila Hills region, showing ethnic groups (manuscript, 1p); Bemba I Bena Nqandu house of Cimbola (handwritten, 3pp) attached to notes on I. Schapera, Migrant Labour and Tribal Life [1947] (handwritten, 4pp); List of wives of Kazembe, their villages, clans and tribes (handwritten, 2pp);
Correspondence: Letter from White at African Local Government School, Chalimbana to Cunnison on the meaning of “ngala ya tulongo”, 15 March 1952 (handwritten, 1p); Letter from James [?Took] to Cunnison, 3 November 1951 (handwritten, 1p); Letters from Basil [?Shone] to Cunnison, January-April 1951 (handwritten, 6pp); Letters to Cunnison from Game & Tsetse Control, Kawambwa, concerning fishing rights, September-October 1950 (handwritten and typescript, 2pp);
[?Lunda] text, headed “Kabundebunde - 2” (typescript, 1p);
Notes from Northern Rhodesia Journal (handwritten, 4pp);
H.T. Bayldon, District Commissioner, Kawambwa District, Northern Province, “Tour Report no. 18 of 1955”, Annexure IV. Special Annexure: Crossing of Lunde River, 6 October 1955 (2pp);
Handwritten bibliography of 19th and 20th century sources (3pp); Draft index subjects? (handwritten, 2p); Draft chapter 1 on the death of Kazembe XIV (handwritten, 8pp); Draft index subjects? (handwritten, 2pp);
Notes on KZ-MY relations (handwritten, 9pp); Notes from 19th century sources (handwritten, 6pp); Notes made at the Burton Library from 20th century sources (handwritten, 10pp)
SAD.1012/3
[1948-1956]
Bibliographic research notes, field notes, and genealogie.
The Congo Free State. EB. Chronology (3pp typescript, 2pp handwritten); “Gazetteer of Tribes in the Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland”, University College of Rhodesia and Nyasaland (Department of African Studies) (mimeo, 4pp); Notes from mainly 19th century publications (handwritten, 14pp); Notes from Meland, In Witch-bound Africa (typescript, 4pp); Notes from Baumann, Lunda: bei Bauern und Jägern in Inner-Angola (typescript, 1p); Notes from White, “The Balovale peoples and their historical background”, Rhodes-Livingstone Journal 8, 1949 (handwritten, 2pp); Notes from G.L. Haveaux, “La tradition historique des Babende orientaux”, Institut Royal Colonial Belge, 37/2, 1954 (handwritten, 2pp); Notes from Coxhead, The Native Tribes of North Eastern Rhodesia (typescript, 1p); Notes from Congo 1923, p372 (handwritten, 1p); Notes from Northern Rhodesia Journal 1955 & 1956 (handwritten, 1p); Outline for Kingdom of Kazende in mid-19th Century (handwritten, 1p); Draft text pp.29-56, beginning “At this point Kazembe was in a difficult position” (typescript).
Field notes, 1948-1949:
Lunda-Kambwali: court organisation, Land tenure (typescript, 2pp);
Lunda-Kazembe-Kazembe-Kasasa, Matipa, Cipota, Cilembe, Mufwalwa, Cikoleka village histories, Citante history, Bufwalwa (typescript, 6pp);
“Ukwisa kwa bena Nsoka”, written by Mukanga (typescript, 2pp);
Genealogy (handwritten, 1p).

