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Cannibals, Warriors, Conquerors, and Colonizers: Western Perceptions and Azande Historiography1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 May 2014

Paola Ivanov*
Affiliation:
Institut für Völkerkunde und Afrikanistik, Munich, paola_ivanov@yahoo.com

Extract

Mainly as a result of the work of E. E. Evans-Pritchard, the Azande are among the best-known African peoples. In anthropological theory they have become indissolubly associated with the study of religion and magic. Also remarkable is their expansion under the leadership of the dynasties of the Avungara and the originally Ngbandi-speaking Abandia. Starting from a small core area in the basin of the lower Mbomu, where the ancestors of the Avungara and Abandia had established themselves as rulers over parts of the resident, mainly Zande-speaking, population around the middle of the eighteenth century, the Abandia extended their rule into the region of the lower Mbomu and lower Uele, while the Avungara and their Azande followers swept eastward in a vast movement and in less than one hundred years conquered a huge area reaching as far as the upper Sue and upper Uele, integrating the population into their system of rule.

One of the reasons for the speed of this expansion is that individual members of the Avungara dynasty (who all claimed descent from Ngura, the first historical ruler in the lower Mbomu area) repeatedly founded principalities of their own in new territories. This led to the existence of a varying number of polities under numerous, more or less, powerful rulers who descended from several dynastic branches, thereby preventing the formation of a single kingdom, stable in time and place. Through the integration of numerous groups of different linguistic and ethnic origins, the population cluster was formed for which the collective name Azande has become established. The history of Azande expansion thus provides a very interesting example of a society being created through political processes, which raises questions concerning the origin, acceptance, and characteristics of centralized political organizations, as well as assimilation and acculturation processes (besides the Mangbetu in the Uele-Bomokandi area, the Azande were the only group in the region to develop centralized political structures on a wide scale).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2002

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Footnotes

1

This paper is an abridged version of the first chapter of my book, Vorkolouiale Geschichte und Expansion der Avungara-Azande: Eine quellenkritische Untersuchung (Cologne, 2000). I would like to thank Dr. Ruth Schubert, Munich, for the translation. Unless otherwise indicated, all quotations have been translated by her.

References

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5 Other variants of the term occasionally found in the sources are Dahdam, Tamnam, Tamim, and possibly Yamyam. Although all these forms represent the same general collective term for infidel cannibals, corresponding to the modern variants Niam-Niam, Yam-Yam, etc., the etymology is extremely problematical for several reasons, starting with the extreme variability of the graphic representation. Cf. Marquart, J., Die Benin-Sammlung des Reichsmuseums für Völkerkunde in Leiden. Beschriehen und mit ausführlichen Prolegomena zur Geschichte der Handelswege und Völkerbewegungen in Nordafrika (Leiden, 1913), lxxvi, cclxivn4Google Scholar; Monteil, Charles, “Les empires du Mali,” Bulletin du comité d'études historiques et scientifiques de l'Afrique occidentale française 1929, 331Google Scholar; Cuoq, Joseph M., Recueil des sources arabes concernant l'Afrique occidentale du Ville au XVIe siècle (Bilad al-Sudan) (Paris, 1975), 6, 1314, 108n1, 130n2, 205n3, 241n3Google Scholar; Mauny, Raymond, Tableau géographique de l'ouest africain au Moyen Age d'après les sources écrites, la tradition et l'archéologie (Dakar, 1961), 447, 459Google Scholar; idem, “Lamlam” Encyclopaedia of Islam, 5:651. For the transcription of the variants I have followed Cuoq, Recueil. The uniform spelling “Niam-Niam” which I use is a European standardization of the term.

6 Akhbar al-zaman (Universal History) in Cuoq, Recueil, § 47. This passage is also found in al-Bakri (460/1068) and al-Harrani (732/1332): cf. ibid., § 162, § 411. In Muruj al-dhahab al-Mascudi sometimes clearly uses the name Damadim as a collective term, like Sudan (black people of West Africa) and Zanj (inhabitants of East Africa). Les prairies d'or, transl. Barbier de Meynard and Pavet de Courteille, rev. by Charles Pellat (5 vols.: Paris, 1962-97), 1: $ 170, 2: § 844.

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9 Ibn Sacid in Cuoq, Recueil, § 344, also repeated by Abu'l-Fida' (721/1321); cf. Géographie d'Aboulféda, transl. Reinaud, J.T. and Guyard, Stanislas (2 vols.: Paris, 18481883), 2/1:209–11.Google Scholar

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13 Also in the European sources with different variants and localizations. For example, Leo Africanus mentioned a kingdom of Temiam south of the Niger kingdoms (ed. Épaulard, A., Description de l'Afrique [2 vols.: Paris, 1956, transl, of the Italian Ramusio edition: Venice, 1500], 1:10Google Scholar), the Calabrian scholar Giovanni Lorenzo d'Anania mentioned a “Iamiam” area in the interior of West Africa (L'universale fabrica del mondo, overo costnografia [2nd ed.: Venice, 1576; 1st ed. Naples, 1573], 286Google Scholar). In d'Anvilles map of Africa (1749) there are “Lem-Lem” south of the Niger on a “Lem-Lem river” (Fage, J. D., An Atlas of African History [London, 1963], 34Google Scholar).

