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  • Online Resource  (4)
  • 2000-2004  (4)
  • 2003  (4)
  • Human Relations Area Files, Inc  (4)
  • Nyoro (African people)  (2)
  • San Miguel Talea de Castro (Mexico)--Social life and customs  (2)
  • 1
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Nyoro (African people)
    Abstract: The Banyoro live largely in western Uganda, east of Lake Mobutu. Bunyoro is one of Uganda's administrative regions. Runyoro, the language of the Banyoro, belongs to the Central Bantu division of the Bantu language family. The Banyoro had a powerful kingdom for many centuries; its influence waned in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries under pressure from other kingdoms. All Ugandan kingdoms were abolished after Ugandan independence from British rule, but were restored in 1993. The Banyoro are largely sedentary agriculturalists. There are sixteen documents in this collection with a time focus from 1450-1967. Fieldwork was done mostly between 1950 and 1965. The major works are Beattie's study of Bunyoro political institutions (The Bunyoro state) and Roscoe's study of the royal household and rituals. The Banyoro historian, John Nyakatura and Beattie (Bunyoro, an African kingdom) both wrote primers on the Bunyoro, which serve as excellent overviews. Other Banyoro scholars have written articles critical of British historical accounts of the 1907 Nyangire Revolt, the relationship among the peoples of Northern Uganda in the 19th century, Hamitic hypothesis, and the fall of the Bunyoro state
    Description / Table of Contents: Nyoro - Godfrey N. Uzoigwe and Ian Skoggard - 2003 -- - The Nyoro state - John Beattie - 1971 -- - Bunyoro: an African kingdom - by John Beattie - 1960 -- - Nyoro marriage and affinity - J. H. M. Beattie - 1958 -- - Nyoro kinship - J. H. M. Beattie - 1958 -- - Group aspects of the Nyoro spirit mediumship cult - by John Beattie - 1961 -- - Divination in Bunyoro, Uganda - John Beattie - 1967 -- - Nyoro mortuary rites - By J. H. M. Beattie - 1961 -- - Sorcery in Bunyoro - by John Beattie - 1963 -- - Mobility and village composition in Bunyoro - By S. R. Charsley - 1970 -- - Population decline and delayed recovery in Bunyoro: 1860-1960 - By Shane Doyle - 2000 -- - The empire of Bunyoro Kitara: myth or reality? - [By] M. S. M. Kiwanuka - 1968 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a reappraisal of the decline and fall of an African Kingdom - M. S. M. Kiwanuka - 1968 -- - Aspects of Bunyoro custom and tradition - Translated, annotated, and with a pref. by Zebiya Kwamya Rigby - [1970?] -- - The Bakitara or Bunyoro: the first part of the report of the Mackie Ethnological Expedition to Central Africa - by John Roscoe - 1923 -- - Revolution and revolt in Bunyoro-Kitara: two studies - G. N. Uzoigwe - 1970 -- - Inter-ethnic co-operation in northern Uganda in the 19th century - G. N. Uzoigwe - 1970
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Criminal justice, Administration of--Mexico--Oaxaca ; Indians of Mexico--Oaxaca ; Oaxaca (Mexico)--Social conditions ; San Miguel Talea de Castro (Mexico)--Social life and customs ; San Pablo Villa de Mitla (Mexico) ; Social structure--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle ; Subsistence economy--Mexico--San Miguel Talea de Castro ; Sustainable development--Mexico--San Miguel Talea de Castro ; Teotitlán del Valle (Mexico)--Social life and customs ; Textile industry--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle ; Traditional farming--Mexico--San Miguel Talea de Castro ; Zapotec Indians ; Zapotec Indians--Agriculture ; Zapotec Indians--Food ; Zapotec Indians--Legal status, laws, etc ; Zapotec Indians--Social conditions ; Zapotec textile fabrics--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle ; Zapotec women--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle--Economic conditions ; Zapotec women--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle--Social conditions
    Abstract: This collection about the Zapotec consists of 14 documents, all in English, with a focus on the valley Zapotec of Oaxaca, and with special emphasis on the towns of Mitla, Teotitĺan del Valle, D́iaz Ordaz, San Miguel del Valle, San Sebastian Teitipac, and Talea de Castro. Good overviews of Zapotec ethnography are provided by Nader and Whitecotton. Nader summarizes both Zapotec ethnography and the literature on the Zapotec as of the middle of the 1960s. Whitecotton provides information on prehistory, as well as history and ethnographic research in the area as of the 1960s and 1970s. Two works in the collection are primarily community studies, providing fairly complete ethnographic coverage on the communities investigated. Parsons, based on fieldwork in the 1930s, is a study of Mitla, while Taylor is a study of Teotitĺan del Valle dating to the 1950s. Mitla has received a good deal of attention from ethnologists and further information on the community may be found in Messer and Williams. Control