Notes from Johnston, British Central Africa 1895 (typescript, 1p); Lunda notes from Tippoo Tib by [H. Brode] (typescript, 1p); Succession of Bemba Chiefs, with genealogy (handwritten, 7pp)
3. Research papers: (ii) Sudan
Humr
1952-1990s
Field Notes
SAD.1097/6
[1952 x 1966]
Handwritten index of Arabic terms from Humr field notes (10pp)
SAD.1097/7
[1952 x 1966]
Humr field notes (file 1). Notes are numbered in blue crayon and cut out and pasted on foolscap pages according to topic:
1-57 Humr Khashm al-Buyut, genealogies and dia (blood money);
58-60 Notes on Baggara law (Messiria-Humr), informants Sh. Babu, Sh. Ali, Abu Gabr and Nur ed Din, File 66/E/43 (A.C. Beaton [District Commissioner, En Nahud, Western Kordofan]), Abyei, 3 March 1947;
61-70 Dinka and Humr-Dinka relations;
71-73 Towns and townsmen;
74 Dinka, position of women (a version of the 1951 killing of Dinka policemen in Upper Nile in a dispute over giraffe hunting);
75-112 Political: dayf (guest); nazirs; kaddab (lies); authority; mal (money); fellata; sheykhs; regulation of disputes; omodiya; history; Ali Julla; courts; omdaship; headship of Mezaghna; Ali Rahma; Mekky Saidy; elections; tribal fights and alliances;
113-115 Messiria: various notes on appointments and dismissals of nazirs and omdas [from] Governor’s file [Kn.P./CR/]66/E/43, 1942-1945;
116-122E from El Obeid Files: annual report 1950-51; notes of R.A. Bruce, R. Davies, C.J. Dupuis, F. Nicholls, [J.W.] Robertson, 1918-1938 (files Kn.P./CR/66.E.13 and 43; Malwal 66.B.40; Humr Rweng 8.A.8; Humr-Dinka-Nuer 8.A.8.2; Humr court no. 6 1.F.1/2.6; Hunting 31.A.2);
122-151 Places: Fayyarin, Durub and Edad; A. Kimeyl; Berokela; A. Kamil wells; Mezaghna; Beni Helba and Mumin; Terakena and Dar Hantoor; Fadliya; Menama; Ziyud; Metanin; Awlad Serur; Jubarat; Salamat; Mezaghna munsha'; Ganis woty; Mesar; cattle from Bahr el Ghazal in 1954; Meaar; Mesar; ?itinerary, [1953-1954];
152-166 Cattle and descriptive cattle terms and phrases; annotated pencil sketch of cow; Tor khussy; milk magic; Farrash, accidental killing of livestock; straying livestock; the age of shakwa; Amrat al bagar; cattle disease; Turab - bahr;
167-168 Handwritten list of residences, gardens and summer grazing;
169 Azzaba and Tegeliya;
170-188 Points from Mesar Munsha’: authority; tour to Turab; Mesar - woty; Ferig at Byeyty, Deret; Salamat; Nureddin; Ferig, in deret, dayyering; ; Mesar - plans from deret;
189-209 The Bahr and Babanusa: Mesar - Babanusa; cattle in cotton country; cattle origins; wells and water; water in rushash; water rights; cotton; cotton against growing esh; cotton, Dinka; gardens; damage to garden; Zura';
210-211 Economic terms;
212 Honey gathering;
213 Khatt ez zeraf (terms dealing with horses);
214-215 Handwritten diagrams and notes on settlements;
216-224 Hunting: Derud; Siyada; horse; Bandaga; zeraf; geese; horses, 'eyn; fil;
225-237 Iyal Ganis: marriages - early; females; Abid;
238-239 Meyras (inheritance of cattle);
240-244 Rigeyby marriages, men and women;
245-247 Iyal Habily: marriage; females;
248-251 Iyal Belebbo
252-267 Kinship terms: odd; Atim; adoption; Berti; Surra; Ferig; Ferig, Lau - summer; Ferig, Haddab; Gaid fog;
268 Gardens;
269-275 Cattle: mal; Sh's aspirations; Eyb; Surra cow; cattle property;
276 ‘Ar;
277-279 Custody;
280-288 Meyras (inheritance of cattle); kitab; women's property; incidents;
289 Death;
290-291 Division of meat;
292 El Kimm;
293 Food customs;
294-300 Slaves: Abid; freed slaves.
SAD.1097/8
[1952 x 1966]
Humr field notes (file 2). Notes are numbered in blue crayon and cut out and pasted on foolscap pages according to topic:
301-303 Hammoda’s wedding, December 1953;
303A-305 at Beyda Nuwar, wedding songs, 20 December [1953];
306 Marriage: agud;
307-308A si’ir;
309-361 Marriage: 313A: 'ada and sheri’; 314 Humam, umm shakoka; 315B-C jizy, kan; 317 negotiations; 318 prohibited degrees; 319 hiyat au sunna; 320 [seasonality]; 321 mezaghna; 329-330 agola; 331-332 adultery, murda - zina'; 333 tuffagiya, with fakir, damin; 340-341 after childbirth; 346, 348 robat; 353-354 Dar Mota case; 357 property; 359, 361 mal;
362-398 Divorce / kilfa, return of marriage payments, property, co-wives, idda, child custody;
399-418 Geyduma verse, songs and poems;
419 fil: ‘iyeyry, ghenny (on decline of elephant hunting)
420-469 Women: 420-423 Nuggara (dances); 424 and decorations; 425 azabs; 426 and food; 427 ornament terms; 428 and cattle; 429, 432 position of women; 430 as witnesses; 437-438 sherek; 440 limm, sharing; 447-468 hoom;
470-471 Maramka, and wirrel;
472 Shahy;
[473 not present]
474 Hadaya;
475 Historical monuments [Nuba]
476 Archaeological sites: the Shatt
477-480 Odd phrases;
481-484, 486 Gifts and hospitality;
485 Dayfan;
487-488 Tahura;
489-492 Months: Id el Fatur, Ramadan;
493 Guwa’d es salam el khamsa;
494-526 Religion, including: 502 cosmology; 503 misfortunes; 504 irada; 505-506 Hijja; 507 Jinns in wells; 508 shabshab; 509 eclipse of the moon; 510 cattle, a Saturday taboo; 511 new moon; 512 fugha; 513 warag; 514 faghir; 515-516, 518, 521, 524 sacrifices; 517, 522-523 karama; 519-520 gubbas; 525 food and the eye; 526 hukr, eyn, khashm, haram in dermud.
SAD.1097/9-SAD.1098/1
[1950s x 1990s]
Notes by Cunnison from publications on Sudan
SAD.1097/9
[1950s x 1990s]
File of notes, both handwritten and typed, from publications about Kordofan and wider Sudan:
Malte-Brun – Journal de voyage du Docteur Charles Cuny de Siout a el Obeid du 22 Novembre 1857 au 5 Avril 1858 (2pp);
Bibliography (manuscript, 2pp);
Flora (trees, grasses) (Latin), land types (Arabic) (manuscript, 2pp);
Dehérain – The Egyptian Sudan under Mohamed Ali;
1955/6 census (manuscript, 3pp);
Ethnic groups, locations, seasonal movements (manuscript, 2pp);
Harrison – report on 1955 grazing survey (6pp);
LeBeuf – “Die stämme zwischen Schari und Nil” (9pp, with mss. map);
Martine – “Essai sue l'histoire du pays Salamat” (7pp);
Carbou – La region du Tchad et du Ouadaï (17pp);
Sudan Intelligence Reports (SIR), nos 50-354 (1896-1924) (18pp);
Ali Julla – “The defeat of Hicks Pasha”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Arkell – “Fung origins”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Barbour – “The Wadi Azum”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Barth – Travels and Discoveries in North and Central Africa, 1849-1855 (5pp);
Browne – Travels in Africa, Egypt, and Syria, from the year 1792 to 1798 (2pp);
Davies – “Totemism in the Homr tribe”, Sudan Notes and Records (2pp);
Davies – “Elephant and giraffe hunting among the Homr tribe”, Sudan Notes and Records
Forde – Habitat, Economy and Society;
Gillan – “Darfur 1916”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Henderson – “Origin of the Dagu”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Hebbert – “The Bandala of Bahr el Ghazal”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Henderson – “A note on the migration of the Messiria tribe into South West Kordofan”, Sudan Notes and Records, with mss chronology and genealogy (9pp);
Hill – review of Douin's Histoire du Soudan Egyptien, vol. 1, Sudan Notes and Records;
Henderson and Hill – review of Douin's Histoire du regne du Khedive Ismail, Sudan Notes and Records;
Hill – “An unpublished itinerary of Kordofan, 1824-5”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Hill – “Rulers of Sudan, 1820-1885”, Sudan Notes and Records (2pp);
Kotschy – “Introduction to Paltae Tinneanae”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Keays – “Note on the history of the Camel Corps”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Hillelson – “Notes on the Dajo”, and “Songs of the Baggara”, Sudan Notes and Records (4pp);
Howell – “Notes on the Ngork Dinka of Western Kordofan”, Sudan Notes and Records (2pp);
Lampen – “The Baggara tribes of Darfur”, and “History of Darfur” (2pp), Sudan Notes and Records;
Lloyd – “Some notes on Dar Homr”, Geographical Journal (4pp);
Macintosh – “A note on the Dago tribe”, Sudan Notes and Records;
MacMichael – A history of the Arabs in the Sudan (5pp), and “Sudan Arabs in Nigeria”, “Nubian elements in Darfur”, “Notes on the burial-place of the Fur Sultans at Tura, in Jebel Marra” from Sudan Notes and Records;
Nachtigal – Sahara und Sudan, with 2 mss maps (6pp);
Pallme – Travels in Kordofan (4pp);
Reid – “Story of a Mahdist Amir”, “Some notes on the tribes of the White Nile Province” with ms map (5pp), “Some notes on the Khalifa Abdullahi from contemporary Sudanese sources” from Sudan Notes and Records;
Ruppel – Reisen in Nubien, Kordofan und dem petraïschen Arabien;
Sagar – “Notes on the history, religion and customs of the Nuba”, Sudan Notes and Records (2pp);
Salmon – “The story of Sheikh Abdullahi Ahmed abu Gelaha, a Sudanese Vicar of Bray”, Sudan Notes and Records (2pp);
Slatin – Fire and Sword in the Sudan (4pp);
Theobald – “The Khalifa Abdallahi”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Tunisy – Voyage au Darfur with ms map (5pp), Voyage au Ouadây with ms map (3pp);
Willis – “Relgious confraternities of the Sudan”, Sudan Notes and Records [tariqas];
Wordsworth – “Organisation, movements and economics of the cattle tribes” (4pp);
Yunis – “Notes on the Baggara and Nuba of Western Kordofan”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Newspaper cutting: interview with Nazir Musa Madibbo of the Rizeigat, 31 August 1964 (Arabic, with manuscript English translation, 5pp) ;
Rainfall map, from Lewis' “The Tsetse fly problem”, Sudan Notes and Records (manuscript);
Tribal map of the Chad region ?1914, from Gaillard and Poutrin Étude anthropologique des populations des régions du Tchad et du Kanem (manuscript);
Andrew and Karkanis – manuscript map from “Stratigraphical notes”, Sudan Notes and Records;
Bowen – manuscript map from “The game-birds and waterfowl of the Sudan”, with Baggara wordlist, Sudan Notes and Records
Gordon – letter to King Leopold II, 1 February 1884, (French, manuscript)
SAD.1098/1
[1970s x 1990s]
File of notes, both handwritten and typed, on the Baggara people:
Comparison of Humr and Nuer lineage systems (manuscript, 7pp);
Handwritten notes on lineage systems (manuscript) [not present];
Notes from articles in Sudan Notes and Records vols 1-2, 5, 10-12, 16, 22-23, 28-29, 31-32 (manuscript, 26pp);
Bibliography (5pp);
Domville-Fife – Savage Life in the Black Sudan (5pp);
Hamilton – The Anglo-Egyptian Sudan from within (3pp);
Chronology of events from issues of the Sudan Intelligence Report, 1918-24 (manuscript);
Bibliography of 19th century sources (manuscript, 2pp);
Humr genealogies and marriages (manuscript, 12pp);
Timothy Tor Young, “A Visit to Babanusa”, Nile Mirror 9 Sep 1971, p.2 (photocopy);
P.A. Zanotelli, “I Baggara”, Nigrizia, 85/4 [4 April 1967], p.31 (photocopy);
Bibliography of French, German, Italian sources on Chad and the Western Sudan (manuscript, 2pp)
Bibliography of W.S.[?] from [Gleichen] (manuscript)
Bibliography of French academic articles (manuscript)
Bibliography of articles from Journal of the African Society, Man, and various geographical journals (manuscript, 3pp on University of Manchester stationery)
Note on article by J. Lacey in Arabica, 1956 (page fragment)
Transcription of song “Al shay wa sheya” (manuscript)
Vesey-Fizgerald – Muhammadan Law (exercise book, manuscript, 19pp)
Larousse encyclopedia – “Darfour” entry (French, manuscript, 6pp)
Bibliography of works on the Arab and Muslim world (manuscript, 2pp)
Genealogies and lists of adult males and females and marriages of Ganis (manuscript, 13pp)
Incomplete genealogy “only for Matriline” (manuscript scroll)
Field notes on Humr cattle colours and other attributes about male and female cattle (5pp)
Field notes on ‘Jellaba’ [traders]
SAD.1098/2
[1970s x 1990s]
Research notes on dia (blood money):
“On Blood Money” (13pp);
Notes on blood money (manuscript, 20pp);
Notes on Mohammed Abu Rannat, “The relationship between Islamic and customary law in the Sudan”, Journal of African Law vol. 4, no. 1, 1960, 9-16 (manuscript, 3pp);
Notes on Hardy (manuscript, 4pp);
Notes on J.N.D. Anderson, “Homicide in Islamic Law”, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, 1951, 911-28 (manuscript, 2pp);
Notes on dia from Encyclopaedia of Islam, Dictionary of Islam, etc. (manuscript, 5pp);
List of footnotes (manuscript, 1p);
Notes on dia (blood money) file, D.F. Hawley, 1952 (manuscript, 1p);
Transcription of Criminal court circular no. 18, 3 December 1932 reissued 15 June 1952, drawn from Mohammed Abu Rannat, “The relationship between Islamic and customary law in the Sudan”, Journal of African Law vol. 4, no. 1, 1960, 15 (manuscript, 1p);
Notes from government files: AC/CP/117 & 118/1936; Dr.P/14.A.14; AC/Gen/2.6.9 sub file no. 2/4; AC/Gen/6.13.11 (manuscript, 6pp);
Draft typescript pp.2-8 of article on blood money (8pp)
SAD.1098/3
[early 1970s]
Research notes for Cunnison's published article “Classification by genealogy, a problem of the Baggara belt” (1971) (see SAD.1017/5):
Romanised transcription(s) of [Juhayna genealogies or pedigrees] (manuscript, 18pp)
“One kind of nomadism” (12pp);
“The Juhayna geneaology of the Baggara” (6pp);
“The Juhayna genealogies of the Baggara” (6pp);
“Genealogy in the Sudan, with special reference to the so called Juhaina”, draft article with related notes, including on different recensions, and on secondary works by Harrison, LeBeuf, Carbou, Nachtigal, Barth, Trimingham (manuscript, 37pp)
SAD.1098/6/1-82
[1956], 9 September 1988
“Some observations on the Baggara Messiria of Western Kordofan”, draft notes by P.P. Howell (79pp); with covering letter from Howell to Cunnison, 14 June [1956?]; with cutting from the Glasgow Herald entitled “Atrocities cover-up by Sudan aid groups”, 9 September 1988
3. Research papers: (iii) General
SAD.1098/4
[1950s]
Research papers:
Boston, J.S., “Gifts, wealth and treasure”, lecture (12pp);
Lecture notes on conducting fieldwork (manuscript, 4pp);
List of subject prompts for lecture re Kazembe and Baggara (manuscript, 1p);
Lecture notes on a student sit-in at Hull University (8pp)
SAD.1098/5
[1950s x 1960s]
Research notes:
“Why do Azande not perceive the futility of magic?” (manuscript, 1p);
Notes on field research methods (manuscript, 2pp);
Notes on B. Sefaniszyn “African reincarnation re-examined”, African Studies, vol. 13, no. 3 (1954) pp.131-146 (manuscript, 2pp);
Notes on M. Gluckman “Some processes of social change illustrated from Zululand”, African Studies, vol. 1, no. 4 (1942) pp.243-260 (manuscript, 2pp);
Notes on F. Keru Kingship and law in the Middle Ages (1939) (manuscript, 5pp);
Notes on E. Durkheim, also Fauconnet, and sociology (manuscript, 18pp)
4. Abyei Boundary Commission and Permanent Court of Arbitration
SAD.1098/7-10
[1952 x 1954], 2005-2009
Correspondence and witness statements relating to the Abyei Boundary Commission. The Abyei Boundary Commission was established after the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, between the Government of Sudan in the north and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/ Army in the south, to “define and demarcate the area of the nine Dinka Chiefdoms transferred to Kordofan in 1905”. The Commission included experts and representatives of the local communities and the local administration. When the Commission set the boundary lines in 2005 the Sudan People's LIberation Movement/ Army refused to accept them. The case was taken to the Permanent Court of Arbitration in the Hague in 2008 for settlement. The court delivered its final verdict in July 2009
See also SAD.1100/14 for aerial photographs taken in connection with the fixing of the boundary between North and South Sudan, 2012/13
SAD.1098/7/1
[1952 x 1954]
Photograph of Dinka visitors sitting under Hurgas Merida's tree at a Messiria Humr camp. Cropped copy of SAD.750/1/523
SAD.1098/7/2-10
2005 May-August
Correspondence between Cunnison and Douglas H. Johnson on the Abyei Boundary Commission (ABC): Johnson on receipt of Humr notes, 21 May 2003; letter from Wendy James to Ian Cunnison, giving extracts from Johnson’s emails about field visits of the ABC, [2005]; enclosing copy of notes on Commission experts 22 May 2005 conversation with Cunnison, 6 June 2005; Cunnison to Johnson with comments on above, 25 June 2005; from Johnson enclosing a copy of the 14 July 2005 Commission's report, 4 August 2005
SAD.1098/7/11-12
2005 July 14
Abyei Boundaries Commission Report, part 1 (45pp with 4 fold-out maps) and part 2 (appendices, 207pp) (photocopy)
SAD.1098/8-9
2008 September-2009 March
Correspondence with Wendy Miles of Wilmer Hale LLP and Professor James Crawford of the Lauterpacht Centre for International Law, with related papers, concerning the preparation of a case supporting the SPLM position in the Abyei hearing at the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) in the Hague. Includes: transcript of an interview with Cunnison (SAD.1098/8/7-28); Cunnison's witness statements, in drafts and final; aerial photograph of [?Abyei] church and surrounding settlement; Cunnison's comments on the case; Crawford's summary of the Tribunal's decision, with copy of the Comparative Map of the Abyei Area from its final report
Some emailed correspondence found in this file was forwarded from the Cunnison family to D.H. Johnson and W. James for inclusion within the collection
SAD.1098/10/1-51
2008 Dec 16
“The Boundaries of Abyei in Historical Perspective”, report by M.W. Daly (photocopy)
5. Articles, lectures, and books: (i) Rhodesia (now Zambia)
Lunda drafts
SAD.1014/2
[1950s]
Lunda drafts (I)
Skeleton Genealogy of Kazembes (manuscript);
Single sheet of typescript, cut off at the top, beginning “The years following were especially troubled”;
“The eastern Lunda and their uninvited guests” (3pp); “Lunda response to foreign visitors in the nineteenth century” (7pp, handwritten); “Kazembe and his invaders” (3pp, handwritten);
Part II, Chapter II, “The legendary origins of the kingship”, pp.1-16;
Chapter V, “ The Lunda”, pp.165-186;
Contents (3pp);
Random carbon typescript, pp.75, 112, 151-176;
Chapter V, “The Lunda”, pp.180-185;
Sub-sections: “ Conquest and settlement”, “Struggle for the kingship”, “Kazembe and the British”, pp.193-211;
Sub-sections: “Summary of aristocrats”, “The City”, pp.211-227;
Chapter VI, “Mwata Kazembe”, pp.228-245, including two photographs as plate VII Scenes in the City: Hippopotamus bones piled beneath the memorial tree to Kazembe I; The Lunda band;
Sub-section: “Death of the king”, pp.245-255, including two photographs as plate VIII Royal funeral: The bearers; The bier;
Sub-section: “Installation”, with plan, pp.255-263, including two photographs as plate IX Royal succession: the first four aristrocrats in Lunda dress; Mwinempanda strings the bow of kingship;
Sub-section: “The queen”, pp.263-269
SAD.1014/3
[1950s]
Lunda drafts (II)
Chapter VII, “People around the king”, pp.270-324, including two photographs as plate X: The recognition of headman Kasebula; At sunset he is borne out of the palace;
Chapter VIII, “Political authority and allegiance”, pp.325-365;
“Evidence on dates of the Kazembes”, notes (handwritten, 6pp);
“The royal house of Kazembe”, with manuscript genealogies, with programme for Oxford University Institute of Social Anthropology seminar series on royal and ruling houses, 1958 (25pp);
“ Notes on the ownership of waters on the Luapula” (4pp);
“Some types of history among the Luapula peoples”, Royal Anthropological Institute, 16 May 1950 (20pp);
“History among the Luapula Peoples”. Lectures I-IV (66pp);
“Lukwesa Mpanga, a Lunda rebel” (handwritten, 12pp);
Paper on Kazembe interregnums and successions, (21pp);
“Lunda village ritual”, Rhodes=Livingstone Institute conference, Nkana, February 1951 (22pp, and 3pp handwritten);
Untitled pages clipped together: (pp.1-2, Chapter I Introduction pp.3-7, Chapter II The patrilineal descent of the Kazembes 1p, Chapter II Kazembe Mawta Yamvo pp.1-2, untitled section including sub-section “Kazembe's charter” pp.186-192)
SAD.1014/5/1-5
[1950s]
Notes by Cunnison for a lecture on “Perpetual kinship”
See also 1956 published article by Cunnison “Perpetual kinship: a political institution of the Luapula peoples” filed at SAD.1015/1
Articles by Ian Cunnison about Northern Rhodesia (Zambia)
SAD.1014/4, 1015/1-2
1950-1967
Articles by Ian Cunnison about Northern Rhodesia (Zambia).
SAD.1014/4
1950-1951
Articles by Ian Cunnison about Northern Rhodesia (Zambia):
“Kinship and local organization on the Luapula”. Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Communications no. V, 1950 (mimeo., 32pp)
“History on the Luapula”, Rhodes-Livingstone papers no. 21, OUP 1951 (42 pp) and second impression published by Manchester University Press 1969) (50pp)
International Review of Missions, vol. 40, no. 160, 1951, including: “A watchtower assembly in Central Africa”, pp.456-69
Northern Rhodesia Journal no. 4, Dec 1951, including: “The death and burial of Chief Kazembe XIV”, pp.46-51
SAD.1015/1
1954-1966
Articles by Ian Cunnison about Northern Rhodesia (Zambia):
Rhodes–Livingstone Journal, no. 14 Human Problems in British Central Africa, including: “A note on the Lunda concept of custom”, pp.20-29
“Headmanship and the ritual of Luapula villages”, Africa, vol. 26, no. 1, 1956, pp.2-16
“Perpetual kinship: a political institution of the Luapula peoples”, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Journal, no. 20, 1956, pp.28-48
“History and genealogies in a conquest state”, American Anthropologist, vol. 59, no. 1, 1957, pp.20-31
The Times British Colonies Review, no. 29, 1958, including: “Jehovah’s Witnesses at work: expansion in Central Africa”, p.13
Journal of African History, vol. 2, no. 1, 1961, including: “Kazembe and the Portuguese 1798-1832”, pp.61–76
“Kazembe and the Arabs to 1870”, from The Zambezian past: studies in Central African history, eds R. Stokes and R. Brown, Manchester University Press, 1966, pp.226-237
SAD.1015/2
1962-1967
Articles by Ian Cunnison about Northern Rhodesia (Zambia):
“Ifikolwe Fyandi na Bantu Bandi (My ancestors and my people)”, by Mwata Kazembe XIV, translated from the Bemba by Cunnison and Labrecque, published in Central Bantu Historical Texts II: Historical Traditions of the Eastern Lunda, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Communication no. 23, 1962 (mimeo, 141pp)
“Analysis of an interregnum in the dynasty of the Eastern Lunda”, Frazer Lecture, Glasgow University, 1967: notes with genealogy, draft and final typescript, floppy disk
Offprints of articles and lectures on Lunda (not by Cunnison)
SAD.1013/1-4
1890-[1970s]
Offprints of articles on Lunda
SAD.1013/1
[1950s-1960s]
Offprints of articles and lectures on Lunda:
Brian M. Fagan, P.A. Robins, F. Willett, “Radiocarbon dating in Sub-Saharan Africa from the introduction of food production”, [1964 x 1967] (mimeo, 13pp)
William Desborough Cooley, “The Geography of N’yassi, or the Great Lake of Southern Africa, investigated; with an account of the overland route from the Quanza in Angloa to the Zambezi in the Government of Mozambique”, Journal of the Royal Geographical Society 15 (1845): 185-235 (photocopy, 51pp)
P. Colle, “Le Butwa (Société Secrète Nègre)”, La Revue Congolaise 1912 (photocopy, 3pp)
SAD.1013/2
[1950s-1970s]
Offprints of articles and lectures on Lunda:
Guy de Plaen, “Diplomatie et economie. Le Système Yeke”, from Cultures et Developpement , 1979 (photocopy, 22pp)
Robert H. Bates, “Rural development in Kasumpa village, Zambia”, California Institute of Technology, [1974] (photocopy, 46pp)
“Le Katanga (1850-1908)”, from A nos heros coloniaux morts pour la civilisation 1876-1908 (1931), 217-232 (photocopy)
V.W. Turner, “A Lunda love story and its consequences: selected texts from traditions collected by Henrique Dias de Carvalho at the court of Mwatianvwa in 1887”, from Rhodes-Linvingstone Institute Journal, 19, Dec 1955 (26pp and with fold-out map)
Andrew Roberts, “Tippu Tip, Livingstone, and the chronology of Kazembe”, from Azania, 2, 1967 (17pp), inscribed with the author's “respects and compliments”
SAD.1013/3
1890-1966
Offprints of articles and lectures on Lunda:
José de Oliveira Boléo, “Explorações dos Portugueses em África” from I congresso da história da expansão Portuguesa no mundo, 5th section, 1938 (20pp)
F. Alves de Azevedo, “Levingstone e as descobertas Portuguesas”, from I congresso da história da expansāo Portuguesa no mundo, 4th section, 1938 (8pp)
A.I. Richards, “Tribal government in transition: the Babemba of north-eastern Rhodesia”, from the Journal of the Royal African Society, vol. 34, no. 137, 1935 (26pp)
L. Stienon, “Notes concernant la tribu Baushi”, from Congo, v.2, no. 7, 59-61, June 1926
[H. Labouret], “Langage tambouriné en Afrique Centrale”, from Congo, v.2, no. 4, 587-592, Nov 1923
A. Verbeken, “La tambour-téléphone chez les indigènes de l’Afrique centrale”, from Congo, v.1, nos 3-5, 253-284, 721-728, June-July 1920, May 1924
Alfred Sharpe, “Trade and colonisation in British Central Africa”, from Scottish Geographical Magazine, v.17:3, 129-148, 1901
Alfred Sharpe, “The geography and resources of British Central Africa”, from Geographical Journal, v.7, no. 4, April 1896 (21pp)
Alfred Sharpe, “A journey to Garenganze”, from Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography, v.14, no. 1, January 1892 (12pp, with fold-out map)
Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography, v.12, no. 12, December 1890
Neil D. McGlashan, “The distribution of blindness in the Luapula Province”, from The Central African Journal of Medicine, v.12, no. 3-4, 41-47 and 68-73, March-April 1966 (photocopy)
SAD.1013/4
[1950s-1970s]
Offprints of articles and lectures on Lunda:
P. Glyn Griffiths, “Leprosy in the Luapula Valley, Zambia: history, beliefs, prevalence and control”, from Leprosy Review, 36:2, 59-67, 1965 (photocopy)
Marie-Louise Bastin, “Tshibinda Ilunga: à propos d’une statuette de chasseur ramenée par Otto H. Schütt en 1880”, from Baessler-Archiv, n.s. 13, 501-537, 1965 (photocopy); with covering letter from the author to Cunnison, 1 June 1969
Eduardo Dos Santos, “A Antiga Lunda e seus povos”, from Ultramar, v.5, no. 19, 52-70, 1965 (photographic copy)
Yvo Struyf, “Kahemba. Envahisseurs Badjok et conquerants Balunda”, from Zaire, v.2, no. 4, 351-390 (photocopy)
Entry from [1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica] on Portuguese East Africa (photocopy, 6pp)
Max Buchner, “Die Lukokessa, die gynokratische Königin des Lunda-Reiches”, from Globus, 51, 135-137, 1887 (photocopy)
“Voyages des Portugais d’une côte à l’autre de l’Afrique, aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles: II. Route de la côte orientale au centre de l’Afrique et à la côte occidentale”, from L’Exploration, 3:2, 38-49, 1879 (photocopy)
Francisco José de Lacerda e Almeida, “Biographia dos Brasileiros illustres por armas, letras, virtudes, etc.”, from Revista Trimensal do Instituo Historico e Geografico do Brasil, v.35, pt 1, 177-185, 1863 (photocopy)
Photocopied extracts from Archivo Pittoresco, 1857/8 (negative photocopy)
James MacQueen, “Notes on the present state of the geography of some parts of Africa”, from Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, v.20, 235-251, 1851 (photocopy)
Marcia Wright and Peter Lary, “Swahili settlements in Northern Zambia and Malawi”, from African Historical Studies, vol.4, no. 3, 547-573, 1971 (photocopy)
Offprints of articles on Northern Rhodesia, Zambia and Zimbabwe (not by Cunnison)
SAD.1015/3-5, 1016/1-2
1891-2003
Offprints of articles on Northern Rhodesia, Zambia and Zimbabwe
SAD.1015/3
[1950s]-1966
Offprints and copies of articles and papers mainly relating to Northern Rhodesia, sorted into small and large sized pamphlets/papers.
Assorted extracts from Congo, 1937-38, “Mélanges: documents ethnographiques” (photocopy)
Assorted extracts from Annaes Martimos e Coloniaes (official records of Portuguese explorations), 3rd series, nos 5-10, Lisbon 1843 (photocopy)
Colson, Elizabeth, “Possible repercussions of the right to make wills upon the Plateau Tonga of Northern Rhodesia”, Journal of African Administration, vol. 2, no. 1, Jan. 1950, pp.1-10 (photocopy)
Colson, Elizabeth, “The Tonga and the shortage of implements”, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Journal, no. 14, 1952, pp.37-38 with reply, pp.39-40
Colson, Elizabeth, “Plateau Tonga diet”, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Journal, no. 24, 1958, pp.51-67
Colson, Elizabeth, “Family change in contemporary Africa”, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, vol. 96, article 2, 1962, pp.641-47
Colson, Elizabeth, “Trade and wealth among the Tonga”, from Markets in Africa, eds P. Bohannan and G. Dalton, Northwestern University Press, 1962, pp.601-16
Colson, Elizabeth, “Land rights and land use among the Valley Tonga of the Rhodesian Federation: the background to the Kariba resettlement programme”, from African Agrarian Systems, ed. Daniel Biebuyck, Oxford University Press, 1963, pp.137-56
Colson, Elizabeth, “Social change and the Gwembe Tonga”, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Journal, no. 35, Sept. 1964, pp.1-13
Colson, Elizabeth, “Land law and land holdings among Valley Tonga of Zambia”, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, vol. 22, no. 1, Spring 1966, pp.1-8
SAD.1015/4
[1950s]-1976
Offprints and copies of articles and papers mainly relating to Northern Rhodesia, sorted into small and large sized pamphlets/papers.
Colson, Elizabeth, “The alien diviner and local politics among the Tonga of Zambia”, Political Anthropology, eds Marc J. Swartz, Victor W. Turner, and Arthur Tuden, Aldine, 1966, pp.221-28
Colson, Elizabeth, “Spirit possession among the Tonga of Zambia”, from Spirit Mediumship and Society in Africa, eds John Middleton and J.H.M. Beattie, Routledge, 1969, pp.69-103
Colson, Elizabeth, “Converts and tradition: the impact of Christianity on Valley Tonga religion”, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, vol. 26, no. 2, Summer 1970, pp.143-56
Colson, Elizabeth, “Heroism, martyrdom, and courage: an essay on Tonga ethics”, from The Translation of Culture: Essays to E.E. Evans-Pritchard, Tavistock, 1971, pp.19-35
Colson, Elizabeth, “Culture and progress” (Distinguished Lecture, American Anthropologist Association, 1975), American Anthropologist, vol. 78, no. 2, 1976, pp.261-71
Colson, Elizabeth, “From chief’s court to local court: the evolution of local courts in southern Zambia”, Political Anthropology, An International Quarterly, vol. 1, no. 3/4, 1976, pp.15-29
Colson, Elizabeth, and T. Scudder, “New economic relationships between the Gwembe Valley and the line of rail”, [from Town and country in central and eastern Africa, ed. David Parkin, Oxford University Press, 1975], pp.190-210
Colson, Elizabeth, with Mark Chona, “Marketing of cattle among Plateau Tonga”, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Journal, no. 37, June 1965, pp.42-50
Cuvelier, J., “Letter on the meaning of ‘Pombeiros’”, dated 31 March 1949. Biographie Coloniale Belge 2: 779 (1951)
Extracts from Cooley, William Desborough, Inner Africa laid open in an attempt to trace the chief lines of communication across that continent south of the equator, 1852: map/title page, pp.8-43 (photocopy)
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “White-collar workers and supervisors in a plural society”, Civilisations, vol. 10, no. 3, 1960, pp.293-306
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “Wage labour and African population movements in Central Africa”, from Essays on African Population, eds K.M. Barbour and R.M. Prothero, Routledge, 1961, pp.193-248
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “Marriage, matriliny and social structure among the Yao of southern Nyasaland”, International Journal of Comparative Sociology, vol. 3, no. 1, Sept 1962, pp.29-42
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “Tribe and social change in South Central Africa: a situational approach”, Journal of African and Asian Studies, vol. 5, no. 1-2, Jan. and Apr. 1970, pp.83-101
SAD.1015/5
1891-1984
Offprints and copies of articles and papers mainly relating to Northern Rhodesia, sorted into small and large sized pamphlets/papers.
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “Distance, transportation, and urban involvement in Zambia”, from Urban Anthropology: Cross-Cultural Studies in Urbanization, ed. Aidan Southall. Oxford University Press, 1973, pp.287-314
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “Perceptions of ethnicity and ethnic behaviour: an empirical explanation”, from Urban Ethnicity, ed. Abner Cohen, Tavistock, 1974, pp.1-35
Mitchell, J. Clyde, and A.L. Epstein, “Power and prestige among Africans in Northern Rhodesia: an experiment”, Proceedings and transactions of the Rhodesia Scientific Association, vol. 45, 1957, pp.13-26
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “Preliminary notes on land tenure and agriculture among the Machinga Yao”, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Journal, no. 10, 1950, pp.1-13
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “An estimate of fertility in some Yao hamlets in Liwonde District of southern Nyasaland”, Africa, vol. 19, no. 4, Oct 1949, pp.293-308
Perry, Ottley, “Mr. A. Sharpe’s journey from Karonga to Katanga, viâ the northern shore of Lake Mweru”, Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography, vol.13, no. 7, July 1891, pp.1-5
Roland, Hadelin, “Résumé de l’histoire ancienne du Katanga”, Problèmes Sociaux Congolais, no. 61, June 1963, pp.5-41 (photocopy)
Uberoi, Jit Singh, “New outlines of structural sociology, 1945-1970”, Contributions to Indian Sociology, vol. 8, pp.135-52
Van Velsen, J., “Social research and social relevance: suggestions for a research policy and some research priorities for the Institute for African Studies”, African Social Research, 17, June 1974, pp.517-53
Watson, W. “The Kaonde village”, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Journal, no. 15, 1954, pp.1-30
Werbner, Richard, “The Manchester School in south-central Africa”, in Annual Review of Anthropology, vol. 13, 1984, pp.157-85
Werner, Douglas, “Some developments in Bemba religious history”, Journal of Religion in Africa, vol. 4, 1972, pp.1-24 (photocopy)
SAD.1016/1
1967-2003
Offprints and copies of articles and papers mainly relating to Northern Rhodesia, sorted into small and large sized pamphlets/papers.
Annear, Christopher M., “Fishing in decline: practice and politics of killing and farming fish in Luapula, Zambia”, dissertation research proposal for Department of Anthropology, Boston University, 2003
Bates, Robert, “UNIP in a Luapula village”, paper for a Political Science workshop, [University of Zambia, Lusaka], 3-4 August 1972 (photocopy, 7pp)
[Campbell, Dugald], “Notes on Butwa, an African secret society”, [Southern Rhodesia Native Affairs Departmental Annual], 25, 1948, pp.44-48 (photocopy)
“A few notes on Butwa: an African secret society”, from Man, vol. 14, 1914, pp.76-81 (photocopy)
Notes by Cunnison on Dugald Campbell's Blazing trails in Bantuland (1933)
Colson, Elizabeth, “The assimilation of aliens among Zambian Tonga”, [later published within From tribe to nation in Africa, R. Cohen and J. Middleton eds, 1970] (typescript)
Colson, Elizabeth, “Competence and incompetence in the context of independence”, from Current Anthropology, vol. 8, nos 1-2, February-April 1967, pp.92-111
Colson, Elizabeth, “Contemporary tribes and the development of nationalism”, from Essays on the problem of tribe. Proceedings of the 1967 annual spring meeting of the American Ethnological Society, ed. June Helm, 1968, pp.201-206
Colson, Elizabeth, “Indian reservations and the American social system”, paper read at the 67th annual meeting of the American Anthropological Association in Seattle, Nov. 1968, reprinted from Northwest Anthropologcal Research Notes, vol. 3, no.1, 1968, pp. 7-11
Colson, Elizabeth, “Political anthropology: the field” and Smith, M.G., “Political anthropology: policial organization”, from International encyclopedia of the social sciences, Macmillan, 1968, pp.189-202
SAD.1016/2
1960-1989
Offprints and copies of articles and papers mainly relating to Northern Rhodesia, sorted into small and large sized pamphlets/papers.
Cross, Sholto, “Jehovah’s Witnesses and socio-economic change in the Luapula Province”, paper presented to Political Science Workshop, School of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zambia, 1972 (mimeo, 23pp)
Cross, Sholto, “The Watch Tower, witch-cleansing and secret societies in Central Africa”, [Conference on the religious history of central Africa, Lusaka, 1972] (mimeo, 21pp)
Epstein, A.L., “The millennium and the self: Jehovah’s Witnesses on the copperbelt in the '50s”, Anthropos, vol. 81, no. 4/6, 1986, pp.529-554
Kauseni, Maxwell, “Zambia’s traditional dances: 6, Umutomboko”, Z Magazine, Zambia Information Services, February 1973, pp.16-21, illustrated with several photographs
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “Marriage stability and social structure in Bantu Africa”, paper presented to the International Population Union Conference, September 1961 (mimeo, 8pp)
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “Measures of marriage stability”, working paper for N.R.C.S.S. [Northern Rhodesian Council for Social Services] Conference on marriage and the family, Lusaka, 15-17 September 1961 (mimeo, 8pp)
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “Notes on the measurement of labour migration”, October 1960, 6pp
Roberts, Allen F., “History, ethnicity and change in the ‘Christian Kingdom’ of Southeastern Zaire”, from The creation of tribalism in Southern Africa, ed. Leroy Vail, University of California Press / James Currey, 1989, pp.193-214 (photocopy), with covering letter from the author
Teeffelen, T. van, “The Manchester School in Israel and Africa: a critique”, Dialectical Anthropology, vol. 3, no. 1, February 1978, pp.69-83 (photocopy)
5. Articles, lectures, and books: (ii) East and Central Africa
Offprints, mainly East and Central Africa
SAD.1016/3-5
1948-1963
Offprints, mainly East and Central Africa.
Barnes, J.A., “Some aspects of political development among the Fort Jameson Ngoni”, African Studies, vol. 7, nos 2-3, 1948, pp.1-11
Barnes, J.A., “The perception of history in a plural society: a study of an Ngoni group in Northern Rhodesia”, Human Relations, vol. IV, no. 3, 1951, pp.295-303
Clark, J. Desmond, “A note on the pre-Bantu inhabitants of Northern Rhodesia and Nyasaland”, South African Journal of Science, vol. 47, no. 3, 1950, pp.80-85; inscribed by the author
Watson, W., “The Kaonde village”, Rhodes-Livingstone Institute Journal, no. 15, July 1954, pp.1-30; inscribed by the author
Schapera, J., “Marriage of near kin among the Tswana”, Africa, vol. 27, no. 2, April 1957, pp.139-159; inscribed by the author
Epstein, A.L., “Linguistic innovation and culture on the Copperbelt, Northern Rhodesia”, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, vol. 15, no.3, 1959, pp.235-253; inscribed by the author
Van Velsen, J., “Notes on the history of the lakeside Tonga of Nyasaland”, African Studies, vol. 18, no.3, 1959, pp.105-117; inscribed by the author
Richards, Audrey I., “Social mechanisms for the transfer of political rights in some African tribes” (Presidential Address), The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, vol. 90, no.1, 1960, pp. 175-190; inscribed by the author
Prothero, R. Mansell, “Population movements and problems of malaria eradication in Africa”, Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 24, 1961, pp.405-425; with compliments of the author
Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences, s. 2, vol. 24, no.7 (May 1962), including “Factors inhibiting change in an African pastoral society: the Karimojong of northeast Uganda” by N. Dyson-Hudson, pp.771-801; inscribed by the author
Rehfisch, F., “Competitive gift exchange among the Mambila”, Cahiers d’Études Africaines, vol. 3, c.9, 1962, pp.91-103; inscribed by the author
Marwick, M.G., “History and tradition in East Central Africa through the eyes of the Northern Cewa”, Journal of African History, vol. 4, no.3, 1963, pp.375-390
SAD.1016/4
1963-1977
Offprints, mainly East and Central Africa.
Gluckman, Max, “Civil war and theories of power in Barotseland: African and medieval analogies”, Yale Law Review, vol. 72, no.8, 1963, pp.1515-1546; inscribed by the author
Hair, Paul E.H., “Milho, meixoeira and other foodstuffs of the Sofala garrison, 1505-1525”, Cahiers d’Études Africaines, vol. 17, c.66-67, 1977, pp.353-363; inscribed by the author
Roberts, Andrew, “A bibliography of Tanganyika, 1959-1964. Local and tribal studies in the social sciences”, Tanzania Notes and Records, no.65, 1967, pp.67-77; inscribed by the author
Rigby, Peter, “Time and structure in Gogo kinship”, Cahiers d’Études Africaines, vol. 7, c.28, 1967, pp.637-658 (photocopy)
Labrecque, P. Edouard: “Les origines des Babemba de la Rhodesie du Nord (Zambia)”, Annali del Pontificio Museo Missionario Etnologico, vol. 32, 1968, pp.249-329 (photocopy)
Jaspan, M.A., “Symbols at work: aspects of kinetic and mnemonic representation in Redjang Ritual”, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia and Oceania, vol. 123, no.4, 1968, pp.476-516
SAD.1016/5
[1950s]-1986
Offprints, mainly East and Central Africa.
Werbner, Richard P., “Constitutional ambiguities and the British administration of Royal careers among the Bemba of Zambia”, from L. Nader ed., Law in Society and Culture, 1969, pp.245-272 (photocopy); inscribed by the author to Talal
Werbner, Richard P., “Symbolic dialogue and personal transactions among the Kalana and Ndembu”, Ethnology, vol. 10, no.3, 1971, pp.311-328; inscribed by the author
Malamat, Abraham, “Tribal societies: biblical genealogies and African lineage systems”, Archives Européennes de Sociologie, vol. 14, no. 1, 1973, pp. 126-136; inscribed by the author
Kandawire, J.A.K., “Education and rural development in colonial Nyasaland”, Journal of Eastern African Research & Development, vol. 4, no.2, 1974, pp. 111-122
Peristiany, John G., “The ideal and the actual: the role of prophets in the Pokot political system”, from J.H.M. Beattie and R.G. Lienhardt eds, Studies in Social Anthropology, 1975, pp.167-212; inscribed by the author
Hair, P.E.H., “From language to culture: some problems in the systematic analysis of the ethnohistorical records of the Sierra Leone region”, from R.P. Moss and R.H.A.R. Rathbone eds, The Population Factor in African Studies, 1975, pp.71-83; inscribed by the author
Werbner, Richard P., “Land, movement, and status among Kalanga of Botswana”, from M. Fortes & S. Patterson eds, Studies in African Social Anthropology, 1975, pp.95-120 (photocopy); inscribed by the author
Lewis, I.M., “Culture and conflict in Africa”, Millennium: Journal of International Studies, vol. 6, no.2, 1977, pp.175-181; inscribed by the author
Werbner, Richard P., “Sin, blame and ritual mediation”, from M. Gluckman ed., The Allocation of Responsibility, 1977, pp.227-255
Baxter, P.T.W., “Giraffes and Poetry: some observations on giraffe hunting among the Boran”, Paideuma, vol. 32, 1986, pp.45-63; inscribed by the author
Forster, Peter G., “Missionaries and anthropology: the case of the Scots of Northern Malawi”, Journal of Religion in Africa, vol. 16, no.2, 1986, pp.101-120
Gann, Lewis, Sometime Research Officer, Rhodes-Livingston Institute, “A chronology of cultural, social, economic, political and administrative events in Northern Rhodesia: 1884-1933”, [c.1950s], 8pp (mimeo)
Gulliver, P.H., “An applied anthropologist in East Africa during the colonial era” (typescript, 28pp) [later published in Social anthropology and development policy, eds Grillo and Rew, 1985
Offprints and Seminar Papers on Central African History
SAD.1016/6
1944-1955
Offprints and Seminar Papers on Central African History.
Mitchell, J.C. and Barnes, J.A., “The Lamba village: report of a social survey”, Communications from the School of African Studies, University of Cape Town, n.s. no. 24, May 1950, (mimeo, 78pp)
Brelsford, W.V., “Aspects of Bemba chieftainship”, Communications from the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute, no. 2, 1944 (mimeo, 57pp)
Clay, G.C.R., “History of the Mankoya District”, Communications from the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute, no. 4, 1945 (re-Roneod March 1955, 21pp)
Mitchell, J. Clyde, “African urbanization in Ndola and Luanshya”, Communications from the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute, no. 6, 1954 (mimeo, 25pp)
SAD.1017/1
[1944]-1967
Offprints and Seminar Papers on Central African History.
Harries, Lyndon, “The Initiation rites of the Makonde tribe”, [Communications from the Rhodes-Livingstone Institute, no. 3, 1944] (mimeo, 36pp)
Roberts, Andrew, “The Lumpa church of Alice Lenshina and its antecedents. Part 1”, [1960s] (mimeo, 18pp)
Roberts, Andrew, “The Lumpa church: Part II”, 27 January 1967 (mimeo, 26pp); inscribed by the author
[Roberts, Andrew, “[The Lumpa church]:Part III: conclusions and comparisons” (mimeo, 5pp)
Roberts, Andrew, “Bemba history: methods and problems”, December 1964, with maps and geneaologies (mimeo, 19pp)
[Roberts, Andrew], “Survey of African chronology and genealogies. Chronology of the Bemba (N.E. Zambia)”, (mimeograph, 14pp)
Roberts, Andrew, “Chronology of the Bemba (N.E. Zambia)”, Journal of African History, vol. 11, no.2, 1970, pp.221-240; inscribed by the author
SAD.1017/2
[1964]-1981
Offprints and Seminar Papers on Central African History.
[Echenberg, M.J.], “Survey of African Chronology and Genealogies: the application of normal probability theory to the problem of Wagadugu Mossi state origins” [1964] (mimeo, 4pp)
Jones, D.H., “Chronology from genealogical evidence”, African History Seminar, SOAS, 20 October [1965] (mimeo, 3pp)
“Survey of African chronology and genealogies: The Kingdom of Wanga in Buluyia, Western Kenya. Chronology from genealogical evidence” (mimeo, 4pp)
Roberts, A.D., “The political history of the Bemba: a comparative approach”, seminar paper, SOAS, 27 January 1971 (mimeo, 16pp)
Musambachime, Mwelwa C., “The social and economic effects of sleeping sickness in Mweru-Luapula 1906-1922”, African Economic History, no. 10, 1981, pp.151-173 (photocopy)
“History in Zambia”, Research Bulletin of the Historical Association of Zambia, no. 1, June 1970 (mimeo, 14pp); inscribed by A.D. Roberts
“History in Zambia”, Research Bulletin of the Historical Association of Zambia, no. 2, March 1971 (mimeo, 10pp)
“History in Zambia”, Research Bulletin of the Historical Association of Zambia, no. 3, January 1972 (mimeo, 17pp)
“History in Zambia”, Research Bulletin of the Historical Association of Zambia, no. 4, January 1973 (mimeo, 20pp)
“History in Zambia”, Research Bulletin of the Historical Association of Zambia, no. 5, January 1974 (mimeo, 9pp)
“History in Zambia”, Research Bulletin of the Historical Association of Zambia, no. 6, January 1976 (mimeo, 17pp)
SAD.1017/3
1967-1977
Offprints and Seminar Papers on Central African History.
“History in Zambia”, Research Bulletin of the Historical Association of Zambia, no. 7, January 1977 (mimeo, 14pp)
“History in Zambia”, Research Bulletin of the Historical Association of Zambia, no. 8, January 1978, with membership circular (mimeo, 6pp)
Tanzania Zamani. A bulletin of research on pre-colonial history, no. 1, July 1967, with membership circular (mimeo, 14pp)
Tanzania Zamani. A bulletin of research on pre-colonial history, no. 2, January 1968 (mimeo, 20pp)
Tanzania Zamani. A bulletin of research on pre-colonial history, no. 3, July 1968 (mimeo, 8pp)
Tanzania Zamani. A bulletin of research on pre-colonial history, no. 4, January 1969 (mimeo, 25pp)
Tanzania Zamani. A bulletin of research on pre-colonial history, no. 5, July 1969 (mimeo, 15pp)
Tanzania Zamani. A bulletin of research on pre-colonial history, no. 6, January 1970 (mimeo, 13pp)
Tanzania Zamani. A bulletin of research on pre-colonial history, no. 7, July 1970 (mimeo, 12pp)
Tanzania Zamani. A bulletin of research on pre-colonial history, no. 8, January 1971 (mimeo, 16pp)
5. Articles, lectures, and books: (iii) Sudan
SAD.1017/4
[1950s x 1970s]
Lectures and lecture notes by Cunnison for a lecture series about the history of anthropology.
“Nineteenth century kinship studies” (19pp)
Durkheim (12pp)
Primitive modes of thought (13pp)
Fieldwork (13pp)
Social anthropology (11pp)
Developments in social anthropology since the 1930s (13pp)
The tribal fixation (manuscript, 16pp)
Tribe and false consciousness (typescript and manuscript, 9pp), with notes (5pp)
SAD.1017/5-6
1956-1977
Journal articles and lectures on Sudan by Cunnison.
SAD.1017/5
1956-1971
Journal articles on Sudan by Cunnison.
Dugla poem praising a woman's beauty
“Giraffe hunting among the Humr tribe”, Sudan Notes and Records vol. 37, 1956, pp.49-60
“Subsidiary nomadic movements of the Humr”, Geographical Magazine, Khartoum University, I, 1963, pp.25-30
Sudan Journal of Science and Animal Husbandry, vol. 1, no.1, March 1960, including “The social role of cattle”, pp.8-25
“Classification by genealogy, a problem of the Baggara belt”, from Sudan in Africa, pt II, “The Sudan Today”, 1971, pp.186-196; see also related research notes at SAD.1098/3
SAD.1017/6
1962-1977
Journal articles and lectures on Sudan by Cunnison.
“The technical and moral position of the anthropologist in relation to the economic development in tribal societies”, Sudan Society, no. 1, 1962, pp.15-27
Sudan Journal of Development Research, vol. 1, no.1, February 1977, including “Changing relations of anthropology and administration in the Sudan”, pp.1-25
“Blood money, vengeance and joint responsibility: the Baggara case”, Essays in Sudan Ethnography, [1972], pp.105-125 (photocopy)
“The position of women among the Humr”, paper read to Philosophical Society of the Sudan in November 1961 and printed in Sudan Society, no. 2, 1963, pp.24-34 (photocopy)
“Some social aspects of nomadism in a Baggara tribe”, Philosophical Society of the Sudan, written contribution to the 10th annual conference on the effect of nomadism on the social and economic development of the people of the Sudan, Khartoum, January 1962, pp. 28-42
[“The progress of anthropological research in Sudan”], Sudan Society, no. 3, 1965, pp.7-14 (Arabic)
“Settlement of nomads in the Sudan: a critique of present plans”, T. Asad, I. Cunnison & L.G. Hill, [paper presented to the 13th annual conference of the Philosophical Society of the Sudan: Agricultural Development in the Sudan, Khartoum 1965], pp.1-19
“Nomads and the nineteen-sixties”, an inaugural lecture delivered in the University of Hull, 24 January 1967 (photocopy, 18pp)
“Politics and ethnicity in the Sudan”, draft paper, probably by Cunnison, marked York, Dept of Politics 1968 (18pp)
Lecture on social anthropology, particularly aspects of field work and with references to Northern Rhodesia and the Sudan, , [?1970] (17pp)