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54 It is striking that as soon as the traders had developed a closer relationship to the northwestern Azande of Mukpoi's principality, they also introduced a specific name for it, “Dar Dika” (derived from the name for the Azande used by Ndogo-Sere speakers): Heuglin, , Reise, 207, 210.Google Scholar

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59 See the collected evidence in Pénel, Homo Caudatus, 153-59.

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67 Zyhlarz, Ernst, “Eine Auslese aus Max Müller's Kondjara-Werk,” Zeitschrift für Eingeborenen-Sprachen 32/3(1941/1942), 177Google Scholar (translated by O'Fahey, , “Fur and Fartit,” 78Google Scholar).

68 Zyhlarz, , “Auslese,” 174.Google Scholar On the lack of graves in the land of the cannibals, cf. Jackson, H. C., Black Ivory and White, or The Story of El Zubeir Pasha Slaver and Sultan as told by Himself (Oxford, 1913), 14Google Scholar; specifically on the Azande and their neighbors, see Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 226Google Scholar; Pasha, Emin, Die Tagebücher von Dr. Emin Pascha, ed. Stuhlmann, Franz (5 vols.: Hamburg, 19161927), 2:454.Google Scholar

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71 Petherick, , Egypt, 455–56Google Scholar; Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 453–54.Google Scholar

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73 See al-Tunisi's account of the Banda above, and, among others: Ibn Sacid in Cuoq, Recueil, § 352-54; d'Anania, , Universale fabrica, 286Google Scholar; Aucapitaine, . “Yem-Yem,” 6364Google Scholar; Nachtigal, , Sahara und Sudan, 3:183Google Scholar; Pénel, Homo Caudatus, 155.

74 Jones, Adam, “Cannibales,” 3344Google Scholar, and idem, Quellenproblematik, 61-67. Cf. also in repect of the so-called Zanj in East Africa al-Mascudi (Prairies d'or, 2: § 323) and al-cUmari in Cuoq, Recueil, § 471.

75 Cf., for instance, Heuglin, , Reise, 206.Google Scholar

76 Pierre-Henri-Stanislas, de Lauture, Comte d'Escayrac, Mémoire sur le Soudan (Paris, 18551856), 53Google Scholar; Trémaux, , Soudan, 352Google Scholar; Brun-Rollet, , “Brun-Rollet's Reise,” 19Google Scholar; Castelbolognesi, Angelo, “Voyage au Fleuve des Gazelles (Nil Blanc),” Le Tour du Monde (1862/1871), 391Google Scholar; Miani, in Rossi-Osmida, , Diari e carteggi, 183–84Google Scholar; Pénel, Homo Caudatus, 184-89. The most widely accepted explanation is that given by Lejean, “La queue,” but it refers to a form of clothing characteristic only of the Avukaya-Ojilä, to the west of the Yei, whom the traders considered to be “Niambara” (=“Niam-Niam”); cf. Marno, , Reise, 115, figure 120.Google Scholar

77 Lafitau, Joseph François, Customs of the American Indians Compared with the Customs of Primitive Times (Moeurs des sauvages ameriquains, comparées aux múurs des premiers temps) (2 vols.: Paris, 1724)Google Scholar, ed. and trans, by William N. Fenton and Elizabeth L. Moore (2 vols.: Toronto, 1974-77), 2:5, 23-24 and plate I.

78 Pénel, Homo Caudatus, 73-76. I believe it is not a coincidence that it was Hornemann who reported about tailed “Yam-Yam;” for he was in contact with Blumenbach, who had also recommended him to the African Association for the planned journey to the Sudan: Essner, Cornelia, Deutsche Afrikareisende im 19. Jahrhundert: Zur Sozialgeschichte des Reisens (Stuttgart, 1985), 62.Google Scholar

79 Petherick, , Egypt, 456–74Google Scholar; cf. also idem and Mrs.Petherick, , Travels, 1: 6263.Google Scholar

80 Antinori, “Viaggi,” 147n; Heuglin, , Tinne'sche Expedition, 44Google Scholar; Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 96.Google Scholar As noted above, Petherick had already invented an earlier journey.

81 Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 6062 and table 18.Google Scholar

82 Cf. also John, and Mrs.Petherick, , Travels, 1:132-33, 141, 209-10, 279–80Google Scholar; 2:114-15.

83 See, for example, the map in Heuglin, Reise, and idem, Tinne'sche Expedition, together with Hassenstein's remarks (“Bemerkungen zu den Karten,” Petermanns Mitteilungen supplementary volume issue 13, supplementary volume 3(1863/64), 44-45.