of water resources is an important aspect of land use in the Oaxaca valley. Downing's study concentrates on a single community (D́iaz Ordas) to show how water rights, water usage, and conflicts over water change during the annual cycle with changing water availability and demand. Zapotec ideas about illness and health are discussed in Messer, which also covers the classification and use of plants in Mitla, and the report by O'Nell and Selby, which discusses susto, a debilitating folk illness characterized by depression, loss of appetite, etc., which the authors consider to be a culturally patterned reaction to psychological stress. Other ethnographic topics include inheritance and its effects on social solidarity; changes in women's roles and authority in production, ritual, and local politics from 1920-1989; the production and marketing of mutates; and harmony ideology, with particular reference to justice and social control
    Description / Table of Contents: Zapotec - Douglas P. Fry - 2003 -- - Culture summary: Zapotec - Douglas P. Fry - 2003 -- - The Zapotec of Oaxaca - Laura Nader - 1969 -- - The Zapotecs: princes, priests, and peasants - by Joseph W. Whitecotton - 1977 -- - Mitla, town of the souls and other Zapoteco-speaking pueblos of Oaxaca, Mexico - by Elsie Clews Parsons - 1936 [third impression, 1970] -- - Teotilan del Valle: a typical Mesoamerican community - Robert Bartley Taylor, Jr. - 1960 [1979 copy] -- - Sex differences in the incidence of susto in two Zapotec pueblos - Carl N. O'Nell and Henry A. Selby - 1968 -- - Zapotec plant knowledge: classification, uses and communication about plants in Mitla, Oaxaca, Mexico - Ellen Messer - 1975 [1979 copy] -- - Irrigation and moisture-sensitive periods: a Zapotec case - Theodore Edmond Downing - 1974 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: from hacienda to PRI, political leadership in a Zapotec village - Antonio Ugalde - 1973 -- - Cohesive features of guelagetza system in Mitla - Aubrey Williams - 1979 -- - The social consequences of Zapotec inheritance - Theodore Edmond Dowing - 1979 -- - Teitipac and its metateros: and economic anthropological study of production and exchange in a peasant artisan community in the valley of Oaxaca, Mexico - Howard Scott Cook - 1969 [1979 copy] -- - Zapotec science: farming and food in the Northern Sierra of Oaxaca - Roberto J. González - 2001 -- - Harmony ideology: justice and control in a Zapotec mountain village - Laura Nader - 1990 -- - Zapotec women - Lynn Stephen - 1991
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Criminal justice, Administration of--Mexico--Oaxaca ; Indians of Mexico--Oaxaca ; Oaxaca (Mexico)--Social conditions ; San Miguel Talea de Castro (Mexico)--Social life and customs ; San Pablo Villa de Mitla (Mexico) ; Social structure--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle ; Subsistence economy--Mexico--San Miguel Talea de Castro ; Sustainable development--Mexico--San Miguel Talea de Castro ; Teotitlán del Valle (Mexico)--Social life and customs ; Textile industry--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle ; Traditional farming--Mexico--San Miguel Talea de Castro ; Zapotec Indians ; Zapotec Indians--Agriculture ; Zapotec Indians--Food ; Zapotec Indians--Legal status, laws, etc ; Zapotec Indians--Social conditions ; Zapotec textile fabrics--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle ; Zapotec women--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle--Economic conditions ; Zapotec women--Mexico--Teotitlán del Valle--Social conditions
    Abstract: This collection about the Zapotec consists of 14 documents, all in English, with a focus on the valley Zapotec of Oaxaca, and with special emphasis on the towns of Mitla, Teotitĺan del Valle, D́iaz Ordaz, San Miguel del Valle, San Sebastian Teitipac, and Talea de Castro. Good overviews of Zapotec ethnography are provided by Nader and Whitecotton. Nader summarizes both Zapotec ethnography and the literature on the Zapotec as of the middle of the 1960s. Whitecotton provides information on prehistory, as well as history and ethnographic research in the area as of the 1960s and 1970s. Two works in the collection are primarily community studies, providing fairly complete ethnographic coverage on the communities investigated. Parsons, based on fieldwork in the 1930s, is a study of Mitla, while Taylor is a study of Teotitĺan del Valle dating to the 1950s. Mitla has received a good deal of attention from ethnologists and further information on the community may be found in Messer and Williams. Control of water resources is an important aspect of land use in the Oaxaca valley. Downing's study concentrates on a single community (D́iaz Ordas) to show how water rights, water usage, and conflicts over water change during the annual cycle with changing water availability and demand. Zapotec ideas about illness and health are discussed in Messer, which also covers the classification and use of plants in Mitla, and the report by O'Nell and Selby, which discusses susto, a debilitating folk illness characterized by depression, loss of appetite, etc., which the authors consider to be a culturally patterned reaction to psychological stress. Other ethnographic topics include inheritance and its effects on social solidarity; changes in women's roles and authority in production, ritual, and local politics from 1920-1989; the production and marketing of mutates; and harmony ideology, with particular reference to justice and social control