Language: English; Arabic
SAD.1017/17, 1018-1-3
1955-[1965], 2011
Drafts of Baggara Arabs by Ian Cunnison (1966).
SAD.1017/7
1955 Jul; 2011 Apr
Drafts of Baggara Arabs by Ian Cunnison (1966).
“Anthropological report of the Humr tribe”, by Ian Cunnison, Anthropologist to the Sudan Government and Deptartment of Social Anthropology, University of Manchester, July 1955 (101pp); with Post-it note from Elizabeth Colson, 20 April 2011
SAD.1018/1
[1955 x 1965]
Drafts of Baggara Arabs by Ian Cunnison (1966).
“Domestic arrangements of a Humr ferig”; Chapter VI “Marriage and male-female relationships”; “Land rights and local community”; and fragments of other sections, including “Cattle husbandry”; with some manuscript notes
SAD.1018/2
[1955 x 1965]
Drafts of Baggara Arabs by Ian Cunnison (1966).
Drafts of chapters 1-5, up to p. 260 but missing pp.154-79: “The Baggara”, “The land and productive techniques”, “Surra and camp”, “Domestic organisation”, “Men and women in Humr society”
SAD.1018/3
[1955 x 1965]
Drafts of Baggara Arabs by Ian Cunnison (1966).
Drafts, including Chapter 5 “Men and women in Humr society”, up to p.298, and a section on “The collection and distribution of blood money”
SAD.1018/4-6, SAD.1019, SAD.1096, SAD.1097/1-3
1839-[2005]
Sudan offprints and photocopies
SAD.1018/4
1971-[1984]
Articles about Sudan by Abdel Ghaffar M. Ahmed.
“The role of the sedentary population in Rufā‘a al-Hoj politics”, Sudan Notes and Records, vol. 52, 1971, pp.33-45 (photocopy)
“Nomadic competition in the Funj area”, Sudan Notes and Records, vol. 54, 1973, pp.43-56
“Tribalism: a passing of an ideology”, [1984]
“The relevance of indigenous systems of organization of production to rural development: a case from Sudan”, from Ali M. El Hassan (ed.), Essays on the Economy and Society of the Sudan, 1976, pp.57-67 (photocopy)
“The relevance of contemporary economic anthropology”, from G. Huzer & B. Mannheim (eds), The Politics of Anthropology, 1979, pp.171-185
“‘Tribal’ elite: a base for social stratification in the Sudan”, from S. Diamond (ed), Toward a Marxist Anthropology, 1979, pp.321-335
“The social science contribution to rural development policy”, paper presented to UNESCO conference “Expert meeting on the utilization of the social sciences by policy makers”, Suriname, 10-13 December 1979 (16pp)
“The state of anthropology in the Sudan”, Development Studies and Research Centre, Faculty of Economic and Social Studies, University of Khartoum, 1981 (photocopy, 20pp)
Abdel Ghaffar M. Ahmed and Mohamed Osman El Sammani, “Social research and development: the Rahad project case”, a working paper for the Rahad Social Science Workshop at Fau, 28-30 November 1979 (photocopy, 24pp)
SAD.1018/5
1961-1989
Articles about Sudan.
Bayoumi, M.S. and others, including Abdel Ghaffar M. Ahmed, “Guide lines towards develoment of nomadism in the Sudan”, from Ali M. El Hassan (ed.), Growth, Employment and Equity, 1977, pp.96-115 (photocopy)
Adams, M.E., “A development plan for semi-arid areas in western Sudan”, Experimental Agriculture, vol. 11/4, 1975, pp.277-287
Baumer, M.C., “Environmental impacts of rangeland uses”, Proceedings of the First International Rangeland Congress, 1978, pp.17-20
Braukämper, Ulrich, “Ökologische Grenzlinien und kulturelle Wandlungsprozesse zwischen Kamel- und Rindernomadismus im Ostsudan”, Paideuma , vol. 30, 1984, pp.81-102
Crawford, R.W., “Sudan: The revolution of October, 1964”, [Mawazo, vol. 1, issue 2, 1967], pp.47-60 (photocopy)
Guttman, Egon, “A survey of the Sudan legal system”, Sudan Law Journal Review 1956, pp.6-47 (photocopy)
Khalil, I.M., “Impact of tradition on livestock development in the Sudan”, Sudan Journal of Veterinary Science & Animal Husbandry, vol. 2, no.2, 1961, pp.166-175
Lampen, G.D., “The Baggara tribes of Darfur”, Sudan Notes and Records, vol. 16, part 2, 1933, pp.97-118 (photocopy)
Morton, John, “Ethnicity and politics in Red Sea Province, Sudan”, African Affairs, vol. 88/350, 1989, pp.63-76
Morton, Johh, “Sakanab: greetings and information among the northern Beja”, Africa vol. 58/4, 1988, pp.424-436
O’Brien, Jay, “How traditional is ‘traditional’ agriculture?”, Sudan Journal of Economic and Social Studies, vol. 2, no.2, 1978, pp.1-10 (photocopy)
Payne, W.J.A., “The origin of domestic cattle in Africa”, Empire Journal of Experimental Agriculture, vol. 32, no.126, 1964, pp.97-113, plates 5-11
Scopas A. Jibi Dima, “Political troubles in the Southern Sudan: a southern student’s experience”, [African Forum, vol. 3, no. 2/3, Fall 1967 / Winter 1968], pp.58-74 (photocopy)
Taj-el-Anbia Ali el-Dawi, “El-Obeid: A Sudanese urban community in Kordofan Province”, African Urban Notes, vol. 4, Summer 1971, pp.99-107 (photocopy)
Taj al-Anbia Ali el-Dawi, [article about Kordofan]: in Bulletin of Sudanese Studies, vol. 4, no.1, June 1973, pp.44-61 (Arabic) (photocopy)
Wilson, R.T. and S.E. Clarke, “Studies on the livestock of southern Darfur, Sudan. I. The ecology and livestock resources of the area”, Tropical Animal Health Production, vol. 7, 1975, pp.165-187

Language: English, Arabic
SAD.1018/6
1963-1973
Articles about Sudan.
Lanier, H, “L’ancien royaume du Baguirmi”, “Renseignements Coloniaux”, no. 10, Supplement of l’Afrique Française, October 1925, pp.457-474 (photocopy)
O’Fahey, R.S., “Slavery and the slave trade in Dār Fūr”, Journal of African History, vol. 14, no.1, 1973, pp.29-43; inscribed by the author
Sanderson, G.N., “The modern Sudan, 1820-1956: the present position in historical studies”, Journal of African History, vol. 4, no.3, 1963, pp.435-461; inscribed by the author
Collins, R.O., “The Sudan: link to the North”, from S Diamond & F.G. Burke (eds.), The Transformation of East Africa, 1966, pp.359-406 (photocopy)
Uthman Said Ahmad Ismail, [“Celebration of the 25th of May: a look at out contemporary political history, 1956-1969”], Department of History, University of Khartoum, [?1970s] (22pp) (Arabic)
Mazoudier, [A.],“Le rythme de vie indigène et les migrations saisonnièrs dans la colonie du Tchad”, Annales de Géographie, 53e/54e Année, no.296, Oct.-Dec. 1945, pp.296-299 (photocopy)
Kampffmeyer, Georg,“Studium der arabischen Beduinendialekte Innerafrikas”, [Mitteilungendes Seminars ftr orientalische Sprachen 2, 1899, pp.143-221 (pp.143-151 not present) (photocopy)