84 Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 71Google Scholar (in contrast to the correct location, ibid., 294n2); Schildkrout, Enid and Keim, Curtis A., African Reflections: Art from Northeastern Zaire (New York, 1990)Google Scholar, figures 2.5. and 11.12; John Mack, “Art, Culture, and Tribute among the Azande,” in ibid., 218.

85 Heuglin's most westerly point was the river Pongo (“Bahr Dembo or Kosanga”). On Heuglin's biography see also Essner, , Deutsche Afrikareisende, 2124.Google Scholar

86 The Barambu (“Berembo”), the Sere (“Scheri” or “Schera”), and the Apambia (“Bambia”) can be definitely identified: cf. Heuglin, , Reise, 207.Google Scholar

87 See especially idem., Tinne'sche Expedition, 9 and idem., Reise, 212-13, 224-25. Heuglin was the first to mention the function of the abanyaki (“Beqi”), subordinate provincial chiefs of non-Avungara origin (as against Evans-Pritchard, who believed, Azande, 147, the term was first used by Schweinfurth.

88 Cf. Heuglin, , “Berichte und Arbeiten,” 106, 163–64Google Scholar; idem., Tinne'sche Expedition, 9; idem., Reise, 208-12

89 Petermann/Hassenstein, Innerafrika, frontispiece. Cf. Éric, de Dampierre, Harpes zandé (Paris, 1991), 8188.Google Scholar

90 Heuglin, , “Berichte und Arbeiten,” 105–07.Google Scholar

91 For biographical details see Bassani, Ezio, ed., Carlo Piaggia nella terra del Niam-Niam (1863-1865) (Lucca, 1978), xivxxxvi.Google Scholar

92 Antinori, “Reise vom Bahr el Gazai” and idem, “Viaggi,” 93-103. Research usually tends to neglect the fact that in addition to the famous travelers, most of whom came from socially privileged backgrounds, there were also a large number of European emigrants in Egypt at that time, especially Italians, with more lowly social origins. They included craftsmen, petty traders, hunters, and taxidermists who were employed by collectors and naturalists. For example, a collecting trip into western Azande country was undertaken in 1876-79 by Friedrich Bohndorff, a former goldsmith's apprentice (later employed as a taxidermist by Wilhelm Junker), reported by Schweinfurth, Georg, ed., “F. Bohndorff's Reise nach Dar Abu Dinga,” Das Ausland (1884), 541–45Google Scholar, and Hassenstein, Bruno, “Friedrich Bohndorffs Reisen in Zentralafrika, 1874 bis 1883,” Petermanns Mitteilungen 31(1885), 339–50.Google Scholar

93 Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, 4.Google Scholar

94 The term badia was generally used for friendly northern Sudanese traders (Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 290Google Scholar).

95 Apart from two long visits to Italy Piaggia spent the rest of his life in the Sudan, but never ranked among the highly esteemed and popular explorers. His travels included trips up the Blue Nile, the Bahr al-Jabal and the Victoria Nile, and to Ethiopia; he died in 1882 in Karkoj (Sinnar).

96 Piaggia, Carlo, Dell'arrivo fra i Niam-Niam e del soggiomo sul lago Tzaua in Abissinia (Lucca, 1877).Google Scholar

97 Antinori, “Viaggi.”

98 Pellegrinetti, Alfonso, ed., Le memorie di Carlo Piaggia (Florence, 1941).Google Scholar

99 Bassani, Carlo Piaggia.

100 Letter dd 15 April 1875, quoted in ibid., xxxvii.

101 In general reflections on the best way to travel, Piaggia argued in favor of spending some time among the people and sharing their way of life: Alcune lettere del Cav. Carlo Piaggia,” Atti R. Accademia Lucchese 22(1883)Google Scholar, quoted in Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, xxv.Google Scholar

102 Ibid., 80, 104, 121-22, and Antinori, , “Viaggi,” 126, 128Google Scholar; cf. Evans-Pritchard, “Zande State” in idem, The Position of Women in Primitive Societies and Other Essays in Social Anthropology (London, 1965), 121-22. A remark in Antinori's report that no bride price is paid and that the bride is presented by the prince was rejected by Evans-Pritchard as an error by Piaggia: cf. “Zande Cannibalism” in ibid., 140. On the giving of wives by the princes, which could also follow the principle of delayed exchange, see Lagae, C.-R., Les Azande ou Niam-Niam (Brussels, 1926), 193Google Scholar; Lagae, C.-R. and Pias, V.H. Vanden, La Langue des Azande (3 vols.: Brussels, 19211925)Google Scholar, 2:s.v. harem; Émile, Leynaud, “Ligwa: Un village zande de la R.C.A.,” Cahiers d'études africaines 3(1963), 363Google Scholar; De Jonghe, E., Les formes d'asservissement dans les sociétés indigènes du Congo belge (Brussels, 1949), 76.Google Scholar

103 Cf. Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, 71.Google Scholar

104 For the exact details, see Ivanov, Vorkoloniale Geschichte, table 1.

105 Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 290300Google Scholar; Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, 37.Google Scholar This battle was already mentioned in Pellegrinetti's edition (Le memorie di Carlo Piaggia, 217).