    Description / Table of Contents: Zapotec - Douglas P. Fry - 2003 -- - Culture summary: Zapotec - Douglas P. Fry - 2003 -- - The Zapotec of Oaxaca - Laura Nader - 1969 -- - The Zapotecs: princes, priests, and peasants - by Joseph W. Whitecotton - 1977 -- - Mitla, town of the souls and other Zapoteco-speaking pueblos of Oaxaca, Mexico - by Elsie Clews Parsons - 1936 [third impression, 1970] -- - Teotilan del Valle: a typical Mesoamerican community - Robert Bartley Taylor, Jr. - 1960 [1979 copy] -- - Sex differences in the incidence of susto in two Zapotec pueblos - Carl N. O'Nell and Henry A. Selby - 1968 -- - Zapotec plant knowledge: classification, uses and communication about plants in Mitla, Oaxaca, Mexico - Ellen Messer - 1975 [1979 copy] -- - Irrigation and moisture-sensitive periods: a Zapotec case - Theodore Edmond Downing - 1974 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: from hacienda to PRI, political leadership in a Zapotec village - Antonio Ugalde - 1973 -- - Cohesive features of guelagetza system in Mitla - Aubrey Williams - 1979 -- - The social consequences of Zapotec inheritance - Theodore Edmond Dowing - 1979 -- - Teitipac and its metateros: and economic anthropological study of production and exchange in a peasant artisan community in the valley of Oaxaca, Mexico - Howard Scott Cook - 1969 [1979 copy] -- - Zapotec science: farming and food in the Northern Sierra of Oaxaca - Roberto J. González - 2001 -- - Harmony ideology: justice and control in a Zapotec mountain village - Laura Nader - 1990 -- - Zapotec women - Lynn Stephen - 1991
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Language: English
    Edition: eHRAF World Cultures
    Series Statement: eHRAF World Cultures
    RVK:
    Keywords: Nyoro (African people)
    Abstract: The Banyoro live largely in western Uganda, east of Lake Mobutu. Bunyoro is one of Uganda's administrative regions. Runyoro, the language of the Banyoro, belongs to the Central Bantu division of the Bantu language family. The Banyoro had a powerful kingdom for many centuries; its influence waned in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries under pressure from other kingdoms. All Ugandan kingdoms were abolished after Ugandan independence from British rule, but were restored in 1993. The Banyoro are largely sedentary agriculturalists. There are sixteen documents in this collection with a time focus from 1450-1967. Fieldwork was done mostly between 1950 and 1965. The major works are Beattie's study of Bunyoro political institutions (The Bunyoro state) and Roscoe's study of the royal household and rituals. The Banyoro historian, John Nyakatura and Beattie (Bunyoro, an African kingdom) both wrote primers on the Bunyoro, which serve as excellent overviews. Other Banyoro scholars have written articles critical of British historical accounts of the 1907 Nyangire Revolt, the relationship among the peoples of Northern Uganda in the 19th century, Hamitic hypothesis, and the fall of the Bunyoro state
    Description / Table of Contents: Nyoro - Godfrey N. Uzoigwe and Ian Skoggard - 2003 -- - The Nyoro state - John Beattie - 1971 -- - Bunyoro: an African kingdom - by John Beattie - 1960 -- - Nyoro marriage and affinity - J. H. M. Beattie - 1958 -- - Nyoro kinship - J. H. M. Beattie - 1958 -- - Group aspects of the Nyoro spirit mediumship cult - by John Beattie - 1961 -- - Divination in Bunyoro, Uganda - John Beattie - 1967 -- - Nyoro mortuary rites - By J. H. M. Beattie - 1961 -- - Sorcery in Bunyoro - by John Beattie - 1963 -- - Mobility and village composition in Bunyoro - By S. R. Charsley - 1970 -- - Population decline and delayed recovery in Bunyoro: 1860-1960 - By Shane Doyle - 2000 -- - The empire of Bunyoro Kitara: myth or reality? - [By] M. S. M. Kiwanuka - 1968 --^
    Description / Table of Contents: a reappraisal of the decline and fall of an African Kingdom - M. S. M. Kiwanuka - 1968 -- - Aspects of Bunyoro custom and tradition - Translated, annotated, and with a pref. by Zebiya Kwamya Rigby - [1970?] -- - The Bakitara or Bunyoro: the first part of the report of the Mackie Ethnological Expedition to Central Africa - by John Roscoe - 1923 -- - Revolution and revolt in Bunyoro-Kitara: two studies - G. N. Uzoigwe - 1970 -- - Inter-ethnic co-operation in northern Uganda in the 19th century - G. N. Uzoigwe - 1970
    URL: Volltext  (Deutschlandweit zugänglich)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
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