Language: English, Arabic
SAD.1019/1
[1960s-2005]
Articles about Sudan.
Lagrange, “La ciconscription du Batha”, La Géographie, vol. 28, 1913, pp.157-171 (photocopy)
El-Wathig Kamier, Zeinab El-Bakri, Idris Salim, Samiya El-Nagar, “The state of women studies in the Sudan”, DSRC Seminar Series, Discussion paper no. 2, January 1982, Development Studies and Research Centre, Faculty of Economic and Social Studies, University of Khartoum (photocopy of annotated mimeo, 29pp)
Hoile, David, Introduction to “Darfur in perspective”, European-Sudanese Public Affairs Council, [2005] (4pp)
Mohamed Abdel Rahim Mohamed Salih, “The Ngok Dinka-Homr conflict: the relevance of tribalism to regional politics in modern Sudan”, [Social Anthropology MSc thesis], University of Khartoum, 1981 (photocopy of mimeo, 24pp)
Henderson, K.D.D. and Own, T.R.H., Sudan Verse, London: Tileyard Press, 1963 (photocopy)
“The design of a new dress for the Sudanese”, and “The replacement of Arabic by the English language”, 5/4/3 (mimeo, 1p). This same text appears within G. Ayoub Balamoan's “Migration policies in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, 1884-1956”, 1976.
Holt, P.M., “Survey of African chronology and genealogies. The North-Eastern Sudan: the Funj dynasty”, [1960s] (mimeo, 3pp)
Yousif Hassan Said, “Influence of tradition on agricultural development”, [University of Khartoum and Congress for Cultural Freedom, 1961] (mimeo, 13pp)
Jamieson, W.C., “Sudan Plantations: a tale to be told”, extract from incomplete memoir, with covering letter to Dr O’Neill, 17 March 1982 (photocopy, 7pp). William Cameron Jamieson (1900-1989) served in Sudan from 1922-1950.
SAD.1019/2
1839-1980s
Articles about Sudan.
Holroyd, Arthur T., “Notes on a journey to Kordofan in 1836-7”, with illustrative map, Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society, Vol. 9, [1839], pp.163-191
Lako, George Tombe, “The impact of the Jonglei Scheme on the economy of the Dinka”, African Affairs, [Vol. 84, no.334, January 1985], pp.15-38 (photocopy)
The livestock export trade of the Sudan, Animal Production Series no. 1, Ministry of Animal Resources, Department of Animal Production, Republic of the Sudan, [1958] (24pp; with October 1953 map of main agricultural regions)
Haaland, Gunnar, “Some economic and ecological aspects of traditional systems of livestock management”, [published in Antropologiska Studier 15, 21-29 (1975)], pp.1-12 (incomplete photocopy of mimeo)
[Bonte, Pierre], “Théorie Marxiste et analyse anthropologique: l’étude des sociétés d’éleveurs nomades”, [before 1981], pp.1-33 (photocopy). [An English language version of this article was published in Anthropology of pre-capitalist societies in 1981.]
Patai, Raphael, “Nomadism: Middle Eastern and Central Asian”, Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, vol. 7, no.4, Winter 1951, pp.401-414 (photocopy)
Dyson-Hudson, Neville, “The study of nomads”, Journal of African and Asian Studies, vol. 7, nos 1-2, 1972, pp.2-29 (photocopy)
SAD.1019/3
[1955-1979]
Articles about Sudan.
Davies, H.R.J., “Nomadism in the Sudan: aspects of the problem and suggested lines for its solution”, Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, vol. 57, issue 5, 1966, pp. 193-202 (photocopy)
“Badw” entry, Encyclopedia of Islam , [vol. 1, A-B], pp.872-892 (photocopy)
“Östlicher Sudan”, classified listing of ethnic groups and sub-groups, annotated (dittoed copy, 27pp)
Birks, J.S., “The Mecca pilgrimage by West African pastoral nomads”, Journal of Modern African Studies, vol. 15, issue 1, 1977, pp.47-58
Colston, [R.E.] “Notes sur les tribus de Bédouins du Soudan & du Kordofan”, Bulletin de la Société khédiviale de géographie du Caire, no. 3, 1876, pp.267-277 (photocopy)
Herzog, Rolf, “Die Hawawir, eine Berbergruppe in der Bajuda-Wüste”, [Mitteilungen des Instituts für Orientforschung vol. 3, 1955], pp.463-478
Delmet, Christian, “Islamisation et matrilinéarité au Dar Fung (Soudan)”, L’Homme, vol. 19, no.2, April-June 1979, pp.33-51 (photocopy)
Sörbö, Gunnar M., “Nomads on the scheme: a study of irrigation agriculture and pastoralism in eastern Sudan”, in P. O’Keefe (ed.), Land and Development in Africa, [1977] (mimeo, 51pp)
Barclay, Harold B., “A Sudanese religious brotherhood”, The Muslim World, vol. 53, no.2, April 1963, pp.127-137
Barclay, Harold B., “Muslim religious practice in a village suburb of Khartoum”, The Muslim World, vol. 53, no.3, July 1963, pp.205-211
SAD.1019/4
[1960s-1981]
Articles about Sudan.
Khalifa, A.H. and Morag C. Simpson, “Perverse supply in nomadic societies”, Oxford Agrarian Studies, vol. 1, no.1, 1973, (11pp); inscribed by the author
Simpson, I.G., “Institutional constraints to agricultural development in the Sudan”, [Post-Independence Sudan: proceedings of a Seminar held in the Centre of African Studies, 1981], (photocopy, 14pp), annotated
Sörbö, Gunnar M., “Economic adaptations in Khashm El Girba: a study of settlement problems in the Sudan”, [1971] (photocopy, 14pp)
Horowitz, Michael M., “A reconsideration of the ‘Eastern Sudan’”, Cahiers d’Etudes Africains, vol. 7, c.3, 1967, pp.381-398 (photocopy)
Sayyid Muhammad Abu Rannat, “The relationship between Islamic and customary law in the Sudan”, Journal of African Law, vol. 4, issue 1, 1960, pp.9-16 (photocopy)
Sherif M. el-Hakim, “International nomad-sown interaction: some economic relations of the Zeyadiya of Darfur”, paper presented to the International Conference on Nomadic-Sown Interaction, Cairo, 18 March, 1972 (mimeo, 21pp)
Haaland, Gunnar, “Cattle, camels and grain: some aspects of the interrelations of subsistence activities in Darfur” (14pp)
SAD.1019/5
1971
Papers from the Symposium on Islamic Northern Africa, London, 14 September 1971 (mimeo):
O’Fahey, R.S., “Saints and sultans: the role of Muslim holy men in the Keira Sultanate of Dār Fūr” (8pp)
Gray, Richard, “Some aspects of Islam in the southern Sudan during the Turkiya” (9pp)
Sanderson, G.N., “Sudanese nationalism and the independence of the Sudan” (11pp)
Holt, P.M., “The Islamization of the Nilotic Sudan” (8pp)
Anderson, J.N.D., “Modernisation: Islamic law” (9pp)
SAD.1019/6
1968-[1970s]
Articles about Sudan.
O’Fahey, R.S., “Slavery and society in Dār Fūr”, paper presented to the Conference of Islamic Africa: Slavery and Related Institutions, Princeton University, 12-19 June 1977 (photocopy, 34pp); inscribed by the author
Abdel Ghaffar M. Ahmed & El-Farouk Zaki Younis, Country Report: Sudan. Document 4, Conference on the state of the social sciences in the Middle East, Alexandria, 1-10 July, 1974 (photocopy, 77pp)
James, W., “Sister-exchange marriage”, Scientific American, vol. 233, no.6, 1975, pp.84-94; inscribed by the author
Henin, R.A., “Fertility differentials in the Sudan (with reference to the nomadic and settled populations)”, Population Studies, vol. 22, no.1, 1968, pp.147-164; inscribed by the author
Henin, R.A., “The patterns and causes of fertility differentials in the Sudan (with reference to the nomadic and settled populations)”, Population Studies, vol. 23, no.2, 1969, pp.171-198 (photocopy)
SAD.1019/7
[1960s-1980s]
Articles about Sudan.
Holý, Ladislav, “Local communities among the Berti”, Annals of the Náprstek Museum, no. 1, 1962, pp.37-52, with 3 fold-out tables
Voll, John, “The Sudanese Mahdī: frontier fundamentalist”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, vol. 10, no.2, 1979, pp.145-166 (photocopy)
Hillelson, S., “Aspects of Muhammadanism in the Eastern Sudan”, [Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, no. 4, October 1937, pp.657-677] (photocopy)
Holt, P.M., “A Sudanese historical legend: the Funj conquest of Sūba”, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, vol. 23, no.1, February 1960, pp.1-12 (photocopy)
Holt, P.M., “Two traditional Sudanese historical works”, Research Bulletin, Centre of Arabic Documentation, [University of Ibadan], vol. 5, nos 1-2, 1969, pp.1-20 (photocopy)
Holt, P.M., “Modernization and reaction in the nineteenth-century Sudan”, in W.R. Polk & R.L. Chambers (eds), Beginnings of Modernisation in the Middle East: the Nineteenth Century, 1968, pp.401-415 (photocopy)
O’Fahey, R.S. and Jay L. Spaulding, “Hāshim and the Musabba‘āt”, Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, vol. 35, no.2, 1972, pp.316-333
List of Sudanese peoples [Sudan and South Sudan] and Arab tribes, [?1960s x 1980s]; list of peoples lacking one page (photocopy, 8pp)
SAD.1096/1
[1960s x 1980s]
Articles about Sudan.
Paine, R., “Animals as capital: comparisons among northern nomadic herders and hunters”, Anthropological Quarterly, vol. 44, no.3, 1971, pp. 157-172 (photocopy)
[Munzinger, W.], “Einige Bemerkungen über Ethnographie von Kordofan”, from Ostafrikanische studien, [1883], pp.537-534 (photocopy)
Martine, F., “Essai sur l’histoire du pays Salamat et les mœurs et coutumes de ses habitants”, Socièté des Recherches Congolaises, no. 5, 1924, pp.19-83 (photocopy)
Adams, M., “The Baggara problem: attempts at modern change in Southern Darfur and Southern Kordofan (Sudan)”, Development and Change, vol. 13, 1982, pp.259-288, lacking p.289 (photocopy)
SAD.1096/2
1958-1974
Articles about Sudan.
Sweet, Louise E., “Camel pastoralism in North Arabia and the minimal camping unit”, Man, Culture and Animals, American Association for the Advancement of Science, publication no. 78, 1965, pp.129-152 (photocopy)
Lewis, I.M., “Modern political movements in Somaliland”, Africa, vol. 28, nos 3-4, 1958, pp.224-261, 344-363; inscribed by the author
O’Fahey, S., “Al-Tūnisī’s travels in Darfur”, review of 1965 Arabic edition, Research Bulletin, Centre of Arabic Documentation, [University of Ibadan], vol. 5, 1969, pp.66-74 (photocopy)
Burton, John W., “Some Nuer notions of purity and danger. Dedicated to the memory of E.E. Evans-Pritchard (1902-1973)”, Anthropos , vol. 69, 1974, pp.517-536; inscribed by the author
Frantz, C., “Pastoral societies, stratification and national Integration in Africa”, International Congress of Africanists, 3rd Session, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, 9-19 December 1973 (dittoed, 27pp); inscribed by author
SAD.1096/3
1994
Papers from “Ideologies of Race, Origins and Descent in the History of the Nile Valley and North East Africa” conference, St Antony’s College, Oxford, 12 July 1994:
Fetterman, Marilyn H., “The British are red!: Jack Driberg and the Didinga, 1922-1926” (photocopy, 23pp)
Johnson, Douglas H., “Tribe or nationality? The Sudanese diaspora in East Africa” (photocopy, 18pp)
Spaulding, Jay, “The chronology of Sudanese Arabic genealogical tradition” (photocopy, 27pp)
Kurita, Yoshiko, “The life of ‘Ali ‘Abd al-Latif and its significance for the understanding of the Sudanese society” (photocopy, 29pp)
Makris, G., “Creating ethnicity: the case of the Sūdānī people” (photocopy, 20pp)
Kramer, Robert S., “Jihadiyya in Mahdist Sudan: the position of ‘blacks’ in Ansar society” (photocopy, 21pp)
SAD.1096/4
1961
Papers from the Congress for Cultural Freedom conference, University of Khartoum, 1961:
Jamal Mohammed Ahmed, “Sudan in twenty years” (mimeo, 9pp)
Fatma Talib Ismail, “The participation of women in public life” (mimeo, 5pp)
Mohamed Al Nowaihi, “Problems of women’s progress in Arab and Muslim Society” (mimeo, 23pp)
Anderson, J.N., “The modernization of Islamic Law in the Sudan” (mimeo, 23pp)
Paper on Arab society and modernization, missing covering page (mimeo, 11pp)
SAD.1096/5
[1970]-1976
Articles about Sudan.
List of publications on the Sudan from the Department of Social Anthropology and Sociology, University Khartoum (mimeo); annotated and extended to 1970
The Economic and Social Research Council, report for July 1974-December 1975 (33pp)
Working paper, First Annual Conference of the Economic and Social Research Council, Khartoum, 20 January 1976 (28pp)
SAD.1096/6
[1971]
Photocopies of articles from Anthropological Quarterly, vol. 44, no.3, July 1971:
Bates, Daniel G., “The role of the state in peasant-nomad mutualism”, pp.109-131
Goldschmidt, Walter, “Independence as an element in pastoral social systems”, pp.132-142
Irons, William, “Variation in political stratification among the Yomut Turkmen”, pp.143-156
Pastner, Stephen, “Ideological aspects of nomad-sedentary contact: a case from southern Baluchistan”, pp.173-184
Salzman, Philip, “Movement and resource extraction among pastoral nomads: the case of the Shah Nawazi Baluch”, pp.185-197
Spooner, Brian, “Towards a generative model of nomadism”, pp.198-210
SAD.1096/7
[1987]-1993
Publications by Barbara J. Michael.
“Milk production and sales by the Hawazma (Baggara) of Sudan: implications for gender roles”, Research in Economic Anthropology, vol. 9, 1987, pp.105-141 (photocopy)
“How I was cataloged, classified, and came out of seclusion: an anthropologist and librarian in Libya”, High Plains Applied Anthropologist, vols 11-12, 1991-1992, pp.168-193 (photocopy)
“Baggara women as market strategists”, typescript of paper submitted 1993 for Richard Lobban (ed.), Middle Eastern women and the invisible economy (1998) (27pp)
“Female heads of patriarchal households”, typescript of article submitted [1992] to Journal of Comparative Family Studies, “The Arab Family” special issue, vol. 28, no.2, 1997 (23pp)
“The Baggara: Arab cattle pastoralists in the Sudan”, monograph outline (photocopy, 4pp)
“The impact of international wage labor migration on Hawazma (Baggara) pastoral nomadism”, Nomadic peoples, vol. 28, 1991, pp.56-70 (photocopy)
SAD.1096/8
1987
Michael, Barbara J., “Cows, Bulls, and Gender Roles: pastoral strategies for survival and continuity in Western Sudan”, typescript of Ph.D. thesis, University of Kansas (403pp)
SAD.1097/1
[1984]-1989
Offprints and papers by Mohamed Salih:
“National versus regional: some methodological problems in the study of nationalism and nation-building in the Sudan”, The Sudan Ethnicity and National Cohesion, Bayreuth African Studies Series, no. 1, 1984, pp.39-53 (photocopy)
“Tribal militias, SPLA/SPLM and the Sudanese state: ‘New Wine in Old Bottles’”, paper presented at “Management of Crisis in the Sudan: Alternative Models for Action”, University of Bergen forum, 22-24 February 1989 (22pp)
“The Europeanization of war in Africa: from traditional to modern warfare”, Current Research on Peace and Violence, vol. 12, no.1, 1989, pp.27-37
“The Crescent, the Cross and the Devil’s flute: Islam and the present political turmoil in the Sudan”, Nytt från Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, no. 23, 1989 (photocopy); only cover is present
“The first national workshop on camel pastorialism as a food system, Nazaret, Ethiopia, April, 25-27, 1989”, workshop report, [unidentified publication], pp.11-13 (photocopy)
“Ecological stress, political coercion and the limits of state intervention; Sudan”, pp.101-115 in Anders Hjort af Ornäs and M.A. Mohamed Salih (eds), Ecology and Politics: Environmental Stress and Security in Africa, Scandinavian Institute of African Studies, 1989 (photocopy)
SAD.1097/2
[1984-1988]
Offprints and papers by Mohamed Salih:
Mohamed Salih with Ziche, J., “Traditional communal labour and rural development: examples from Africa South of the Sahara”, Quarterly Journal of International Agriculture, vol. 23, no.4, 1984, pp.349-362 (photocopy)
Mohamed Salih with Ziche, J., “Traditional communal labour and rural development: examples from Africa South of the Sahara”, pp.136-158 in Leif O. Manger (ed.), Communal labour in the Sudan, Bergen Studies in Social Anthropology no. 41, Department of Social Anthropology, University of Bergen, 1987 (photocopy)
“Local markets in Moroland: the shifting strategies of the Jellaba merchants”, pp.189-209 in Leif O. Manger (ed.), Trade and traders in the Sudan, Occasional Paper no. 32, Department of Social Anthropology, University of Bergen, 1984 (photocopy)
“The theoretial orientations of SIAS publications on peasant and agro-pastoral development”, Nytt från Nordiska africainistitutet, no. 20, 1987, pp.25-34 (photocopy)
7 book reviews from Sudanow, 1983-1986 (photocopy): The development gap, J.P. Cole; Women of Omdurman, A. Cloudsley; Ecological imbalance in the Republic of Sudan - with reference to desertification in Darfur, Fouad N. Ibrahim; The Nuba people of Kordofan Province, R.C. Stevenson; Famine: a man-made disaster; The emergence and development of the Leftist Movement in Sudan during the 1930s and the 1940s, Mohamed Nuri al Amin; Applied folklore, Ahmed A. Nasr (ed.)
4 book reviews or letters to the editor from various journals, 1979-1987 (photocopy): Africans of two worlds, Francis Mading Deng; letter responding to Notes on rural development in the Nuba Mountains of the Sudan, G. Baumann; Ecological imbalance in the Republic of Sudan - with reference to desertification in Darfur, Fouad N. Ibrahim; An integrated study of desertification, L. Olsson
“Camel production in the arid lands of the Sudan: national and local perceptions of the potential”, pp.19-29 in Anders Hjort af Ornäs (ed.), Camels in development: sustainable production in African drylands, Scandinavian Institute for African Studies, 1988 (photocopy)
SAD.1097/3
[1982-1988]
Offprints and papers by Mohamed Salih:
“Pastoralists in town: some recent trends in pastoralism in the North West of Omdurman District”, Pastoral Development Network, Overseas Development Institute paper no. 20B, August 1985 (photocopy, 21pp)
“The socio-economic effects of migrants and returnee migrants in the Nuba Mountains”, pp.79-92 in Fouad N. Ibrahim and Helmut Ruppert (eds), Rural-urban migration and identity change: case studies from the Sudan, Bayreuter Geowissenschaftliche Arbeiten, vol. 11, 1988 (photocopy)
“The Rahad irrigation scheme: working conditions and tenant/labour relations”, N.E.A. Journal of Research on North East Africa, vol. 1, no.3, Autumn 1982, pp.173-182 (photocopy)
“Camel production as food system, Khartoum, 19-22 December 1987”, workshop report, Nytt från Nordiska Africainstitutet, no. 21, 1988, pp.4-6 (photocopy)
“Agricultural transformation and social change in Africa during the 1970s and the 1980s”, Inter-University Centre of Postgraduate Studies, Dubrovnik, course report, 2-14 March 1987 (11pp)
“Research methodology and the competence of social scientists in depicting reality: some odd facts from rural Sudan”, pp.81-95 in Bashir O.M. Fadlalla and Fassil G. Kiros (eds), Research methods in the Social Sciences: a quest for relevant approaches for Africa, Organization for Social Science Research in Eastern Africa, 1986 (photocopy)
SAD.1097/4
1968-1992
Offprint and papers relating to the career and legacy of Mohammed Omer Beshir (1926-1992).
Mohammed Omer Beshir, “The Sudanese intellectuals and the changing society” (mimeo, 8pp);
Three newspaper obituary notices of Mohammed Omer Beshir’s death;
Curriculum vitae of Mohammed Omer Beshir, August 1990;
Obituary notice by Cunnison in the Bulletin of the University of Hull, March 1992, p.2 (draft and printed version. 14pp);
London Declaration (2pp) and Constitution (7pp) of the Sudan Human Rights Organization (of which he was President from 1984-89)
Two letters from Anne Riddell of Omdurman Ahlia College, [1992] and 2 April 1992, re setting up an Mohammed Omer Beshir Memorial Fund, and enclosing the programme for a commemoration of his life, 15-22 April [1992] (3pp);
Encomium for Mohammed Omer Beshir by Ian Cunnison on the honorary award of Doctor of Laws [by University of Hull, 1978] (3pp), with a copy of Beshir's curriculum vitae, 1 August 1977 (6pp); Correspondence re arrangements for the conferring of an Honorary Doctorate of Laws on Mohammed Omer Beshir by the University of Hull (11pp); Acceptance speech (with draft) by Mohammed Omer Beshir on the occasion of his receiving the Hononary Degree of Doctor of Laws, University of Hull, 7 July 1978 (13pp); Cutting, “Peacemaker gets degree in Hull”, Hull Daily Mail, 8 July 1978;
Omdurman Ahlia University and College prospectus (photocopy, 8pp); lists of technical equipment , Ahlia College Design Centre, 21 May 1989 (photocopy, 2p)
Correspondence and references by Ian Cunnison re Mohammed Omer Beshir, 1968-1975 (5pp)
SAD.1097/5
1968
International Conference: the Sudan in Africa programme, 5-11 February 1968, annotated (mimeo, 6pp)
6. Photographs: (i) Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia)
Luapula valley
1948-1951
Photographs are usually endorsed with Cunnison index numbers and Royal Anthropological Institute (RAI) accession numbers, some are also captioned on the reverse. Cunnison provided a list of captions to the RAI when he donated copies of most of these prints in 1991 and instructed staff to disregard the endorsed captions. Captions provided below are drawn from Cunnison's captions provided to the RAI, but where an endorsed caption provides additional or different information this is also noted. The full list of Cunnison's RAI captions, with related correspondence, are filed at SAD.1010/2. Cunnison roughly arranged his RAI prints into 16 thematic groups. A few photographs additional to the sequence donated to the RAI are also present.
SAD.1010/3/1-40
1948-1951
Photographs from the following subject groups:
Other activities
Some people
Spirits
Royal symbols and occasions

40 prints
SAD.1010/3/1
Headman Chubulwa, and Nakawanga his wife, sitting smoking a pipe
SAD.1010/3/2
Cross-cousins behaving as expected
RAI accession no. 36054
SAD.1010/3/3
Fulalio drinking medicine to achieve popularity with girls
RAI accession no. 36053
SAD.1010/3/4
Kayongole, on Katabulwe stream, Nkambo chiefdom
RAI accession no. 36034
SAD.1010/3/5
Spurwing goose at Mitutu lagoon
RAI accession no. 36025
SAD.1010/3/6
Child, Chubulwa village
RAI accession no. 36040
SAD.1010/3/7
Chola, trying out the mutombok (royal) dance. Captioned on reverse: Luapula. Chola dancing the chief's dance kutomboka
RAI accession no. 36041
SAD.1010/3/8
1949 Sep 3
Katoloshi. Captioned on reverse: Katoloshi at Chubulwa, September 3, 1949
RAI accession no. 36042
SAD.1010/3/9
John Chindima, woodworker and ivory sculptor, with two wives, two children, and drum. Captioned on reverse: Luapula. Rich man, mukankala, who has built outside of his village of Chishishila because he could not stand the eternal gossip. Two wives, children of wife on right already grown up. Bigamy is not common in the Luapula valley. He holds itumba drum.
RAI accession no. 36037
SAD.1010/3/10
Mako, of Chubulwa village
RAI accession no. 36044
SAD.1010/3/11
Chief Nkambo at his house with two of his wives
RAI accession no. 36035
SAD.1010/3/12
Girls making dolls. Captioned on reverse: Luapula. Making dolls of clay at Mutwale, with Luapula behind
RAI accession no. 36043
SAD.1010/3/13-14
Dignitary (unidentified)
RAI accession no. 36038
SAD.1010/3/15
The Lunda aristocrat Kashinge
RAI accession no. 36036
SAD.1010/3/16
Blackstone and [two women] friends
RAI accession no. 36045
SAD.1010/3/17
[Five] smartly dressed young men
RAI accession no. 36046
SAD.1010/3/18
Fulalio, Dick Kayumya, John Chindima, Nason Kambalama. All except John Chindima, ethnographer's staff
RAI accession no. 36047
SAD.1010/3/19
[Child, dressed in shorts and shirt]
SAD.1010/3/20
Woman possessed by Chilumbu spirit
Access restricted under terms of the Data Protection Act 2018 until 2040
RAI accession no. 36152
See also SAD.1010/6/19-20
SAD.1010/3/21
Captioned on reverse: Luapula. Mpuya, a kalulua, wearing mukonso skirt and nshipo cowskin belt, insignia of Lundahood
SAD.1010/3/22
1949 Aug
Chief Nkuba Chitambala of the Shila, at his house at Mutwale in Chibondo (his main house is at Kawama on Lake Mweru). With his ‘perpetual’ Lunda father, the aristocrat Kalandala. Captioned on reverse: Nkuba and Kalandala. Mutwale, August 1949
RAI accession no. 36077
SAD.1010/3/23
1949 Aug
Captioned on reverse: [Chief] Nkuba Chitambala [at his house at Mutwale in Chibondo, August 1949]
SAD.1010/3/24
Headman Koni and family, at his village up the River Ngona
RAI accession no. 36079
SAD.1010/3/25
Group of people seated around a small table at [?Chief Mununga's village, Kalungwisi]
SAD.1010/3/26
Captioned on reverse: Chipeha, Shamende, Thomas Kazembe, Chansongo and Roma Loma, standing outside a building, wearing matching robes with light-coloured lapels
SAD.1010/3/27-28
[Group of people at ?Chubulwa village]
SAD.1010/3/29
Dick Kayumya with Ian Cunnison, standing posed in front of a cloth background, wet and muddy to the knees. Captioned on reverse: Professional photographer's work on Nkole Island. Ethnog[rapher] and Dick Kayumya, main assistant, who preferred bare feet in the mud
SAD.1010/3/30
Captioned on reverse: Mwinempanda, at Luanshya. Photographer: J.C. Mitchell
SAD.1010/3/31-40
Duplicates of SAD.1010/3/5, 7-10, 12, 15, 17-18
SAD.1010/4/1-35
1950
Photographs from the following subject groups:
Royal symbols and occasions
Burial of Mwata Kazembe XIV Shadreck Chinyanta Nankula