106 Azande, 295-96; cf. Piaggia, , Dell'arrivo fra i Niam-Niam, 79.Google Scholar

107 Azande, 297.

108 “Viaggi,” 109, 112-13.

109 There are discrepancies both in the route and in the duration of the stay of the traders (a little over five months according to Antinori, a little over two in Piaggia's travel account). Evans-Pritchard only had Pellegrinetti's edited text at his disposal, which adopted the chronology of the second version, but the publisher does give a summary of the contents of the first version.

110 Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, xxviii.Google Scholar

111 Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, 66, 71Google Scholar (first version of Piaggia's); Pellegrinetti, , Memorie, 267, 269 (second version of same).Google Scholar

112 Antinori, , “Viaggi,” 121Google Scholar and map; Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, 37-38, 40, 56, 58, 63, 6971.Google Scholar For details from the second version see also Pellegrinetti, , Memorie, 203-04, 252–54.Google Scholar

113 Percke and Ngindo, brothers of Tombo and not his sons; Wando, son of Bazingbi and not a “small, independent chief”; Ezo, son of Bazingbi, and not his “administrator” (i.e., subordinate provincial chief). For full details see Ivanov, Vorkoloniale Geschichte, table 2.

114 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 318, 323.Google Scholar

115 Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, 56, 113Google Scholar; ibid., 114: he did reach Kipa (second version).

116 Calonne-Beaufaict, , Azande, 73Google Scholar; Hutereau, , Histoire des peuplades, 164–66Google Scholar; Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 660 (table 18).Google Scholar

117 Evans-Pritchard, , “Zande Cannibalism,” 156Google Scholar; idem, Azande, 82, 86; Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 391-404, 463–79.Google Scholar

118 Antinori, , “Viaggi,” 105–06.Google Scholar

119 Ibid., 124.

120 Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, 90Google Scholar; cf. Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 257–58.Google Scholar

121 Cf. Evans-Pritchard, “Zande Cannibalism.”

122 Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, 91, 135–37.Google Scholar In other ways too Piaggia showed a greater tendency toward sensationalism in the later accounts of his experiences. Especially in the lecture and in the second version of his travel account he showed a preference for spicy stories and makes unlikely claims about his own role among the Azande. Cf. ibid., 52, 61, 139-40, and Dell'arrivo fra i Niam-Niam, 15.

123 Anonymous (probably August Petermann), Das Land der Niamniam und die südwestliche Wasserscheide des Nil. Nach den Berichten von C. Piaggia und den Brüdern Poncet,” Petermanns Mitteilungen 14(1868), 413.Google Scholar

124 For biographical details, see the obituary by Busse, W., “Georg Schweinfurth,” Berichte der deutschen botanischen Gesellschaft 43(1925), 74111Google Scholar; the biography by Schweinfurth's great-nephew, Guenther, Konrad, Georg Schweinfurth. Lebensbild eines Afrikaforschers. Briefe von 1857-1925 (Stuttgart, 1954)Google Scholar; and Essner, , Deutsche Afrikareisende, 8185.Google Scholar

125 Cf. among others Lejean, Les Nyamnyam,” 6Google Scholar; Antinori, , “Viaggi,” 113Google Scholar; Ori, Leopoldo, “Comunicazioni del Dott. Ori sopra le spedizioni dei fratelli Poncet all'Ovest del Fiume Bianco,” Bollettino délia Società Geografica ltaliana 1(1868), 167–91Google Scholar; Anonymous, “Das Land der Niamniam und die südwestliche Wasserscheide des Nil,” 412-26. The Uele was mostly called “Babura” or “Bahar [Bahr] Monbuttu” by the ivory hunters.

126 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 358.Google Scholar

127 I refer here to the third, revised edition of Schweinfurth's book; where there are important differences, the first German edition (2 vols.: Leipzig, 1874) is also referred to.

128 In 1886 he was made an honorary member of the Deutsche Kolonialgesellschaft, he was one of the instigators of Carl Peters' “Emin Pasha relief expedition,” and he became the chairman of the Peters Foundation, which supported colonial endeavors in East Africa. He was almost ninety years old when he died in 1925.

129 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 174-75, 184, 218–19Google Scholar; at the beginning of the journey he mentioned being accompanied by two slave girls, who served “as living mills:” ibid., 23.

130 Ibid., 242-45.

131 Dr. G. Schweinfurth's Reise nach den oberen Nil-Ländern. IV. Reise in das Land der Niam Niam und Monbuttu, 1870,” Petermanns Mitteilungen 17(1871), 15.Google Scholar

132 Schweinfurth, Georg, Linguistische Ergebnisse einer Reise nach Centralafrika (Berlin, 1873), 3653Google Scholar; on the genesis of the vocabulary, cf. Im Herzen, 455. Most of the words he gave are right, if one discounts his attempts at reproducing them phonetically, where errors occurred, which Evans-Pritchard pointed out: Sources, with Particular Reference to the Southern Sudan,” Cahiers d'études africaines 41(1971), 138–39.Google Scholar The example given by Evans-Pritchard, in which he claims that Schweinfurth had understood the name given to him by the Azande, ‘leaf-eater,’ wrongly as Mbarik-pah instead of barikpe, is due to a misleading spelling in the English edition. In the vocabulary the word “leaf” is given correctly as pè; in the German edition of the travel account this is rendered with a popularized spelling as Mbarik-päh.

133 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 174.Google Scholar When the expedition ended, Jabir remained in the Bahr al-Ghazal, after Schweinfurth had “secured his freedom.” Amber accompanied Schweinfurth to Cairo, where he found employment with a physician friend of Schweinfurth (ibid., 529, 537; for a portrait of Jabir see ibid., 264).

134 “Sources,” 137.

135 According to Schweinfurth's own statement, the loss included travel journals, itineraries, vocabularies, body measurements, and metereological records, plus a large part of his collections, especially the ethnographical, entomological, and zoological collections. See Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 444, 446, 455Google Scholar, Guenther, , Georg Schweinfurth, 234–38Google Scholar, and a letter from Schweinfurth to a fellow traveler and friend Miani, Giovanni in Camperio, Manfredo, ed., Il viaggio di Giovanni Miani al Monbuttu. Note coordinate dalla Società geografica italiana (Rome, 1875), 3940.Google Scholar

136 For instance, Evans-Pritchard, , “Zande Cannibalism,” 140Google Scholar; Kremser, , “Das Bild der ‘menschenfressenden Niam-Niam,’95Google Scholar; Essner, Cornelia, “Some Aspects of German Travellers' Accounts from the Second Half of the 19th Century” in Heintze, Beatrix and Jones, Adam, eds., European Sources for Sub-Saharan Africa before 1900: Use and Abuse (Stuttgart, 1987), 203.Google Scholar

137 On this type of source material see Roy C. Bridges, “Nineteenth-Century East African Travel Records, with an Appendix on ‘Armchair Geographers’ and Cartography” in ibid., 186-88.

138 Im Herzen, 433.

139 Cf. ibid., 308-16 and the letter in Guenther, Georg Schweinfurth, 205-10.

140 “Dr. G. Schweinfurth's Reise nach den oberen Nil-Ländern. IV. Reise in das Land der Niam Niam und Monbuttu, 1870” and V. Bemerkungen zur Karte seiner Reisen im oberen Nil-Gebiete, 1869 und 1870,” Petermanns Mitteilungen 17(1871), 11-16, 131–39.Google Scholar This journal published five short reports by Schweinfurth, in part with the respective maps, based on letters written before the loss of his records (apart from the reports already mentioned: “I. Vorläufige Nachrichten über die Reise bis Chartum, August bis November 1868” and Skizze eines neuen Weges von Suakin nach Berber, zurückgelegt im September 1868 von Dr. G. Schweinfurth,” Petermanns Mitteilungen 15[1869]: 53-57, 281–91Google Scholar; III. Aufenthalt im Djur-Gebiet, Sommer 1869,” Petermanns Mitteilungen 16[1870], 1820.).Google Scholar Schweinfurth's observations from this period appeared in journal form, with maps and itineraries, in the Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde zu Berlin. As the date of writing is not given, it remains unclear whether these are extracts from the journal that was destroyed in the fire. Tagebuch einer Reise zu den Niam-Niam und Monbuttu 1870,” Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde zu Berlin 7(1872), 385475Google Scholar, is a particular problem: it was published only in 1872, after Schweinfurth's return from Africa and could therefore have been written in retrospect. Complete references for other letters and especially botanical reports sent from Africa can be found in the bibliography of Schweinfurth's writings in the third edition of his travel account, published in 1918.