35 prints
SAD.1010/4/1
Bier carrying the body of Kazembe XIV being taken from the palace to the gap cut in palace fence
RAI accession no. 36107
SAD.1010/4/2
Bier carrying the body of Kazembe XIV, showing Meleka “kulele mfumu” supporting the body in the bier
RAI accession no. 36108
SAD.1010/4/3
Mwinempanda directs the killing of a goat with mpok knife at the gap in the fence. As soon as it is killed , the bier is carried over it
RAI accession no. 36109
SAD.1010/4/4
The bier is carried to a lorry, which will transport it to Kanyembo, the village on the main road nearest to Lunde
RAI accession no. 36110
SAD.1010/4/5
Carrying the muselo, the zebra-skin bier, from Kanyembo up the six miles of bush path to Lunde
RAI accession no. 36111
SAD.1010/4/6-7
The kalambilo: on the way to Lunde, the hereditary gravekeepers of the Kazembes allow the body to pass, but line up on the path and attack the followers with switches cut from nearby trees
RAI accession no. 36112-3
SAD.1010/4/8
The bier at a mupundu tree near Lunde, surrounded by members of the Snake Clan, Kazembe's mother's kin. (Umbrella on account of the rain.)
RAI accession no. 36114
SAD.1010/4/9-10
Dancing in the rain
RAI accession no. 36116-7
SAD.1010/4/11
Muselo at Lunde
RAI accession no. 36118
SAD.1010/4/12
Dancing in front of the muselo (covered by an umbrella) at the mupundu tree, Lunde
SAD.1010/4/13
Gravekeeper Mubanga addressing the people at Lunde
RAI accession no. 36119
SAD.1010/4/14
Gravekeepers Mubanga, Kasao and Mukanso cover Kazembe's face with mpemba at the graveside
RAI accession no. 36120
SAD.1010/4/15
Lowering the body, dressed in royal apparel, face covered with mpemba
RAI accession no. 36121
SAD.1010/4/16
Morning after the burial, Kayongole and Chipepa Chipula dancing at Kazembe's palace. Mikonso drying. Band
RAI accession no. 36122
SAD.1010/4/17-18
Interregnum. Mwinempanda occupies the palace verandah, where Kashinge relates Lunda history
RAI accession no. 36123
SAD.1010/4/19
The platform at the first leper ceremony at Kabalenge. Photographer: Cave
RAI accession no. 36
SAD.1010/4/20-35
Duplicates of SAD.1010/4/3-17, some with unique captions
RAI accession no. 36
SAD.1010/5/1-82
1948-1951
Photographs from the following subject groups:
General river and swamp scenes from Johnston Falls downstream (northwards) to Lake Mweru
Landward scenery, south to north
Fishing camps and boats
Fish marketing
Other activities
Royal symbols and occasions

82 prints
SAD.1010/5/1-2
1949 Jun
Luapula at Mambilima (Johnston Falls). The first barrier to navigation, leaving 100 miles clear to Lake Mweru. Drought year, June 1949
RAI accession no. 35893
SAD.1010/5/3
1949 Jul
Luapula. The landing place at Kasenga, where fish are unloaded for transport to Elisabethville. Low water, July 1949
RAI accession no. 36000 [?36001]
SAD.1010/4/4-5
Luapula at Kasenga, looking north
RAI accession no. 35896-7
SAD.1010/5/6
Village on Luapula at Chibambo
RAI accession no. 35899
SAD.1010/5/7
Villages in Lukwesa chiefdom; Greek fish-trade motorboat
RAI accession no. 35903
SAD.1010/5/8
Fishing camp on island in Luapula, Lubunda chiefdom
RAI accession no. 35900
SAD.1010/5/9
[Luapula, riverbank and village]
SAD.1010/5/10
Luapula. Elephant near Kaseba lagoon
RAI accession no. 35911
SAD.1010/5/11
Mushitu vegetation, Lubunda chiefdom
RAI accession no. 35902
SAD.1010/5/12
Luapula, view towards Lukwesa chiefdom
RAI accession no. 35906
SAD.1010/5/13
[Luapula, riverbank with trees]
SAD.1010/5/14
Munga pali Tembwe fishing camp, west bank, 3 miles south of Chipita. The fishing ground is Kaseba lagoon; canoes are dragged a mile to it
RAI accession no. 35978
SAD.1010/5/15
1949 Jul
Kaseba lagoon, with elephants and egrets, July 1949
RAI accession no. 35911
SAD.1010/5/16
1949 Jun
Luapula. Kutumpula at sundown, Johnston Falls [Mambilima]. Dought year, June 1949
RAI accession no. 35894
SAD.1010/5/17
Mofwe lagoon from Kapepele village
RAI accession no. 35917
SAD.1010/5/18
1949 Mar
Luapula. Southern tip of Lake Mweru (the Chimbofuma) from Mulwe village, showing sudd. Kilwa Island just visible. March 1949
RAI accession no. 35919
SAD.1010/5/19
1949 May
Chowa lagoon, Kaindu chiefdom, with mashila bushes, ambach and open-bill (batote) storks. Lishila is the only wood that grows in the swamp, is very light, and is used for net markers and dugout seats. By August 1949 (drought year) this lagoon was nearly dry, revealing mudflats. May 1949
RAI accession no. 35912
SAD.1010/5/20
1949 May
Luapula. Kampemba [?Chowa] lagoon, May 1949. (Kaindu)
RAI accession no. 35913
SAD.1010/5/21
Luapula. Nkondo (Kabimbi) lagoon: ferryboat, owned by Belgian Government
RAI accession no. 35909
SAD.1010/5/22
Luapula. Kampemba lagoon. Fishing ground for bream - utucenje, ntembwa and bapale
RAI accession no. 35916
SAD.1010/5/23
Mulale lagoon, eastwards towards Kazembe
RAI accession no. 35915
SAD.1010/5/24
1949 Aug
Luapula. Chowa lagoon, with whistling duck, white-faced duck, and spurwing geese (bandilindio and mambata). August 1949
RAI accession no. 35914
SAD.1010/5/25
Luapula. Makandwai channel dug from Ipanga to Kampemba lagoons to allow fishermen to reach Mitutu, Kampemba and Chowa lagoons during 1949 drought. African middlemen have come halfway to meet fishermen and buy fish for Greeks
RAI accession no. 35972
SAD.1010/5/26
[1949] Feb
Luapula. Anthills on the Lutipuka plain in February. This plain is normally flooded from April, and is one of the spawning grounds for ‘Luapula salmon’ (mpumbu; Flaveo altivelis)
RAI accession no. 35921
SAD.1010/5/27
Borassus palms at Mwala wa Mukenge
RAI accession no. 35923
SAD.1010/5/28-30
Luapula. Mwansabombwe City (Kazembe's capital) from the road to Mbereshi. Pembe lagoon in left background. The capital moved here in the 1890s from Mofwe lagoon, the traditional site, as defense against the Byeke (Banyamwezi).
RAI accession no. 35932-4
SAD.1010/5/31-32
Luapula. “Densham Falls”, about 10 miles upstrem on the Mbereshi River, escarpment foothills
RAI accession no. 35938
SAD.1010/5/33-34
Toka village, with Mofwe lagoon behind
RAI accession no. 35939
SAD.1010/5/35
1949 May
Luapula. Village sceen in Chibondo, with sun-dried brick (metafware) houses typical of the whole valley. Many beautiful trees were brought here from Elisabethville. May 1949
SAD.1010/5/36
Chibondo village, with cyclist
RAI accession no. 35928
SAD.1010/5/37
1949 May
Luapula. Oil-palm (nkoma) at Chibondo. Oil-palms grow wild on Kilwa Island and are cultivated at Chibondo, and in Kambwali (Lukanga) and are gradually spreading to the rest of the valley. May 1949
RAI accession no. 35930
SAD.1010/5/38
Belgian flag outside chief Nkambo's fence
RAI accession no. 36078
SAD.1010/5/39
1949 Jun
Luapula. Riverside village at Kabimbi (Mabo) in Belgian Congo. Most villages are built lineally along roads or tracks. June 1949
RAI accession no. 35924
SAD.1010/5/40-47
Traditional villages houses
RAI accession no. 35945-8
SAD.1010/5/48-49
Lake Mweru from Administration's jetty, Ncelenje. Isokwe Island in background
RAI accession no. 35920
SAD.1010/5/50
The Kalungwisi ferry. Dugout canoe with five passengers and a bicycle, midriver
RAI accession no. 35942
SAD.1010/5/51
[Luapula. Anthills on the Lutipuka plain]
SAD.1010/5/52
1949 May
Luapula. Mono basket fishing at CHipita, The baskets are set in gaps in the bamboo fences (lwando, pl nyando). May 1949
RAI accession no. 35953
SAD.1010/5/53
Luapula. Mukwao (Seine-net) fishing at Katabulwe. Net owned by a Greek entrepreneur
RAI accession no. 35958
SAD.1010/5/54
1949 May
Luapula. Dugout canoe on Kampemba lagoon. May 1949
RAI accession no. 35969
SAD.1010/5/55
1949 Aug
Fishing camp of Chubulwa villagers on an island in Kamaundu lagoon. Dry season. August 1949
RAI accession no. 35983
SAD.1010/5/56
1949
Chipita market (the cisankano). Fish are brought early morning up Chipita channel from camps on the river and swamps, and bartered for cassava meal and firewood mainly. 1949
RAI accession no. 36012
SAD.1010/5/57
One of the few herds of cattle. Kazembe has one; the cows pictured are Chipepa's, feeding at Chipita market
RAI accession no. 36021
SAD.1010/5/58
Making cassava mounds (on this occasion a young man instead of cultivating his fiancée's father's field himself in bride service, bought the labour)
RAI accession no. 36017
SAD.1010/5/59
1949
Luapula. Field of monkeynuts (mbalala) cultivated in rich soil belonging to a Mukamba man by the side of the Lufubu river dambo (riverside swamp). Kazembe in background. This garden is also a first-year cassava garden. 1949
RAI accession no. 36018
SAD.1010/5/60
Luapula. Lukose animal trap in an old garden, Chibondo plain. Set here for reed-buck
RAI accession no. 36023
SAD.1010/5/61
House of Parliament. Chief Nkuba with court on right, at Dhibondo in Congo. This house was built so that Nkuba could be in reasonable touch with Belgian authorities
SAD.1010/5/62-63
1950
Remains of Kalungwisi boma. 1950
RAI accession no. 35943
SAD.1010/5/64
Kalungwisi River and Chief Mununga's village (capital)
RAI accession no. 35941
SAD.1010/5/65
Street in Mwansabombwe. Sun-dried brick (matafware) houses, straight lines
RAI accession no. 35949
SAD.1010/5/66
Ethnographer's tent from Chubulwa village
RAI accession no. 35935
SAD.1010/5/67-82
Duplicate prints of SAD.1010/5/12, 18-19, 25, 33, 35, 40-44, 48, 50, 56
RAI accession no. 36
SAD.1010/6/1-72
1948-1951
Photographs from the following subject groups:
Fishing, camps and boats
Fish marketing
Lion ceremony
Spirits
Royal symbols and occasions

72 prints
SAD.1010/6/1-2
Iskowe Island, mending nets
RAI accession no. 35992
SAD.1010/6/3
Iskowe Island, clearing nets
RAI accession no. 35993
SAD.1010/6/4
Iskowe Island. Net markers in foreground, used for setting nets in lake overnight
RAI accession no. 35994
SAD.1010/6/5
A fishing camp on Lake Mweru, Kambwali chiefdom
RAI accession no. 35988
SAD.1010/6/6
Greek motorboat, or chombo
RAI accession no. 36000
SAD.1010/6/7
Canoe on Luapula
RAI accession no. 35970
SAD.1010/6/8
Three men, one holding up a large catfish
RAI accession no. 35997
SAD.1010/6/9
[Large group of men, formally seated before some tables in an outdoor space outside a house]
SAD.1010/6/10-11
Carrying skin of dead lion to capital of Kanyembo, chief of territory in which it was killed
RAI accession no. 36099-100
SAD.1010/6/12-13
Elders of village where the lion was killed dance round the skin en route
RAI accession no. 36101
SAD.1010/6/14-16
The lion skin with crowd outside Kamyembo's courthouse
RAI accession no. 36103
SAD.1010/6/17-18
Kunyante nkalamo - stepping on the lion. Territorial chief and his wife stand on the head and tail of the lion, chewing medicines; later the chief goes to the tail and his wife to the head. They do this to purify their land after the lion's death. A bundle of the lion's heart and claws are lain on the skin
RAI accession no. 36106
SAD.1010/6/19-20
Woman possessed by Chilumbu spirit
Access restricted under terms of the Data Protection Act 2018 until 2040
RAI accession no. 36
See also SAD.1010/3/20
SAD.1010/6/21-23
Luapula. Bakalwe (hunter's) shrine near Mutwale, Chibondo. Here the spirits of dead gun-hunters are invoked by present gun-hunters. Characteristic are the tail on the roof and the forked sticks in front. Note lechwe horn on the ground. Insider there is a bundle of lechwe eyebrows. This hut is always built on an anthill. Each twig has leaves wrapped around it. This custom is believed by the people to be peculiar to the Luapula. Man (not owner) is nephew of Chibwidi
RAI accession no. 36154-5
SAD.1010/6/24
Luapula. Dead python which had been ngulu nature spirit at Luka on the Kapweshi River. The headman being a Catholic was not priest to this ngulu but handed the work to his elder brother
RAI accession no. 36157
SAD.1010/6/25
Kazembe's cook, the Mwadyambala, doing kushilaoka at the cinkulimba of the royal kitchen (mbala), to break silence after cooking
RAI accession no. 36064
SAD.1010/6/26
Mpok and otter-skin scabbard
RAI accession no. 36057
SAD.1010/6/27-28
Lubembo metal gong and striker
RAI accession no. 36058
SAD.1010/6/29
Akamba of Chief Lubunda, inside fence
RAI accession no. 36091
SAD.1010/6/30
Kazembe being led to a state occasion. Photographer: A.L. Epstein
RAI accession no. 36062
SAD.1010/6/31-32
Lubunda's relics or objects of chieftainship posed outside their akamba (relic hut), including elephant tusks, pot with lions' teeth killed in Lubunda's land, lubembo iron gong, feathers of lourie and hornbill, ibuki pot for holding mpemba (white kaolin powder) to bless chiefs' graves, nsense bracelets (copper) and (front) Chishinga hunter's skin bag. The bracelets and gong bear witness to the fact that Lubunda's ancestors were metal-workers
RAI accession no. 36092
SAD.1010/6/33
Kasonso making a mondo talking drum at Kasumpa
RAI accession no. 36083
SAD.1010/6/34
Luapula. Lunda band. Royal drums for the visit of the Provincial Commissioner. Chama the blind drummer on nkumvi. He is grandson of Muonga Kapakata. Mondo the talking drum is on the right and mukelo in the middle
RAI accession no. 36081
SAD.1010/6/35
1949 May
Drumming, songs and dancing on the death of the infant son (Prince) of Kazembe XIV. Marimba xylophone, nkumvi slitdrum and mukelo. Itumba is missing. Bakalunda in white cloth caps on right are Kashinge and Mufwalwa. Men and women sit separately. Outside the house of Kazembe's mother (who is in the leper settlement).May 1949
RAI accession no. 36080
SAD.1010/6/36
Chama on the nkumvi on the way to the grave at Isaac Kituba's funeral (royal family)
RAI accession no. 36084
SAD.1010/6/37
Chipepa beats out praise-names on the mondo talking drum at malilo of Isaac Kituba
RAI accession no. 36085
SAD.1010/6/38-39
Malilo of Isaac Kituba. Dancer (drunk)
RAI accession no. 36086-7
SAD.1010/6/40
Lisambwe of Isaac Kituba. Dancer (drunk) performing bakalwe hunter's dance. The gun was fired up into the mango tree
RAI accession no. 36088
SAD.1010/6/41
Mululu's villagers kusoba maloba (rubbing dust on themselves in prostration) before Kazembe
RAI accession no. 36076
SAD.1010/6/42
Kazembe at the Mululu presentation
SAD.1010/6/43
1949 Jul
The cinkwasa, girls' dancing troupe, in action for Provincial Commissioner's visit. The commission was to examine ways of further taxation for Native Courts. Mwansabombwe City. July 1949
RAI accession no. 36082
SAD.1010/6/44
Nakabutula (a bored stone); on the floor the bow of chieftainship in slackened condition after king's death
Access to this item is permanently restricted
RAI accession no. 36065
SAD.1010/6/45
Inside Nakabutula's hut. Nakabutula (left), Nakabutula's ‘wife’ and‘child’ (right)
Access to this item is permanently restricted
RAI accession no. 36066
SAD.1010/6/46
Nakabutula's hut, with Mwadi's (Kazembe's chief wife's) house behind
RAI accession no. 36067
SAD.1010/6/47
Mutaba tree (ficus sp.) marking the grave of Nkuba Mubemba ‘watumbe-culu’ (who raised up an anthill), at Mutwale (died c. 1700). One of the first Nkubas. Although he is a Shila (Bemba) chief, the mutaba tree is the Lunda national tree, which Mwata Yamvwa ordered Kazembe to plant wherever he conquered. It figures in the Lunda coronation ritual, and avenues of it are now being planted along main roads in Lundaland
RAI accession no. 36069
SAD.1010/6/48
Luapula. Hippopotamus bones piled in front of the tree planted to commemorate Kazembe I, Nganda Bilonda (hunter of men and animals) who was the first Kazembe. The chief's fence is in the background. Planted by Muonga Kapakata, to save the trip to Lunde
RAI accession no. 36071
SAD.1010/6/49
1948 Aug
Mwinemashamo (hereditary keeper of the royal graves) Mukanso at the grave of Kazembe III, Lukwesa Ilunga (1760-1805). A gun barrel in the grave has arisen with the anthill. August 1948
RAI accession no. 36072
SAD.1010/6/50
Mutaba trees outside the western fence of the palace, the trees planted by Kazembe XI, Muonga Kapakata as memorial trees, to save making a journey to Lunde royal graves for the purpose of prayer to ancestors
RAI accession no. 36070
SAD.1010/6/51
Luapula. River Ngona near Kazembe. This is the pool beside which the memorial hut to the spirit Chinyanta, precursor of the Kazembes, was always built when the capital moved here. It was built beside water to commemorate the fact that he was drowned in the Lualaba by Mutanda Yembeyembe
RAI accession no. 36073
SAD.1010/6/52
Luapula. Pool on Ngona sacred to Kasebula (?Kasombola), brother of Chinyanta. Site of the shrine of Kasombola, now overgrown. Prayer stopped here after the death of Kazembe XII Chinyanta Kasasa in 1935
RAI accession no. 36074
SAD.1010/6/53
Meeting at Chomba village. Native Authority officials discuss with headmen (in deck chairs) plans to group villages into parishes. Chief Executive Ashford Mwaba seated at the table
RAI accession no. 36096
SAD.1010/6/54
Kabaluye. Luwari Nakufwaya at the ceremony for the release of cured lepers. Court: ?Chansongo, Kashinge, ?Sendama, and (behind) Roma (bald). Photographer: Cave
SAD.1010/6/55
Kabaluye. Release of cured lepers, who receive certificates from Kazembe XIV. Accompanied by William Densham, head of settlement. Three of Kazembe's wives seated on the left. Photographer: Cave
SAD.1010/6/56-57
Councillors of the Court of Kazembe 1951, outside the court house. Left, chief councillor Chipepa. Third, Thomas Kazembe, then on a visit from Copperbelt where he was Kazembe's representative. He later became chief concillor
RAI accession no. 36094
SAD.1010/6/58
Reception chez Cazembé. Pierre Savorgnan de Brazza at a Kazembe village, Congo [1880]. Photographic print of an engraving by [Édouard] Riou
RAI accession no. 36
SAD.1010/6/59
Kazembe XI, Muonga Kapakata (1904-1919). Photographer: B.R. Turner
RAI accession no. 36
SAD.1010/6/60-72
Duplicates of SAD.1010/6/14-15, 19, 31, 35, 37, 40, 42, 44-46, 49, some with unique captions
Access to SAD.1010/6/62-63 permanently restricted Access to SAD.1010/6/68 restricted under terms of the Data Protection Act 2018 until 2040
SAD.1010/7/1-42
1948-1951
Photographs from the following subject groups:
Wedding scenes
Missions