141 Essner, , Deutsche Afrikareisende, 112.Google Scholar The young Bongo slave who was presented to Schweinfurth as a gift seems to have accompanied him during the whole expedition. Unfortunately, Allagabo did not have a “kind fate” in the “places of culture,” as Schweinfurth prophesied he would: entrusted by Schweinfurth to the explorer Gerhard Rohlfs, who was married to his niece, he ended up as the “wild man” in a circus, after a number of failed attempts at gaining an education, and he finally died of pneumonia. For more details, see ibid., 112, 179n30, Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 523-24, 529Google Scholar, and Guenther, , Georg Schweinfurth, 162, 248–49.Google Scholar

142 Evans-Pritchard, , “Zande Cannibalism,” 139–40Google Scholar; idem., “Sources,” 135-40. Evans-Pritchard also criticized Schweinfurth for not noticing that among the Azande alone, of all the peoples he visited, pottery was a craft practiced by men and not women. However, this is a problematical criticism, for female potters are mentioned by witnesses who knew the Azande well: Larken, P. M., “Impressions of the Azande,” Sudan Notes and Records 10(1927), 129Google Scholar; Lagae, C.-R., Azande, 157.Google Scholar

143 To the examples given by Evans-Pritchard of borrowings from Piaggia (“Zande Cannibalism,” 139-40; cf. Antinori, , “Viaggi,” 123, 126Google Scholar, and Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 298, 302Google Scholar) can be added the description of the elephant hunt among the Azande (Schweinfurth's journey did not coincide with the hunting season), which is similar to a description by Petherick (ibid., 300; Petherick, , Egypt, 470–71).Google Scholar

144 Guenther, , Georg Schweinfurth, 255–58Google Scholar; Essner, , Deutsche Afrikareisende, 108–12Google Scholar and idem, “Some Aspects,” 201-03. The first edition of his book appeared in 1873 in an English translation by Ellen E. Frewer because better conditions were offered.

145 This seems to be Essner's opinion: “Some Aspects,” 203.

146 As a European, i.e., “as a being of the superior kind” (Im Herzen, 244), Schweinfurth continually strove to set himself apart from the “Negroes” and the “Nubian rabble” (ibid., 183). Derogatory remarks are common, for instance concerning the northern Sudanese traders and soldiers, who were his companions for many months (e.g., ibid., 55, 456-60). Schweinfurth's description of the pygmies (ibid., 358-61), not far removed from a description of anthropomorphic monkeys, also influenced the way they were perceived by subsequent observers.

147 With “free commerce” as a slogan, he, like most of his contemporaries, favored European intervention in Africa (cf. ibid., 511-12). For an analysis of Schweinfurth's colonial intentions see Marx, Christoph, “Völker ohne Schrift und Geschichte:” Zur historischen Erfassung des vorkolonialen Schwarzafrika in der deutschen Forschung des 19. und frühen 20. Jahrhunderts (Stuttgart, 1988), 6970.Google Scholar

148 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 447.Google Scholar

149 Ibid., 100.

150 Pratt, Marie Louise, Imperial Eyes: Travel Writing and Transculturation (London, 1992), 202–05.Google Scholar

151 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 120.Google Scholar

152 Ibid., 2.

153 Cf. ibid., 136. The Africans were referred to as “savages” in the original edition of the travel report; in the edition of 1918, Schweinfurth put the term in inverted commas, following a warning issued by the Berlin museum ethnologist, Felix von Luschan. For details of his evolutionist approach, based on the principles of natural science, cf. Henn, Alexander, Reisen in vergangene Gegenwart: Geschichte und Geschichtlichkeit der Nicht-Europäer im Denken des 19. Jahrhunderts (Mainz, 1988), 62-63, 8586.Google Scholar

154 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 295.Google Scholar Schweinfurth was following the ideas of Adolf Bastian, who belonged to his circle of friends. Bastian believed in the existence of universal basic elements in human life (Elementargedanken), which can be found in its supposedly most uncomplicated form among “primitive” peoples.

155 On this attitude see Schweinfurth's, Artes Africanae: Illustrations and Descriptions of Productions of the Industrial Arts of Central African Tribes (London, 1875) viiixGoogle Scholar, and Marx, Völker ohne Schrift und Geschichte,” 7476.Google Scholar

156 Cf. also the analysis of Schildkrout and Keim, , African Reflections, 2930.Google Scholar

157 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 355.Google Scholar The “discovery” of the pygmies enabled Schweinfurth to surround his journey with an epic aura (ibid., 355-58). But there is also no lack of allusions to those “classical” barbarians, the Scythians, and to Herodotus' description (ibid., 299, 380).

158 Ibid., 49, 218.

159 Letter from Schweinfurth to a German publisher interested in his travel account, quoted in Essner, , Deutsche Afrikareisende, 112.Google Scholar Schweinfurth's original drawings are preserved in the archives of the Frobenius Institute in Frankfurt. His sketches of the Bongo were published in Waltraud and Andreas Kronenberg, Die Bongo: Bauern und Jäger im Südsudan (Wiesbaden, 1981), chapter 14.2.Google Scholar There are some others in Schildkrout/Keim, African Reflections, figures 8.2 and 12.5, and in Geary, Christraud M., “Nineteenth-century Images of the Mangbetu in Explorers' Accounts” in Schildkrout, Enid and Keim, Curtis A., eds., The Scramble for Art in Central Africa (Cambridge, 1998), 133–68Google Scholar, where Geary also offers an analysis of Schweinfurth's visual representation of the Mangbetu.

160 (London, 1875); German title: Artes Africanae: Abbildungen und Beschreibungen von Erzeugnissen des Kunstfleißes centralafrikanischer Völker.

161 Artes Africanae, ix (original translation).

162 Keim, Curtis A., “Artes Africanae: The Western Discovery of ‘Art’ in Northeastern Congo,” in Schildkrout, /Keim, , Scramble, 111-18, 130.Google Scholar

163 Keim, , “Western Discovery,” 109–11.Google Scholar

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165 Im Herzen, 343 figure; cf. Geary, , “Nineteenth-Century Images,” 159–63.Google Scholar

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167 (12 vols: Berlin, 1849-59).

168 Im Herzen, 318, 341-42. However, Schweinfurth did not commit himself on the question of an “Asian” origin of the Mangbetu rulers. There was a theoretical conception among certain German-speaking ethnologists at the time that stressed the unity of Egyptian culture and that of the sub-Saharan African state formations, without actually claiming that they originated from Asia. The defenders of this theory included Schweinfurth's influential friend, Hartmann, Robert, who wrote “Untersuchungen über die Völkerschaften Nord-Ost-Afrikas I,” Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 1(1869), 2345Google Scholar; cf. also Zitelmann, Thomas, “Formen und Institutionen politischer Herrschaft” in Deutsch, Jan-Georg and Wirz, Albert, eds., Geschichte in Afrika: Einführung in Probleme und Debatten (Berlin, 1997), 204–05.Google Scholar

169 Schildkrout, /Keim, , African Reflections, 24-25, 3234.Google Scholar

170 Schweinfurth's knowledge of the “Jaga” appears to be based on Dapper (cf. Im Herzen [1st ed.: 1874], 2:143). Adolf Bastian had also compared the Jaga with the Fang (E/M Besuch in San Salvador der Hauptstadt des Königreichs Congo [Bremen, 1859], 150nGoogle Scholar) and the Niam-Niam (Die Loango-Küste,” Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde zu Berlin 8[1873], 132Google Scholar). On the stereotypical image of the Fang see Vansina, Jan, “Knowledge and Perceptions of the African Past” in Jewsiewicki, Bogumil and Newbury, David, eds., African Historiographies: What History for Which Africa? (Beverly Hills, 1986), 2931.Google Scholar

171 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 238, 296–97.Google Scholar

172 Ibid., 287.

173 Ibid., 292; there are many other similar passages, e.g., ibid., 227, 253, 288-89.

174 Amber's photographs are preserved today in the Ethnologisches Museum in Berlin.

175 Ibid., 242, 298, 418.

176 Ibid., 298. The same claim was made in the Piaggia-Antinori report (“Viaggi,” 123) but is not confirmed by other sources.

177 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 242, 298Google Scholar; cf. “Viaggi,” 123.

178 Cf., for instance, Im Herzen, 229-30, 292, 297-98, 346, 349-51.

179 Reisen in Afrika 1875-1886 (3 vols.: Vienna, 18891891), 2:203–04.Google Scholar

180 Schildkrout/Keim, African Reflections.

181 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 184.Google Scholar

182 Apart from the Amadi, the “Azande” population also included Barambu and Bantu-speaking Abangbinda. Cf. Evans-Pritchard, Zande Cannibalism,” 156–58Google Scholar; Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 463-80.Google Scholar

183 “Bemerkungen zur Karte,” 137-38. The two Zande words which express an individual's group membership, ngbatunga and (ngba)rika can be used for both “clan” and “ethnic group.” Their meaning is closer to genus/species/kind/breed, etc.: Gore, Edward Clive, Zande and English Dictionary (2nd ed.: London, 1952 [1931])Google Scholar, s.v. ngbarika, ngbatunga; cf. Pias, Lagae Vanden, Langue des Azande, 2Google Scholar:s.v. espèce, tribu; 3:s.v. ngbwatunga, lika.

184 Im Herzen, 269-79. Cf. Costermans, B. J., Mosaïque Bangba (Brussels, 1953), 5, 1819Google Scholar; Lotar, L., “Souvenirs de l'Uele: Schweinfurth (1836-1926),” Congo 11/2(1930), 171n10.Google Scholar

185 “Bemerkungen zur Karte,” 138-39; Im Herzen, 266.