42 prints
SAD.1010/7/1
Twins ceremony. Afterbirth buried at X-paths west of village. Natal cloth mpemba and potsherds on top of mound
RAI accession no. 36195
SAD.1010/7/2
Luapula. Fetching water for beer for Blackstone's wedding. This procession is followed up by women beating bride's nkonko, the cisungu wooden canoe-shaped drum
RAI accession no. 36182
SAD.1010/7/3-4
Kubuta - cooking for wedding parties
RAI accession no. 36183-4
SAD.1010/7/5-6
1949 Jan
Luapula. Wedding of Kaisala and Bupe, January 1949. Sunday afternoon, bridal and groom's processions come together singing ‘Tulemitwale ndabala’ (we take you quickly). They take a long time over it. Banacimbusa women with hoes dance between the approaching parties
RAI accession no. 36186-7
SAD.1010/7/7
‘The Bemba brought us the custom of crawling’ on the eve of the wedding; girls with bundles of sticks tied to backs
RAI accession no. 36189
SAD.1010/7/8
Luapula. Blackstone's wedding Sunday afternoon. Groom's procession, singing hymns. Boy on right my houseboy whose work was kufwala bwino (to dress up well) to cross over to the bride's party and lead her to the groom. He borrowed his father's clothes
RAI accession no. 36190
SAD.1010/7/9
Bride's party approaching
RAI accession no. 36191
SAD.1010/7/10
Luapula. Chipulu's wedding, Sunday afternoon. Bridge and groom wait before being lectured to. Typical attitude of bride
RAI accession no. 36192
SAD.1010/7/11-12
Brides and grooms at two different weddings waiting before being lectured to
RAI accession no. 36193-4
SAD.1010/7/13-16
Luapula. Plymouth Brethren baptism, by total immersion in the Luapula at Chalwe (Katuta). The missionary (in SAD.1010/7/13) is Mr William Lammond, who has been in the territory since 1900
RAI accession no. 36167-9
SAD.1010/7/17-21
1950 Oct
Watchtower (Jehova's Witnesses) assembly at Kazembe, Oct. 1950: Holcomb, an American, preaches with an interpreter (SAD.1010/7/18-19, 21); 7,000 were present at one of the meetings
RAI accession no. 36171-2
SAD.1010/7/22
1950 Oct
Watchtower (Jehova's Witnesses) assembly at Kazembe, Oct. 1950: a song -leader in action from the platform
RAI accession no. 36173
SAD.1010/7/23
1950 Oct
Watchtower (Jehova's Witnesses) assembly at Kazembe, Oct. 1950: going to the River Ngona for a mass baptism, about 600 neophytes
RAI accession no. 36174
SAD.1010/7/24-30
1950 Oct
Watchtower (Jehova's Witnesses) assembly at Kazembe, Oct. 1950: baptism in the River Ngona; Jason (Canadian) and Holcomb (American) (SAD.1010/7/28), from the Copperbelt local HQ of the movement in N. Rhodesia, ran the assembly
RAI accession no. 36176-7, 36179--81
SAD.1010/7/31-42
Duplicates of SAD.1010/7/3-6, 8, 10-11, 19-20, 25, some with unique captions

RAI accession no. 36
SAD.1010/8/1-29
1948-1951
Photographs from the following subject groups:
Ngulu spirit and village purification
Installation of a village headman

29 prints
SAD.1010/8/1
Luapula. The waterspring by the swamp margin and ferry at Chubulwa. The headman Chubulwa builds a spirit hut (mukishi / lufuba) to the ngulu (nature spirit) Mukupe beside the village watering place. Later in the season Mukupe and ‘his children’ will appear as tame snakes which come to the hollow tree in the foreground. This hut was about the only ngulu hut built in the country since 1949
RAI accession no. 36158
SAD.1010/8/2
Headman Chubulwa building lufuba (spirit hut) of Mukupe, who dwells in the tree on the left. The tree on the right is associated with the ngulu's children
RAI accession no. 36
SAD.1010/8/3-4
1949 Feb
Villagers gather at shrine to eat a chicken, cooked by children. (Drought was broken the same afternoon.) Feb. 1949
RAI accession no. 36161-2
SAD.1010/8/5
Luapula. Finished spirit hut or shrine to ngulu with white cloth torn hanging from roof, beads on floor, blood of chicken on uprights
RAI accession no. 36163
SAD.1010/8/6-7
Later the spirit Musawo, through the same medium, orders the village to be swept out (kupyango mushi). At 6 a.m., sunrise, women bring hearth sweepings to a cross-paths near to the west of the village, where a magician gives them medicated water to smear / replaster their hearths
RAI accession no. 36164-5
SAD.1010/8/8-9
New fire, created by magician Sesa (left) and headman Chubulwa. Sesa lights the fire with grass from a mole's nest. The headman will give brands from the fire to village women. A calabash with purifying oil hangs over the fire
RAI accession no. 36166
SAD.1010/8/10
Elders of matrilineage visiting Chubulwa village to discuss succession to headmanship
RAI accession no. 36143
SAD.1010/8/11-13
In palace grounds. Kazembe at start of installation ceremony
RAI accession no. 36144
SAD.1010/8/14
Kazembe in royal dress, bearer holding lucaca. (Ethnographer's assistant Dick Kayumya in foreground)
RAI accession no. 36145
SAD.1010/8/15-16
Chief Kazembe addresses new Lunda headman, who has been dressed in royal cloth and belt, on duties of the office. The headman has white headcloth, as hereditary gravekeeper of Kazembe VII Muonga Sunkutu
RAI accession no. 36146
SAD.1010/8/17
The headman sits with symbols of chieftainship to which he pays tribute before they are returned to the palace
RAI accession no. 36147
SAD.1010/8/18
The headman sits while being harangued about his duties
RAI accession no. 36148
SAD.1010/8/19
Nkumvi slit drum and mondo talking drum being played at the ceremony installing a new headman
RAI accession no. 36149
SAD.1010/8/20-21
The new headman is shouldered out of the palace grounds, followed by the symbols of chieftainship
RAI accession no. 36150
SAD.1010/8/22
Headman Chubulwa and his wife back at their home
RAI accession no. 36151
SAD.1010/8/23-29
Duplicates of SAD.1010/8/2, 6-7, 9, 20, some with unique captions

RAI accession no. 36
SAD.1010/9/1-58
1948-1951
Photographs from the following subject groups:
Fishing, camps and boats
Fish marketing

58 prints
SAD.1010/9/1
Luapula. Chibobwe, probably the largest and most permanent fishing camp on the Luapula
RAI accession no. 35977
SAD.1010/9/2
Luapula. Mulgu pali Tembwe fishing camp (Kambimbi [chiefdom]), west bank 3 miles south of Chipita. The fishing ground is Kaseba lagoon, about a mile inland. Boats are dragged across the plain
RAI accession no. 35978
SAD.1010/9/3
Chief Kambimbi on his way to collect tribute of fish from Kaseba lagoon
RAI accession no. 35998
SAD.1010/9/4
Luapula. Luapula River at Mungu pali Tembwe fishsing camp, with the tree from which the name is taken
RAI accession no. 35975
SAD.1010/9/5
Mono basket. Unloading fish from Chief Nkambo's trap near Katabulwe
RAI accession no. 35951
SAD.1010/9/6
Luapula. Fences for setting mono fishing baskets near the mouth of the Chipita-baluba channel, June
RAI accession no. 35952
SAD.1010/9/7
Luapula. Fishing tackle left on mango tree at camp on Luapula during owner's absence. Matumba and myono baskets, basket of beerdregs for mono bait, large calabash and (bottom) animal traps (nkose). It is guarded by medicine against theft (lukayi or lushilika)
RAI accession no. 35950
SAD.1010/9/8
Luapula. Mukwao fishing (seine net) at Katabulwe, a Turkish-Greek-Italian trading station opposite Lukwesa. The net belongs to a Greek entrepreneur. A few Africans also have mikwao
RAI accession no. 35957
SAD.1010/9/9
Luapula. Going down Chipita early in the morning to set amatumba / litumba fishing baskets, Feb. Matumba are particularly Lunda baskets and are found only in and around the capital
RAI accession no. 35961
SAD.1010/9/10
Dragging new canoe to the river, at Lubunda
RAI accession no. 35965
SAD.1010/9/11
Luapula. Part-built canoe in a village in Mununshi Valley, 6 miles from Kaombe lagoon where it will be used. Canoes are cut to shape in the bush, perhaps 20 miles away, then dragged down to water where they are finished, soaked for 3 days, fired and stretched, then soaked again before use
RAI accession no. 35964
SAD.1010/9/12
[Fish ice lorries at ?Kasenga]
SAD.1010/9/13
Luapula. Weighing fish at Kasenga, for tax declaration by traders. Fresh fish are packed in ice in motorboats (combo), transferred to ice in lorry here. Kasenga cliff in background
RAI accession no. 36005
SAD.1010/9/14-15
Canoes in a rain-storm at Chipita market
RAI accession no. 35966-7
SAD.1010/9/16
1949 May
Luapula. Dugout canoe on Kampemba lagoon. May 1949
RAI accession no. 35969
SAD.1010/9/17
Luapula. Permanent fishing camp at Chinseneka (Kashyobwe). Well-established with cultivation, note the cassava and pawpaws. Belongs to headman Chabamba. Thorntrees typical of this near swampy country
RAI accession no. 35980
SAD.1010/9/18
Luapula. Chabamba's fishing camp, Chinseneka. Note choshi net drying (floating net for daytime fish driving - kutumpula). Old boat being used to hold baskets etc.
RAI accession no. 35982
SAD.1010/9/19
1949 Aug
Luapula. Scene in Chabamba's fishing camp, Chinseneka (River Kalwa), Aug. 1949
RAI accession no. 35981
SAD.1010/9/20-22
1951 Feb
Mending nets by the Luapula, at mouth of Chipita channel; net maker in foregound (SAD.1010/9/22), Feb. 1951
RAI accession no. 35989-90
SAD.1010/9/23
Luapula. Dry season at a fishing camp on an island in Kamaundu lagoon, built by Watchtower members on Chubulwa in 1949. Implies dragging canoes two miles, and is twelve hours' journey from the village. Pale fishing
RAI accession no. 35983
SAD.1010/9/24-28
A fishing camp on Lake Mweru, Kambwali chiefdom
RAI accession no. 36984-7
SAD.1010/9/29
Chipita market, February 1951. Women come for many miles inland to obtain fish
RAI accession no. 36014
SAD.1010/9/30
Luapula. Fresh and dried fish being bartered for a meal a Chipita market
RAI accession no. 36015
SAD.1010/9/31
Young men at Chipita market. Bycycles are usable in many islands of hard land in the swamp
RAI accession no. 36016
SAD.1010/9/32
Gutting a catfish (monde)
RAI accession no. 35995
SAD.1010/9/33
Boatload of fish including monde, pale, lusa, bongwe
RAI accession no. 35996
SAD.1010/9/34
Greek motorboats off Nkole Island, collection fish for transport to Kasenga and thence to Elizabethville (Lubumbashi)
RAI accession no. 36999
SAD.1010/9/35
[Group of men bargaining over fish, standing beside drying fishing nets]
SAD.1010/9/36
Fishing camp, Isokwe Island, Lake Mweru. Nets drying, and the initiator of the camp, seated
RAI accession no. 35991
SAD.1010/9/37
Isokwe Island, mending nets
RAI accession no. 36992
SAD.1010/9/38
Isokwe Island, clearing nets
RAI accession no. 36993
SAD.1010/9/39
Isokwe Island, clearing nets, net markers in foreground, used for setting nets in the lake overnight
RAI accession no. 36994
SAD.1010/9/40
Belgian government sternwheeler steamer “Charles Lemaire” at Chibondo. Stacked with wood as fuel. Runs once a month from Kasenga to Mpweto. Belgian officials on board
RAI accession no. 36006
SAD.1010/9/41
Belgian government sternwheeler steamer “Charles Lemaire” at Chibondo, loading fish
RAI accession no. 36007
SAD.1010/9/42-44
1951 Apr
Kasenga, Belgian Congo. Waiting to board the “Charles Lemaire” for Kilwa and Mpweto. Belgian policeman looks on. April 1951
RAI accession no. 36008
SAD.1010/9/45-46
1951 Apr
Kasenga, boarding the Chalres Lemaire for Kilwa and Mpweto. April 1951
RAI accession no. 36009
SAD.1010/9/47
Luapula. Making women's fish basket (ntende) at Chubulwe. The girl who was making it was soon relieved of her work by the boys. This basket is used in shallow swamp for driving minnows
RAI accession no. 35956
SAD.1010/9/48-58
Duplicates of SAD.1010/9/16, 25-28, 34-36, 46-47, some with unique captions
SAD.1010/10/1-37
1951 Feb 1
Installation of Kazembe XV
37 prints
SAD.1010/10/1
1951 Feb 1
Schoolchildren from Mbereshi, Kazembe and Lufubu in palace grounds to watch the installation of Mwata Kazembe XV Brown Ngombe (1950-1957)
RAI accession no. 36124
SAD.1010/10/2
1951 Feb 1
Hunters line up to be photographed
RAI accession no. 36125
SAD.1010/10/3
1951 Feb 1
Before the ceremony. Kalandala and Mwinempanda in Lunda dress, with women dancing round the drum. Photographer: ?F.P. Hodgson
RAI accession no. 36126
SAD.1010/10/4
1951 Feb 1
Kalandala, Kashiba and Kashinge, in Lunda dress
RAI accession no. 36127
SAD.1010/10/5
1951 Feb 1
Standing before the ceremony in Lunda dress (left to right), Kalandala, Kashiba, Kashinge and Mwinempanda, the first four aristrocrats. They have the same names as their ancestors mentioned in the text (p. 4, line 21). They stand beside the nkumvi (slit drum) with Kalaku, the magician who has cleansed the palace grounds
RAI accession no. 36128
SAD.1010/10/6
1951 Feb 1
Mwinempanda and Cunnison. Photographer: F.P. Hodgson
RAI accession no. 36129
SAD.1010/10/7
1951 Feb 1
District Commissioner, Kawambwa; Provincial Commissioner, Ndola; follwed by D.C. Fort Rosebery (now Mansa), who was once D.C. Kawambwa, and Asst. P.C. Ndola. Led in by Ashford Mwaba, chief executive of Lunda Native Authority
RAI accession no. 36130
SAD.1010/10/8
1951 Feb 1
Kashiba holds left, Kalandala holds right hand of Kazembe to seat him on the drum mukambangoma. Mutyame is behind Kashiba
RAI accession no. 36131
SAD.1010/10/9
1951 Feb 1
Kalandala having silenced Kazembe by putting a mutaba leaf in his mouth, lectures him on kingship. Kashiba and Masele beside them
RAI accession no. 36132
SAD.1010/10/10
1951 Feb 1
Kazembe sitting on the drum wth mutaba leaf in his mouth
RAI accession no. 36134
SAD.1010/10/11-12
1951 Feb 1
Mwinempanda tightens the bow of chieftainship, buta bwa bufumu
RAI accession no. 36135-6
SAD.1010/10/13
1951 Feb 1
Mwinempanda dances the mutombok
RAI accession no. 36137
SAD.1010/10/14
1951 Feb 1
Kazembe sitting on the drum, bow on his lap. A basin is for money presents
RAI accession no. 36138
SAD.1010/10/15-18
1951 Feb 1
After the removal of the mutaba leaf Kazembe utters his new praise-name then dances. During the dance he points mpok (sword) in four directions: all-conquering. Behind (SAD.1010/10/13) is a shaded enclosure for white visitors, and the palace; [John] Fennel of the Central African Film Unit with a camera shooting film that was included in a newsreel seen in some UK cinemas
RAI accession no. 36139-41
SAD.1010/10/19-37
Duplicates of SAD.1010/10/1, 3-18, some with unique captions
Negatives
SAD.1010/11/1-85
1948-1951
Negatives (album 1): Northern Rhodesia [Zambia].
Empty sleeves: 16-18, 21, 25, 33, 37, 44, 51-52, 58, 72, 78, 85, 87.
85 negatives
Plastic wallet; photographic film
Index terms
Negatives

For captions see Cunnison's own index numbers 1-100 at SAD.1010/2/5-19. Wallet index contains some unique captions.
SAD.1010/12/1-89
1948-1951
Negatives (album 2), and 1 print: Northern Rhodesia [Zambia].
Empty sleeves: 7-8, 26, 40-41, 46-48, 57, 59, 77, 89. 1 print (sleeve 73).
88 negatives; 1 print
Plastic wallet; photographic paper and film
Index terms
Negatives

For captions see Cunnison's own index numbers 101-200 at SAD.1010/2/5-19. Wallet index contains some unique captions.
SAD.1010/13/1-88
1948-1951
Negatives (album 3), and 2 prints: Northern Rhodesia [Zambia].
Empty sleeves: 18, 25-28, 44-45, 54, 61, 83-85, 88, 92, 95. 2 prints (sleeves 1-2). Wallet index contains some unique captions.
86 negatives; 2 prints
Plastic wallet; photographic paper and film
Index terms
Negatives

For captions see Cunnison's own index numbers 201-300 at SAD.1010/2/5-19.
SAD.1010/14/1-24
1948-1951
Negatives (album 4), and 11 prints: Northern Rhodesia [Zambia].
Empty sleeves: 3-68, 89-100. 11 prints (sleeve 2), numbered in Cunnison's index [?364], 365-374.
13 negatives; 11 prints
Plastic wallet; photographic paper and film
Index terms
Negatives

For captions see Cunnison's own index numbers 301-400 at SAD.1010/2/5-19. Wallet index contains some unique captions.
Cinefilm
SAD.1010/15
1951 Feb 1
“Rhodesia: ancient rites for new chief”. Black and white film of the installation of Kazembe XV on 1 February 1951.
1 reel in metal canister
35mm film

See also Pathé newsreels “Ancient rites for new chief” and “Selected originals - Ancient rites for new chief”; Cunnison is also visible in some crowd scenes
Index terms
Video recordings
6. Photographs: (ii) Sudan
Introduction
The photographs date from the years 1952-4. In the captions the present tense refers to that period. They were taken in the course of anthropological work with the Humr. They are not intended as a comprehensive record of Humr life; photography was secondary to the research, and snaps were taken simply when it was convenient. The research itself was written up in a book, Baggara Arabs (Clarendon Press, 1966), and various journal articles listed in it.
At the time, there was no railway in Dar Humr and the town of Babanusa did not exist. Motor transport from the north was possible all the year as far as Muglad but roads further south were impassable in the rains. The period was the end of the Condominium. In 1954 S.W. Kordofan's first Sudanese District Commissioner took office at El Fula.
The base from which research was carried out was the camp of Hurgas Merida, omda of the Mezaghna. Unless otherwise mentioned, the photographs are of people, places and livestock connected with his camp (ferig) and with his five-generational patrilineal family (surra), which was known as Iyal Ganis.
Photographs of the Messiria Humr of S.W. Kordofan
The Humr are pastoralists who move around their territory after suitable water and grazing. The main ecological zones mentioned in the captions are, from north to south:-
the Babanusa, used for rains grazing
the Muglad, used for grazing and cultivation
the Goz, used for transit to the Bahr and for grazing at harvest time
the Bahr, used for grazing in the dry season after harvest

The seasons are as follows:-
shita` "winter" cold, dry (December-February)
seyf "summer" hot, dry (February-April)
rushash "spring" first rains (April-June)
kharif "rains" most rain (July-September)
chelawy "autumn" late rains (September-October)
deret "harvest" getting cold (October-December)
(a) Nomadic Movements
There are four main annual migrations:
Woty, from the Muglad to the Bahr, December
Munshagh, from the Bahr to the Muglad, June
Tal`y, from the Muglad to the Babanusa, July
Kabby, from the Babanusa to the Muglad, September
Shorter moves are also made within these areas
SAD.750/1/1
Dismantling harvest camp in the Muglad, preparing loads for the migration (mesar)
SAD.750/1/2
Mesarna `izz al-Ataya (the Humr belong to the `Ataya branch of Juheyna)
SAD.750/1/3-11
The woty migration takes place well into the dry season, and caravans move in a cloud of dust
SAD.750/1/12
Woty caravan passing remains of a cattle camp in the Goz
SAD.750/1/13-17
The woty migration is done quickly with the certainty of finding water on the Bahr, and only rough shelters are erected at night stops
SAD.750/1/18-19
Caravan crosses the first watercourse (regeba) on the Bahr after passing through the dry sandy wooded Goz
SAD.750/1/20-21
Moving camp within the Bahr area. The dalil on horseback leads the cattle.
SAD.750/1/22-24
Moving between camp sites along a regeba
SAD.750/1/25-27
Members of Dar Hantor lineage of the Mezaghna moving camp on the Bahr
SAD.750/1/28
Sheybun Merida and nephew reaching Seidana, a frequent camp site for Iyal Ganis in summer
SAD.750/1/29-38
The munshagh back from the Bahr to the Muglad is a leisurely journey. Scouts first go ahead to see if rain has filled the pools further north. Short new grass, dust laid.
SAD.750/1/39-44
A late munshagh by people who had stayed behind at Seidana to plant cotton
SAD.750/1/45-46
Bull fallen in mud, shedding part of its load
SAD.750/1/47
Bull loaded up for moving camp - including camp's drum. Kireyfan Jedid
SAD.750/1/48-53
Laden bulls decorated with braided leather
SAD.750/1/54-57
Laden undecorated bulls
SAD.750/1/58-59
Tor umm iyal, dolul o sheyyal : a placid baggage bull, fit for carrying infants
SAD.750/1/60
Fine horse, fine horseman, fine spear. Ashemmo at Umm Kanashy.
SAD.750/1/61
A small travelling party loading
SAD.750/1/62
Girls on mare
SAD.750/1/63-64
Donkey with donkey up
SAD.750/1/65
Horse, donkey, bull, dogs, chickens
(b) Camps
A camp, ferig, usually takes the form of a ring of tents with doors facing inwards. The cattle spend the night inside the ring, and there is rope or a thorn enclosure for calves. A camp is sited near a convenient shade tree, the shejerat el-juma`, where men spend time during the day, and where bachelors sleep. The group, known as surra, of men closely related through their fathers, can be the basis for a camp, but it often splits up for practical or social reasons; and at any time for convenience the cattle can go with the unmarried (the `azzaba) leaving the others behind with tents and baggage (the tegeliya).
SAD.750/1/66-74
Rainy season camp in the Babanusa
SAD.750/1/75-88
Late rains camp in the Babanusa
SAD.750/1/89-90
Cattle camp in the Goz, November. During harvest cattle are kept out of the way, and are taken by the `azzaba to the pools at the northern part of the Goz. Only rough tents are erected.
SAD.750/1/91-96
Harvest camp (mudmar) beside a harvested millet field in the Muglad. Often camps at this season are small, to be convenient for gardens.
SAD.750/1/97-98
Mudmar of Shaikh Kubr Menawwir near Menagir (Dar Umm Sheiba Zerga section of Awlad Kamil)
SAD.750/1/99-100
Cattle of Iyal Jabir (Mezaghna) in camp at Goleh Karamalla, at northern edge of the Bahr, January
SAD.750/1/101-105
Summer camp at Umm Dululu
SAD.750/1/106
A camp at Umm Sha`raya (Fayyarin)
SAD.750/1/107
A camp at Koya (Ziyud)
SAD.750/1/108-109
Camp of Iyal Kabberat (Ziyud) at Umm Ganzus. Tents are, unusually, in a straight line along the bank of the Regeba. February
SAD.750/1/110
Ziyud and A. Serur camps together at Umm Ganzus
SAD.750/1/111-114
Summer camps in the Bahr
SAD.750/1/115-21
Summer camps in open parkland at Lau
SAD.750/1/122
Camp at Lau with Dinka houses in the background
SAD.750/1/123
Camp at Lau: men's tree
SAD.750/1/124-126
Camps of A. Kamil omodiya at Aman, with pools in regeba drying out. March
SAD.750/1/127
Camp in early rains. First move north from regeba to take advantage of small clay depressions in the Goz (kelage) which hold water after the first showers.
SAD.750/1/128-129
Camps in the Goz on the munshagh migration. Tents are properly constructed against the rain, and in view of the slow pace of the move.
SAD.750/1/130-131
Small camp beside gardens at sowing time, at Gideyhat in the Muglad. Cattle are away elsewhere.
SAD.750/1/132-137
Camps in the Babanusa, early rains
SAD.750/1/138
Camp in Babanusa with drying meat, following slaughter of a bull calf
SAD.750/1/139
Camp at Nayinayi in the Firshai, incorporating a Dinka house. The Barokela, whose camp it is, are a lineage of A. Kamil specialising in iron work.
SAD.750/1/140-141
Tents of the Salamat omodiya are often oval rather than round. Summer camp at Lake Keylak.
SAD.750/1/142
Tents on the Bahr in early rains are sometimes strongly protected with thatched roofs and bark sides reaching the ground
SAD.750/1/143
Salamat cotton camp, L. Keylak, February
SAD.750/1/144-145
Cotton camp at Raggl in the Firshai (identity unknown)
SAD.750/1/146-147
Cotton camp at Seidana where all Iyal Ganis cotton cultivation was carried out. Commonly referred to as hilla, village, rather than ferig
SAD.750/1/148-149
Summer camp with servant quarters behind ring of tents
SAD.750/1/150
The village at Gideyhat where the melekiya (former slaves) of Iyal Ganis reside permanently as cultivators
SAD.750/1/151-158
Men's tree at various camps of Iyal Ganis
(c) Tents
Materials for tents are carried on bull backs from one camp site to the next, although the framework may be left behind and fresh sticks cut at the new place. Tents vary in design according to season and personal preference; they consist basically of a beehive shaped framework covered by broad strips of shredded bark, and sometimes straw, which are in turn covered by mats tied down with ropes. A small grass shelter (rakuba) may be erected near the door as a separate kitchen, otherwise cooking is in the open or in the front of the tent. A woman obtains tent and household goods (together called el-khumam) on her first marriage, and they remain hers. Wife, husband, daughters, and younger sons sleep in tents. Unmarried men sleep at the tree, but each is attached to the household of his nearest female relative, on whom he relies for meals and where he can pull in his angereyb on rainy nights. Moving, women ride on bulls with the household goods.
SAD.750/1/159
First steps in erecting a tent (beyt). A split-cane bed (diringil) on tripods; bark (tash) and mats (burush) laid out for roof and sides.
SAD.750/1/160
Half-dismantled tent seen from rakuba. Angereyb, cooking pots, containers, mortar, hearth stones.
SAD.750/1/161-162
Tent complete apart from roof coverings, from rear. Woman's goods are supported to the left of the bed, men's to the right. Containers and decorative leather hanging from the roof. People sleep with feet towards the doorway.
SAD.750/1/163
Braided leather with cowrie shells as decoration for tent and baggage bulls
SAD.750/1/164-167
Rains tent in the Babanusa. Covering of bark and undecorated mats. Forked post for cooking pot. (kalol)
SAD.750/1/168
Rains tent, including market goods (metal box and pail)
SAD.750/1/169-170
Tent in late rains in the Muglad, belonging to Jidya, wife of Hurgas Merida
SAD.750/1/171
Tent, early harvest
SAD.750/1/172-175
Harvest tents. When no more rain will fall, women roof their tents with decorated mats (shugug). Some extend walls right to the ground with straw against cold night winds.
SAD.750/1/176-177
Isolated harvest tent, beside garden at Byeyty, belonging to Sheybun's mother, El-Nogo
SAD.750/1/178-180
Tents with rakubas on Bahr, summer
SAD.750/1/181
Tents of thatch and bark in early rains
SAD.750/1/182
Permanent huts of grass and thatch at Gideyhat, village of former slaves
(d) Cattle
Humr recognise two kinds of local cattle - their own hurr animals, and Dinka cattle, jenage. Their own are longer-legged. Jenage animals look generally a bit squatter, and are less adept at walking swiftly and straight on migrations. Humr have a big range of words to distinguish animals by colour, patterning, shape or horns, and by stage of growth. Bulls are of three kinds - fahil for breeding, sheyly for baggage, and khassy (castrated) to grow fat and lead the herd. Animals are slaughtered near their natural death; occasionally young bulls are sacrificed; surplus stock, mainly young bulls and unproductive cows, are sold.
SAD.750/1/183
Tor be garaboba (flanks dark, back and belly white)
SAD.750/1/184
Tor sheyly (riding bull), with head rope
SAD.750/1/185
Bagara (or bara) rabda (white belly) be subagha (end of tail distinctive) showing ear clip used in combination with lineage brands to denote ownership
SAD.750/1/186
Bara rabda jengeyi (white belly, Dinka type)
SAD.750/1/187
Cow on millet field after harvest
SAD.750/1/188
Bara beida (white) with holi calf
SAD.750/1/189
Tor fahil, argad (breeding bull, with small spots)
SAD.750/1/190
Bara be dur`anna, hamly (foreleg and shoulders distinctive, in calf)
SAD.750/1/191
Bara karta (horns facing downwards)
SAD.750/1/192
Munsalab calves, one mashguga (wedge-shaped clip at end of ear
SAD.750/1/193
Calves in rain storm
SAD.750/1/194
Tired calf, with Sheybun Merida
SAD.750/1/195-196
Jeda` calf with shuwak to prevent it from sucking while grazing with the adult herd. Bara be garabobitta.
SAD.750/1/197
Cow whose calf has died (meri) with tulchan (bau) to persuade her to yield milk
SAD.750/1/198-199
Milking. Kartot calf
SAD.750/1/200
El Hunna Tobeyg removing tip of horn for safety. Some youths prefer to sharpen bulls' horns and boast of the damage they do.
SAD.750/1/201-202
Watering cattle at artificial trough (tebereyb) filled from wells nearby. Bahr
SAD.750/1/203
Bull saddled and tethered. The saddle (safina) rests on shredded bark as used for tent roofs.
SAD.750/1/204
Bull saddled and tied at tent
SAD.750/1/205-206
Making a bull saddle. A well made one of straw which has been soaked will last a year.
SAD.750/1/207
Bull rope, zumam, and how it is tied when not in use
SAD.750/1/208-209
Marking a calf with the shelga, the cattle brand (oraj) common to the `Ajaira section of the Humr. A second brand is applied which distinguishes the sub-section of its owner.
SAD.750/1/210-212
Branding a calf for veterinary purposes. Sheybun Merida and Jim`y Bakhit
SAD.750/1/213
Tor arbad, agharr (white belly, white face) with brand mark as cure
SAD.750/1/214
A team from the Sudan Veterinary Service waiting for cows to come
SAD.750/1/215-217
The team in action, inoculating cattle
(e) Grazing & watering
Rainfall increases from about 18 to 36 inches a year from north to south, and in the north is confined to about 3 months Movements are largely determined by availability of water. Sources of water are pools, watercourses, and wells, as follows. In the Babanusa, mostly small pools called khashm el-rahad, available July to September. In the Muglad, larger pools called bota, available from June and, perhaps lasting the whole year. In the Goz, pools again called khashm el-rahad and at early rains in the southern part, small clay kelgeya saucers. In the Bahr, the numerous winding and interconnected watercourses called regeba retaining diminishing pools until about March. In late dry season deep wells (bir) are dug or reopened in regeba beds; in the Babanusa shallow wells (mashish) may be dug if necessary during the rainy season. Water is pleasantly drinkable except when pools are shrinking in the Babanusa and the Goz. Humr can make acceptable badly polluted water by using alum to separate the water from other substances.
SAD.750/1/218-219
Grazing in the Babanusa, rains
SAD.750/1/220-223
Cattle in el-Magarin pool, Babanusa, rains
SAD.750/1/224-226
In a bota in the Muglad, November
SAD.750/1/227-234
Cattle taken by `azzaba to the Goz, November, to be away from harvest in progress in the Muglad
SAD.750/1/235-239
Cattle at a pool in the Goz, November
SAD.750/1/240
Grazing in regeba, Seidana, February
SAD.750/1/241
Grazing at Lau, February
SAD.750/1/242-244
Cattle of A. Kamil grazing in Regeba Umm Bioro at Aman, March
SAD.750/1/245
Grazing in the regeba at Buk
SAD.750/1/246-249
Cattle drinking from tebereyb, under discipline to avoid damage to lip of the trough
SAD.750/1/250
Wells (bir), and tebereyb prepared for filling, at Grimty (Fayyarin)
SAD.750/1/251-252
Wells at Shengel el-Tubaya (Fayyarin) in March
SAD.750/1/253
Wells, and weaver-birds' nests
SAD.750/1/254-255
Well in regeba with shelter
SAD.750/1/256
Carrying water to camp
SAD.750/1/257-259
Khashm el-rahad at El-`Efeyn, early rains
SAD.750/1/260
Shallow well, mashish, in Babanusa during dry spell in rains
SAD.750/1/261-262
Water pots and transport
(f) Cultivation
The staple is dukhn, bulrush millet; most cultivation takes place on the sand ridges (atamir ) in the Muglad. Maize and sorghum, okra and mallow, sesame and watermelon, are also grown. Granaries are erected near a group of gardens; a few people, mostly elderly, stay at them when others migrate to the Bahr. From there expeditions called jangala come north to replenish grain stocks and take them back to the camps. After W.W.II groundnuts (in the Muglad and the Babanusa) and cotton (in the Bahr and the Firshai) progressively increased as cash crops, but not on a grand scale.
SAD.750/1/263-264
Sowing millet; making scoops with makmak, boy following with seeds
SAD.750/1/265-266
Riding around on bulls to thresh millet
SAD.750/1/267
Cows fertilising harvested millet garden at Byeyty
SAD.750/1/268-270
Granaries, sararu, near gardens in the Muglad
SAD.750/1/271
Filling grain bags for transport to summer camps
SAD.750/1/272-273
Mobile flour mill visits Muglad
SAD.750/1/274-277
Careful clearing of ground for cotton cultivation by means of a working bee (nafir)
SAD.750/1/278
Cotton camp with harvest in the Firshai (identity unknown)
SAD.750/1/279
Cotton of Iyal Ganis at Seidana
SAD.750/1/280-281
Taking cotton from Seidana to Nyama in the Firshai for weighing and paying
SAD.750/1/282
At Nyama weighing centre, government employees inspect and repack cotton for onward transport by lorry
SAD.750/1/283
Cotton awaiting transport to ginning mill at Lagowa
(g) Markets
There is a permanent market at Muglad, with shops open daily; Baggara bring market goods on Thursdays. Seasonal nomad markets exist at Abyei, Nyama, Keylak, alongside permanent shops. Muglad market occupies a square with a row of brick-built Jellaba shops at each side. Baggara women offer their goods in the middle. They sit according to the order that their omodiyas move in, from Fayyarin in the west to Salamat in the east. In the separate livestock market, jenage animals are sold to the south of hurr animals, whoever owns them. Humr men habitually carry spears - except in the market.
SAD.750/1/284-289
Sellers and buyers in Muglad market. Main items on offer by Baggara women are bottles of liquid butter, mats, woodland scents. Clay pots are on sale, but they are mostly brought by women of the Messiria Zurg from Lagowa district, and sold at the east.
SAD.750/1/290
Market scene. The long canes support aerials for Jellaba merchants' wirelesses.
SAD.750/1/291
Shouting the description of a missing cow around the market. Anyone seen it?
SAD.750/1/292-299
Buyers and promenaders at Muglad market. Examples of fashionable dress (1953-4 season).
SAD.750/1/300
The woman wears silver head ornaments including waraga jinn geyyel, a pointed container for a faghir's text
SAD.750/1/301-304
The livestock market at Muglad
SAD.750/1/305-306
Seasonal market at Nyama
(h) People
Some residents at one time or another of the camp of Hurgas Merida, omda of the Mezaghna. Most belong to his surra, Iyal Ganis (307-330); people outside the family of Iyal Ganis (331-374)
SAD.750/1/307-308
Hurgas Merida, omda of the Mazaghna
SAD.750/1/309-314
Sheybun Merida, half-brother of Hurgas
SAD.750/1/315
Sheybun, El-Hunna Tobeyg his paternal cousin, and Kauja, son of Merida Adam, at Goleh
SAD.750/1/316-317
Merida Adam, Hurgas' paternal second cousin
SAD.750/1/318-319
Hammoda Geydum, of the `Ariya branch of the Mezaghna, who married Sheybun's full sister
SAD.750/1/320
El-Neimy Sulum, daughter of a Fayyarin man. Her mother was twice widowed, then brought her two children to live beside her brothers in this camp.
SAD.750/1/321
Omer El-Nagy whose parents died of cerebro-spinal meningitis within a few days of one another
SAD.750/1/322-323
Omer being held by Sulum Hurgas, his late mother's MBS
SAD.750/1/324
Orphan Omer with his mother's sister Umm Foty
SAD.750/1/325
Seated centre: El-Ju` Kammin, Sheybun's mother's brother. His father was a Dinka slave; El-Ju` is now fully integrated into the camp. Walking, Sulum Hurgas.
SAD.750/1/326
Left, Umm Beddy son of Hurgas Merida
SAD.750/1/327
Kauja son of Merida Adam, and `Isa Menawwir
SAD.750/1/328-330
`Isa Menawwir, maternal half-brother to the late husband of Hurgas's sister. Her daughters treat him as if he was their paternal uncle. He belongs to the Terakana section of Mezaghna
SAD.750/1/331-332
Boya el-Zein, Shaikh of Iyal Rigeyby, the lineage closest to Iyal Ganis, with his kinsman Abbakar `Abbad
SAD.750/1/333-335
Abbakar
SAD.750/1/336
Shaikh Hijja of Iyal Jabir
SAD.750/1/337
Kusum at Ajaj
SAD.750/1/338
Belal at Lau
SAD.750/1/339-340
Musa Heymir, a skilled giraffe hunter
SAD.750/1/341-342
Portraits
SAD.750/1/343
Uthman Shintu at Dimsoya
SAD.750/1/344-345
Shaikh Ahmed Shigeyfa of the `Ariya section of Mezaghna
SAD.750/1/346-349
`Ali Nimr, Nazir of the `Ajaira and half-brother of Nazir Babo Nimr
SAD.750/1/350
`Ali Nimr watching the dancing
SAD.750/1/351
`Abd el-Gasim Musa, omda of the Fayyarin
SAD.750/1/352
`Abd el-Gasim Musa with Mohed. Kubr and Mohed. Ashemmoat Shengel el-Tubaya
SAD.750/1/353
At Grimty
SAD.750/1/354
`Abd el-Gasim Musa at his tree at Umm Sha`raya
SAD.750/1/355
Yusuf Adam, omda of the Ziyud, in the sahaly (toic) of Koya
SAD.750/1/356-357
Subeyr el-Haj, omda of the Jubarat and brother of the Felaita nazir Sereir. At Ghorobat
SAD.750/1/358
Sh. Hammad of the Barokela
SAD.750/1/359-360
Mohed. Kubr, anthropologist's assistant (from Dar Umm Sheyba Zerga, A. Kamil) 750/1/361 Mohed. Kubr and Hurgas Merida near end of munshagh migration 1953. (Coronation day in UK, as later discovered)
SAD.750/1/362
Hurgas and Mohed
SAD.750/1/363-364
Mohed. Kubr and wife Fatny with their children
SAD.750/1/365
Horse with anthropologist, in the Babanusa
SAD.750/1/366-367
Nimr son of Hurgas, local government official
SAD.750/1/368
Local government messenger
SAD.750/1/369
Local government official
SAD.750/1/370-373
Executive Officer, Muglad
SAD.750/1/374
Abu Jabr el-Haj, local government official, brother of Sereyr and Subeyr el-Haj
(i) Horses
Men and women ride bulls; only men ride horses. A horse is the ‘fitting' mount for a man but by no means all men have them. They are used as ordinary personal transport, for scouting after grazing and water, for leading cattle on migration, and for hunting.
SAD.750/1/375-376
Horse feeding on hay brought to it in camp. Horses are tethered or hobbled but mares often go free.
SAD.750/1/377-379
Horse with hay and grain bag (millet)
SAD.750/1/380-382
Bulls bringing fresh birdi grass (Echinochloa stagnina) from regeba for horses in camp
SAD.750/1/383-384
Horses eating birdi grass in camp
SAD.750/1/385
Grazing in the Goz, rushash
SAD.750/1/386-387
Bleeding a horse against the disease of bugur, a mild paralysis
SAD.750/1/388-391
Feeding a horse with sesame in build-up for a giraffe hunt
SAD.750/1/392
Making a hobble (shukal). Hammoda Geydum at Ja`bateyn
SAD.750/1/393
Unkempt horse
SAD.750/1/394-395
Onlookers at a Muglad horse show
SAD.750/1/396-398
Horse-running at Muglad
(j) Giraffe hunt
The expedition set off from the Iyal Ganis summer camp at Umm Dululu on 19 April 1954: four hunter horses and their riders, and nineteen bulls ridden by men and women, who made up the umm gharagha who did the work other than the hunting. The area was a week's trek eastwards, in the talh and toic some miles east of Werfing. The expedition rejoined the cattle camp on 9 May. An account of Humr interest in giraffe, largely based on this trip, appeared in Sudan Notes & Records, 1958
SAD.750/1/399
Sand divination (khatt) on the prospects for the hunt. Abakkar, left, divines for Hurgas, right, owner of one of the hunter horses.
SAD.750/1/400-401
Hurgas gives his horse medication for success in the hunt; ink from a text washed off a wooden board (loh) written by a faghir
SAD.750/1/402-407
The expedition (dermada) on the way to the sahaly
SAD.750/1/408-411
A midday break. Rough shelters of cloth and mats so that women may eat without men seeing them
SAD.750/1/412
Shade for men and horses
SAD.750/1/413-418
The route goes through the country of Rweng Dinka who at this season have mostly moved south with their cattle. Dukduks all the way.
SAD.750/1/419-420
Dinka visitors at resting places
SAD.750/1/421-423
Packing and unpacking
SAD.750/1/424-427
In the Sahaly, nearing the hunting area
SAD.750/1/428-430
The giraffe camp (dankuch) before the hunt, with tied horses and women's makeshift tents in background
SAD.750/1/431
After leaving camp in the dark, halt at dawn. Puttees being tied with strips of bark to be secured against thorns.
SAD.750/1/432-433
The hunter horses on the trail of giraffe
SAD.750/1/434
A rider has speared the hind quarters of a giraffe
SAD.750/1/435
Coup de grace
SAD.750/1/436-437
Hunters relaxing after the chase
SAD.750/1/438
Hot horse
SAD.750/1/439
Musa Heymir after his kill
SAD.750/1/440
He cuts off the giraffe's tail
SAD.750/1/441
Rides with it dangling from his saddle
SAD.750/1/442
Covering giraffe against vultures pending arrival of butchering party
SAD.750/1/443-447
Umm gharagha arrives and cuts up the giraffe
SAD.750/1/448
Making umm nyolokh, a delicious and hallucinatory mixture of pounded giraffe liver and marrow
SAD.750/1/449-451
Bulls laden with meat and hide leave the site of a kill
SAD.750/1/452-457
Scenes in the dankuch, with drying meat
SAD.750/1/458-463
Dankuch, including Dinka visitors
SAD.750/1/464
Strips of giraffe hide for stringing angereybs being stretched with weights. Bull saddle; horse saddle on ground
SAD.750/1/465-466
The expedition returns to Dar Humr, passing a tebeldi
(k) Drumming and dancing
Daytime drumming and dancing are usually set pieces on days of Islamic festivals, or VIP visits. There is no picture of the usual, and most orderly dauriya, in which women form up in a cross which revolves slowly on its axis while men circle round it.
SAD.750/1/467-472
Drumming for a dance
SAD.750/1/473-480
Audience and participants
SAD.750/1/481-482
Horsemen galloping past dancers
SAD.750/1/483-484
Women dancing beside the drums
SAD.750/1/485-487
Boys and young men dancing, typically with ostrich feathers, walking sticks and woollen sleeveless jerseys
SAD.750/1/488-494
Women typically wear a patterned frock over long skirt, bareheaded showing off silver ornaments. They snatch turbans off men's heads, wear them as belts and flap the long ends when dancing.
SAD.750/1/495-497
Young girls wear kamfus waist cloth, and flap turbans
SAD.750/1/498-500
Dancing with spears. Men twirl spears and jab the air over girls' heads in appreciation.
SAD.750/1/501
A couple dancing, copying one another's sudden movements as quickly and accurately as possible
SAD.750/1/502
Men circling round women
SAD.750/1/503-505
Men getting their horses to dance in rhythm
SAD.750/1/506
Women dancers with banknotes in their hair, put there by admiring men
(l) The end of a blood feud
Awlad Salamy and Terakana sections of the Mezaghna had inflicted deaths on one another in a feud over some years. Eventually circumstances became promising for a settlement. This was effected in a solemn ceremonial murda` when the parties' camps were near one another in the Muglad.
SAD.750/1/507-508
Awlad Salamy discussing terms for peace-making before meeting their Terakana adversaries
SAD.750/1/509-510
On the way to the peace-making ceremony
SAD.750/1/511-513
Hurgas Merida as leader of A. Salamy surrounded by his elders have last minute discussions
SAD.750/1/514-516
At the peace-making, held in Kubu Menago, a thicket in the Muglad. Making the speeches
SAD.750/1/517
Saying the Fatha together at the end of the feud. It was heard in the presence of distinguished neutrals and mediators including Mekki `Ali Julla (a court president, omda of Muglad town, and Nazir Babo's uncle), who chaired the meeting.
(m) Contacts with other groups
Humr mix with Dinka when they go to their dry season camps, in the territories of the Ngok and Rweng Dinka - and sometimes as far as the Bul Nuer. The Messiria Rural Council, which meets at El Fula, includes the Ngok whose Nazir Deng Majok, who lives at Abyei, has been its president. Some Dinka men and women have been slaves and latterly servants in Humr camps. Such service now is the nearest employment which most Ngok are able to find. Members of the Salamat omodiya enter relations with Nuba, who may contract to herd cattle for them in the hills. Fellata from Nigeria and Niger regularly wander through Dar Humr with their herds. Hamar come south to sell grain in Muglad market specially in September and October.
SAD.750/1/518-519
Dinka visitors at Seidana
SAD.750/1/520-521
Nazir `Ali Nimr (right) in camp at Lau near Abyei entertains (on deck chairs) men of Nazir Deng Majok, with Arab visitors on mats
SAD.750/1/522-523
Dinka visitors to Hurgas Merida's tree
SAD.750/1/524
Kharfan (centre), who is half Dinka, interprets for Dinka visitor. Usually a kind of pidgin Arabic is enough to communicate by.
SAD.750/1/525-527
Dinka settlement and Arab ferig close together, Lau
SAD.750/1/528
A few Dinka in Deng Majok's entourage keep horses. Here is one being led to water by a servant.
SAD.750/1/529
Dinka fish drive in Regeba Angol, March 1954
SAD.750/1/530-532
Dinka fishing with baskets in Regeba Angol
SAD.750/1/533-535
Dinka fishing in Regeba Umm Bioro at Fadlalla
SAD.750/1/536-537
Dinka joining in with Arab men and women to watch the dancing
SAD.750/1/538-540
Passing remains of rainy-season Bul Nuer cattle camp at Umm Seneyny. Hurgas Merida, Hammad Jabir, Sheybun
SAD.750/1/541-542
Fellata cattle watering at Kurru in the Goz. Very distinctive red cattle with large splayed horns.
SAD.750/1/543
Fellata baggage bull. Arab cattle behind
SAD.750/1/544-545
Fellati herdsman, showing distinctive dress
(n) Miscellaneous short sequences
SAD.750/1/546-547
Sacrifice of a madmun bull calf. Hurgas made a pledge that if the hakuma brought a weighing machine to Seidana for the 1954 cotton harvest he would sacrifice a bull. It did, and so saved him arranging a caravan to Nyama.
SAD.750/1/548-550
Pounding grain for wedding festivities outside the specially constructed oval wedding tent
SAD.750/1/551-553
Wedding tents of the Salamat omodiya are - like their ordinary tents - of bigger and better construction than others
SAD.750/1/553-554
Interior of Salamat wedding tent
SAD.750/1/555
Wedding tent in a camp, Wadi el Ghalla (identity unknown)
SAD.750/1/556-557
Trap (sherek). Women making wedding preparations block the path of passing men, seize an object such as spear or turban, returnable on payment of a cash forfeit
SAD.750/1/558
Boy on horseback arriving for circumcision
SAD.750/1/559-561
Singing in front of circumcision rakuba (kin tebki ma baghanni leyk, if you cry I won't sing for you). The upturned mortar is the traditional seat for the operator.
SAD.750/1/562
Slaughtering a jeda` bull calf on account of circumcision
SAD.750/1/563-565
Traps set by women on the occasion of a girl's circumcision
SAD.750/1/566-568
Preparing rob. Milk has set in the calabash overnight. It gives a deep sloshing sound as the woman shakes it to and fro to break it up at dawn. Grainbags and heaps of millet
SAD.750/1/569-572
Faghir with client, writing text on loh
SAD.750/1/573-575
Smoking out bees and collecting honey from hive at foot of tree, in the southern Goz, February
SAD.750/1/576
Mohed. Kubr and Kireyfan Jedid barbecuing a guinea-fowl
SAD.750/1/577-579
Adam Hamadeyn of A. Kamil singing in praise of tea. He is a member of one of the Baramka clubs which meet to honour tea and drink it in a ceremonial way.
SAD.750/1/580-582
The children's game of umm tabara
SAD.750/1/583
Children up a tree
SAD.750/1/584-585
The adult game of dala - being played in Ramadan
SAD.750/1/586-587
Girl plaiting tuft of hair on boy's head
SAD.750/1/588
Kauja and Hawa plucking a cockerel
SAD.750/1/589
Fayyarin girl on dumbelo pods
SAD.750/1/590
Girl with egret at Buk
SAD.750/1/591
Boy on one leg, Nilotic fashion
SAD.750/1/592-593
Nazir Babo Nimr with dignitaries at District Headquarters in El Fula
SAD.750/1/594
The choice of candidates at the 1954 elections
SAD.750/1/595-596
The hustings. In deckchair, Sayed El Fadil Mahmud, grandson of the Mahdi and father-in-law of Nazir Babo. Canvassing in Kubu Menago in the Muglad among `Ajaira. He was the successful candidate.
SAD.750/1/597-601
A khor opened across the road near El Fula in heavy night rain. Next morning goods and lorry are salvaged.
SAD.750/1/602
Dajo dancing at a fantasiya in Lagowa
SAD.750/1/603-605
Dajo band
SAD.750/1/606-614
Nuba fun and games
SAD.750/1/615-616
Kajbur pool (bota) in the Muglad, deret
SAD.750/1/617
Mogran pool in the Muglad after rain
SAD.750/1/618
Crossing the Wadi el Ghalla
SAD.750/1/619-620
Goz views in rushash
SAD.750/1/621-622
Regeba Umm Bioro, with pelicans
SAD.750/1/623
Regeba Umm Bioro with ducks and goats
SAD.750/1/624
Duhul el-Buyud with pelicans
SAD.750/1/625
The mound (debby) of ‘King Buk' of the Shatt
SAD.750/1/626-628
Grimty, the regeba in March
SAD.750/1/629
Parkland at Grimty
SAD.750/1/630
Midday rest at Se`dy on the way from Regeba Zerga to Keylak
SAD.750/1/631-633
Pool in a thicket in the Muglad, December
SAD.1100/4-13
1952-1999
Negatives and duplicate prints of the series SAD.750/1/1-633, depicting Baggara people and culture, with related papers
SAD.1100/4/1-700
1952 x 1955
Six booklets of negatives depicting Baggara people and culture:
1. Labelled 0-100 [numbered 1-100]: envelopes 11, 18, 31, 45, 74, 76-77, 82 are empty; envelopes 28, 41-42, 44, 47 contain small prints in addition to the negatives;
2. Labelled 100-200 [numbered 101-200]: envelopes 110, 114, 117-118, 121, 128, 133, 143-144, 154-155, 157, 160, 165, 179-183, 194, 196-197 are empty; envelope 123 contains a small print in addition to the negative;
3. Labelled 200-300 [numbered 201-300 and 278A]: envelopes 201, 235, 246, 249, 266, 269, 290, 294, 300 are empty; envelopes 261 and 263 contain small prints in addition to the negatives;
4. Labelled 300-400 [numbered 301-400]: envelopes 333, 343, 363 are empty; envelope 322 contains a small print in addition to the negative;
5. Labelled 400-500 [numbered 401-500]: envelopes 423, 426, 430-431, 437, 444, 449, 465, 467, are empty; envelope 450 contains a small print in addition to the negative;
6. Labelled 600-700 [numbered 601-700]: envelopes 622-624, 663, 683, 694-696 are empty; envelope 654 contains a small print in addition to the negative.

Negatives 501-600 not present. Indexes in each booklet contain only one or two captions. Numbered lists and indexes of such images found elsewhere in the archive are usually recorded in blue/black or in red ink. Those numbers written in blue/black ink correspond with the numbered order of negatives in these six booklets. The images were rearranged thematically and then renumbered by Cunnison prior to their donation to Durham University and the photographic prints of Baggara people listed in this catalogue follow Cunnison's second thematic arrangement and numbering sequence. A correspondence index of the two numbering schemes is found at SAD.1100/6
Index terms
Negatives
SAD.1100/5
1952 x 1955
Envelope of negatives depicting Baggara people and culture, containing a handwritten list of missing negatives, and negatives numbered in red and blue (red numbers listed first) 510/507, 515/511, 284/516, 291/520, 289/536, 520/543, 534/554, 554/570, 563/576, 565/577A, 590 and “2 Baggara negatives”
For the significance of the red and blue numbering sequences, see SAD.1100/4
Index terms
Negatives
SAD.1100/7
1952 x 1955
Photographs depicting Baggara people and culture, some prints with crop marks, some with captions, most bearing two sets of numbers in red and blue (red numbers listed first): 7, 8/376, 9/374, 11/372, 14/382, 17/71, 19/390, 29/355, 30/354, 33/360, 35/358, 36/356, 37/357, 38/359, 46/352, 47/350, 50/368, 52/366, 60/386, 62/371, 65/362, 68/37, 93/65, 94/66.
Captioned first quality copies of these prints are filed at SAD.750/1/{red number}
SAD.1100/8
1952 x 1955
Photographs depicting Baggara people and culture, some prints with crop marks, some with captions, most bearing two sets of numbers in red and blue (red numbers listed first): 104/90, 109/93, 113/11, like 124/84, 125/85, 131/34, 133/94, 138/95, 146/30, 147/32, 153/5, 157/100, 158/502 spare, 158/502, 159/279, 164/492, 167/495, 169/50, 169, 170/278, 171/152, 178/274, 196/245, 197/247 9
Captioned first quality copies of these prints are filed at SAD.750/1/{red number}
SAD.1100/9
1952 x 1955
Photographs depicting Baggara people and culture, some prints with crop marks, some with captions, most bearing two sets of numbers in red and blue (red numbers listed first): 200/248, 206/348, 209/497, 217/252, 219/286, 220/239, 223/240, 240/284, 242/234, 243/233, 245/610, 247/257, 249/255, 250/620, 252/617, 261/626, 262/627, 266/651, 267/653, 269/656, 271/658, like 274/659, 279/665, 281/668, 284/516, 284/516 (small print), 289/536, 291/520, 291/520 (small print), 298
Captioned first quality copies of these prints are filed at SAD.750/1/{red number}
SAD.1100/10
1952 x 1955
Photographs depicting Baggara people and culture, some prints with crop marks, some with captions, most bearing two sets of numbers in red and blue (red numbers listed first): 300x2, 300/530, 304x2, 308/106, 318/124, 320/154, spare 325, spare 327, 331/148, 336 no negatives, 340, like 341/145, 349/200, 353/112, 358/135, 358, 359/101, 360/102, 361/103, 363, 365, 374, 392/641, 392A/262
Captioned first quality copies of these prints are filed at SAD.750/1/{red number}
SAD.1100/11
1952 x 1955
Photographs depicting Baggara people and culture, some prints with crop marks, some with captions, most bearing two sets of numbers in red and blue (red numbers listed first): 435/450, 454/460, 470/324, 472/320, 475/311, 476/312, 478/322, 486/327, 487/328, 496/308, 497/310, 499/315
Captioned first quality copies of these prints are filed at SAD.750/1/{red number}
SAD.1100/12
1952 x 1955
Photographs depicting Baggara people and culture, some prints with crop marks, some with captions, most bearing two sets of numbers in red and blue (red numbers listed first): 500/317, 503/332, 504/340, 510/507, 510/507 (small print), 513 spare, 513, 515/511, 515/511 (small print), 517, 518, 520/543, 523/557, 529/549, 534/554, 535 Reject, 536, 537, 542, 543/489, 545/491, 549/563, 553/569, 557/566, 557, 559, 560, 560/573, 561/574, 563/576, 565/577A,570, 571/596, 577/136, 583/558, 584/592, 584, 595/676, 595 603/293, 618/268, 626/612, 628/614
Captioned first quality copies of these prints are filed at SAD.750/1/{red number}
SAD.1100/13
1952 x 1955
Envelope of “Stuck together Baggara” photographs – now unstuck (red numbers listed first, where two numbers are cited) 491/314, 400, 403, 404, [410], 418/433, 423, 425, 487a, 505/330, 512, 513/508, 523, 529
SAD.1100/6
1988-1999
Papers relating to the (re-)arrangement and duplication of Cunnison's photographic prints and negatives depicting Baggara people and culture:
List of photographs depicting Baggara people and culture by subject, numbered in blue and red (manuscript, 4pp)
Correspondence betwen Cunnison and the Sudan Archive, University of Durham, concerning the donation of Sudanese newspapers and copyright of photographs, 22 August 1988-22 January 1999 (16pp)
Correspondence betwen Cunnison and the Sudan Archive, University of Durham, 5 November 1991-3 June 1992 concerning Cunnison’s Sudan photographs and making of negatives (7pp), with copy of Durham's catalogue of Cunnison's photos and captions (16pp)
Guide to the Sudan Archive, 11 January 1990 (2pp)
Manuscript correspondence list of 633 negatives listing the old (black ink) and new (red ink) negative numbers (manuscript, 4pp)
Draft of Cunnison's thematic rearrangement of his photographs with captions (manuscript, 5pp)
Cunnison's catalogue of photographs of the Messiria Humr of South-West Kordofan (typescript, 18pp)
SAD.1100/14/1-3
[2012 x 2013]
Colour aerial photographs, location unidentified, but taken in connection with the fixing of the boundary between North and South Sudan
7. Audio material
SAD.1101/1-19
[1940s]
Vinyl gramophone records made by Ian Cunnison, N. Rhodesia.
SAD.1101/1-10 are filed in box SAD.1101A, the remainder in box SAD.1101B
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/1
[1940s]
4032. “Nyina lya mwana”. Hunting song, mainly a dance. Led by Ali Chipeha. Recorded at Mufulisa Mine
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone recordEdge of record is chipped
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/2
[1940s]
4409. “Kambasa we kari”. Wedding song. Luapula. Recorded at Kambwali
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/3
[1940s]
4410. “Apo nakulila…”. Wedding song. Luapula. 2 drums & axes. Recorded at Kambwali
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/4
[1940s]
4411. “Twapela munanna”. Bakalwe. Luapula. Mondo, mukelo, axes. Recorded at Kambwali
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/5
[1940s]
4412. “Ngobele munkati…”. Paddling song. Shila. Led by Chikobe Mukange. Recorded at Kambwali
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/6
[1940s]
4413. “Chana Chambausi”. Chinkwasa dance. Lunda. Xylophone (etc.) Recorded at Kambwali
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/7
[1940s]
4414. “Chibanze”. Lunda. Chinkwasa (or ?) dance. Xylophone (etc.). By Nshilayankonde. Recorded at Kambwali
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/8
[1940s]
4415. “Chiteba wali wani”. War song. With praises of dead Kazambes. Lunda. Recorded at Kambwali
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/9
[1940s]
4416. “Ifyacitile ba Nakatutwa”. Lunda. Recorded at Kambwali
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/10
[1940s]
4418. “Mwine wa mushi”. Luapula: song at installation of village headman. Recorded at Luapula leprosy settlement
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone recordEdge of record is chipped
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/11
[1940s]
4551. “Kambaya walondale…”. Bakalwe hunting song. Luapula. Recorded at Kazembe
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/12
[1940s]
4552. “Lenami wiya”. Lunda. 3 drums. Recorded at Kazembe
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/13
[1940s]
4553. “Kwetu Tatonta ukuni…”. Bakalwe song (hunting). Luapula peoples. 3 drums. Recorded at Kazembe
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/14
[1940s]
4554. “Ngoma yalenge…”. Bakalwe hunting song. Luapula. Led by Kate Muonga. Recorded at Kazembe
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/15
[1940s]
4555. “Kayowa yowa”. Bakalwe. Luapula. Drums and clapping. Led by Kate Muonga. Recorded at Kazembe
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/16
[1940s]
4556. “Kaukungwala…”. Bakalwe hunting song. Luapula. 3 drums. Led by Chifu Manda. Recorded at Kazembe
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/17
[1940s]
4557. “Bakulu ntulai…”. Bakalwe song. Luapula. 3 drums. Led by Kate Muonga. Recorded at Kazembe
1 x 10-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/18
[1940s]
4596.
I : “Walale muya bwanga”. Lunda. Bushika dance.
II : Mupunga wa ushimba. With malimba acc. Lunda.
Recorded at Kazembe.
1 x 12-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
SAD.1101/19
[1940s]
4635.
I : “Katota ka lwimbo”. Wedding song. Lunda. Led by Rice Mumba.
II : “Chintu…”. Luapula. Hunting song. Led by Banti Tuntepe.
Recorded at Kazembe.
1 x 12-inch vinyl gramophone record
Index terms
Sound recordings
8. Maps
(i) East Africa
SAD.1010/1/1[MP] (filed at SAD.PF 28/6)
May 1929
“Carte ethnographique de la Province du Katanga”, par E. Verhülpen. Base map is “Congo Belge. Feuille 4: Province de Katanga”. Ministère des Colonies Service Cartographique.
scale:   1 to 2,000,000
Size: 77 x 91 cm (66 x 63 cm)
An additional copy is found within Cunnison's copy of Baluba et Balubaïsés du Katanga by E. Verhülpen (Anvers, 1936), shelved at SC 15021.
SAD.1010/1/2[MP] (filed at SAD.PF 28/6)
1933
“Tribal Areas, Northern Rhodesia” (now Zambia); with manuscript additions of bordering tribal areas in south east Congo, according to Verhülpen; and note by Cunnison on the differing meanings of the names Bena Mukulo and Bena Mukulu.
scale:   1 to 4,000,000
Size: 48 x 35 cm (40 x 29 cm)
SAD.1010/1/3[MP] (filed at SAD.PF 28/6)
1942
“Upper Congo”: South Katanga. Africa B34-35 and C34-35. War Office, Geographical Section, General Staff, no. 2871. 8,000/2/46E. Third edition. Army/Air style.
scale:   1 to 2,000,000
Size: 79 x 63 cm (66 x 45 cm)
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.1010/1/4[MP] (filed at SAD.PF 28/6)
1942
“Rhodesia”: Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) and parts of Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), Angola, Belgian Congo (now Democratic Republic of the Congo), Namibia and Botswana. Africa D34-35 and E34-35, and parts of C34-35. War Office, Geographical Section, General Staff, no. 2871. 7,500/3/43.Wa. Fourth edition. Army/Air style.
scale:   1 to 2,000,000
Size: 81 x 69 cm (63 x 50 cm)
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.1010/1/5[MP] (filed at SAD.PF 28/6)
1946
“Lake Nyasa”: Bemba Plateau. Africa SC 36 and part of SC35. War Office, Geographical Section, General Staff, no. 2465. 6,000/3/47 S.P.C. Second edition. Army/Air style.
scale:   1 to 1,000,000
Size: 86 x 65 cm (74 x 43 cm)
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.1010/1/6[MP] (filed at SAD.PF 28/6)
December 1947
“Territoire de Kasenga”, Belgian Congo (now Democratic Republic of the Congo). [Ministère des Colonies], Service Cartographique, no. 101. Territorial divisions annotated in red ink.
scale:   1 to 1,000,000
Size: 34 x 39 cm (34 x 38 cm)
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.1010/1/7[MP] (filed at SAD.PF 28/6)
[1948 x 1951]
Luapula, Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia): traced dyeline map of territory from Fort Rosebery (now Mansa) to Lake Mweru, annotated in blue ink by Cunnison.
Size: 81 x 33 cm
Index terms
Manuscript maps
SAD.1010/1/8[MP] (filed at SAD.PF 28/6)
1978
“Malawi.” Colour relief map. 3rd edition. Department of Surveys, Blantyre.
scale:   1 to 1,000,000
Size: 54 x 91 cm (48 x 86 cm)
Index terms
Topographic maps
(ii) Sudan
SAD.751/1/45[MP]
1952 Jan
Street plan of Omdurman (without street names).
scale:   1 to 10,000
Size: 56 x 86 cm
Index terms
Maps
SAD.PF 28/3/1
Sep 1937
Map of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan : Muglad. Sheet 65-C. Khartoum : Compiled & zincographed at the Survey Office. Includes annotation of hatched area denoting the Aulad Kamil Mezaghna and Fayyarin
scale:   1:250,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/2
1941
Africa : Abéché. N.D. 34. Service Géographique de l’Armée, 1936. Geographical Section, General Staff, War Office No 2465, 1941
scale:   1:1,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/3
1938
International map of the world : Abeshr. N.D. 34. Sudan Survey Department, Khartoum
scale:   1:1,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/4
May 1949
International map of the world : El Fasher. N.D. 35. Sudan Survey Department, Khartoum, 1946. Revised May 1949
scale:   1:1,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/5
Jun 1943
Africa : Khartoum. North D 36. Geographical Section, General Staff, War Office 1st edition, Army / Air style
scale:   1:1,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/6
Jun 1945
Africa : Khartoum. North D 36. 17 Map Reproduction Section R.E., 2nd edition
scale:   1:1,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/7
1941
Africa : Fort Archambault, first edition N.C. 34. Service Géographique de l’Armée, 1936. Geographical Section, General Staff, War Office No 2465, 1941
scale:   1:1,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/8
1939
International map of the world : Qoz Dango, N.C. 34. Sudan Survey Department, Khartoum
scale:   1:1,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/9-10
1937
International map of the world : Bahr El Arab. N.C. 35 (heavily annotated copy in 4 pieces and part copy). Sudan Survey Department, Khartoum
scale:   1:1,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/11
1955
World : Sobat. N.C. 36. Geographical Section, General Staff, War Office, No 4646, 1955. Reproduced by Ordnance Survey, 1955
scale:   1:1,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/12
Jul 1955
Map of the Southern Sudan. Khartoum : Sudan Survey Dept., July 1955. Series Topo no.; S 741-46 Map showing position of tribes - Oct. 1946, corrected Jan 1955 and Jul 1955.
scale:   1:2,000,000
SAD.PF 28/3/13
Feb 1913
The Anglo-Egyptian Sudan: Kordofan Province. Sudan Survey Department
scale:   1:2,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/14
Jun 1954
North Eastern Sudan : Tribes. Sudan Survey Department, Khartoum, 1950, revised June 1954, Topo No. S914-54
scale:   1:2,000,000
SAD.PF 28/3/15
1940
Sudan : animal density (cattle). Khartoum : Sudan Survey Dept., 1940 (Topo No.S 625-40), revised October 1956
scale:   1:4,000,000
Index terms
Thematic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/16
Aug 1958
Sudan : vegetation. Khartoum : Sudan Survey Department., (Topo No.S 625-40), corrected August 1958
scale:   1:4,000,000
Index terms
Thematic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/17
August 1950
Map of the Nile Basin. Sudan Survey Department, . Topo No. S543
scale:   1:10,000,000
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/18-20
[mid-late 20th century]
Photocopy in sections of map of Darfur from unknown publication. Cairo, 1841
scale:   
Index terms
Topographic maps
SAD.PF 28/3/21
[mid-late 20th century]
Photocopy of facsimile of manusript map of Darfur by Shaykh Muhammad al-Tounsey. Plate II from unknown publication.
scale:   
Index terms
Maps
9. Printed material
Separated printed material now in Durham University Library
Printed material deposited with collection; now integrated into the library's printed collections and catalogued on the Open Public Access Catalogue


Anya Nya no.2 [Southern Sudanese Liberation Front] (1971 Apr)
Carvalho, Henrique Augusto Dias de, Memoria: A Lunda, ou Os Estados do Muatiânvua (1890)
al-Sihafa 21 uktubur: asrar al-thawra min awwal rasasa [The Press] [21 October: secrets of the revolution] (Khartoum, 25 Oct 1964)
Verhulpen, Edmond, Baluba et Balubaïsés du Katanga (1936)