186 Zande Cannibalism,” 137-41.

187 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 234, 266, 296.Google Scholar

188 Im Herzen, 266.

189 “Bemerkungen zur Karte,” 138-39; Camperio, , Viaggio, 3839.Google Scholar It is not clear whether these “trophy trees” were ancestral shrines of the Amadi and “Amiangba” (Barambu), who were integrated in the Azande cluster (as Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 99Google Scholar, and idem., “Zande Cannibalism,” 156-57; similarly Giorgetti, Filiberto, Cannibalism in Zandeland: Truth and Falsehood [Bologna, n.d.], 5859)Google Scholar, or really trees for hunting trophies, such as are also confirmed (against Evans-Pritchard) by other travelers and for the Bongo as late as the 1950s (without human skulls). Cf. for the region south of the Uele, Gaetano Casati, Died anni in Equatoria e ritorno con Emin Pascia (2 vols.: Milan, 1891), 1:129Google Scholar; for the Azande Adio, Emin, Tagebücher, 2:419Google Scholar, and for their Mundu neighbors, Nalder, L. F., A Tribal Survey of Mongalla Province (London, 1937), 226Google Scholar; for the Bongo, Castelbolognesi, “Voyage,” 390–91Google Scholar, Petherick, , Egypt, 401, 405–97Google Scholar, and Kronenberg, , Bongo, 9697Google Scholar, figures 106 and 108.

190 “Bemerkungen zur Karte,” 139.

191 Ibid.; Im Herzen, 410-11.

192 The Albert N'yanza, Great Basin of the Nile, and Explorations of the Nile Sources (2 vols.: London, 1866).Google Scholar

193 (Edinburgh, 1863).

194 Schweinfurth, Im Herzen, 280, 313, 323, 357 et passim.

195 Ibid., 166-67.

196 Albert N'yanza, 1:215.Google Scholar

197 Journal of the Discovery of the Source of the Nile, 233, 514-15.

198 “Bemerkungen zur Karte,” 138-39.

199 Im Herzen, 212, 226, 230, 259, 311.

200 Im Herzen, 295, 385. This could be understood in a figurative sense, as referring to the enemy as animals, if it were not for the fact that all credible witnesses agree in their reports that the cry was vura, “war” (Bassani, , Carlo Piaggia, 71Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 3:218Google Scholar). The alleged call of the cannibals for meat is found in so many sources that it would be worth investigating whether this could be a Wandermotiv: cf. among others, Heuglin, , Reise, 219Google Scholar; Stanley, Henry M., Through the Dark Continent (2 vols.: London, 1878), 2:201, 210, 223-24, 262-66, 274Google Scholar; Monteil, , “Empires du Mali,” 331.Google Scholar

201 Evans-Pritchard, , Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic among the Azande (Oxford, 1937), 3335.Google Scholar

202 On Miani's biography and his journeys see Camperio, Viaggio; Rossi-Osmida, Diari e carteggi; Battaglia, Roberto, La prima guerra d'Africa (Turin, 1958), 2839.Google Scholar The report published by Miani on his journey up the Nile (Le spedizioni alle origini del Nilo [Venice, 1865]) is virtually unobtainable.

203 Cf. Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 295–97 and genealogy 9.Google Scholar

204 Camperio, Viaggio. The original notes taken during the journey have been lost.

205 This confusion can be attributed to Schweinfurth, who reconstructed the course of the Uele and the location of the territories of the sons of Kipa on the basis of information culled from the traders: cf. the first edition of Im Herzen (1874), 2:518–22Google Scholar and map.

206 Cf. Casati, , Died anni, 1:9194Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 2:308-09, 331Google Scholar; 3:44; Lotar, , “Souvenirs de l'Uele: Giovanni Miani (1810-1872),” Congo 11/2(1930), 635–61Google Scholar; 12/1(1931), 493-514, 671-86. In his reconstruction Junker mistook the route of the outward journey with that of the return journey, which indicates that he did not have Miani's published, very clear itineraries. Probably he relied here on (misunderstood) information from Casati.

207 Usually referred to in the sources as Danaqla, although Sulayman and the majority of his followers were Jacaliyin.

208 Junker, , Reisen, 1:560–66Google Scholar; Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:229-30, 254-56, 259-60, 264–65Google Scholar; Ewald, , Soldiers, 174Google Scholar; Gray, , History, 102, 110-15, 125, 137-38, 145–50Google Scholar; Thuriaux-Hennebert, , Zande, 76-79, 82, 100-05, 153–54.Google Scholar

209 Cf. Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 110-11, 209-12, 290–92Google Scholar, with more references; Junker, , Reisen, 2:128-29, 190, 249-50, 455Google Scholar; 3:157-63, 206-07, 211, 221-22, 276, 280-81, 295-96; de Dampierre, Eric, Des ennemis, des Arabes, des histoires (Paris, 1983), 4850.Google Scholar

210 Junker, , Reisen, 2:133, 160-61, 191.Google Scholar Contrary to the claims of all other authors, this attack did not take place while Rifaci was in the service of the Bahr al-Ghazal traders but, as Junker stated in a much-neglected remark in 1879, when Rifaci had already gone over to Gessi, who was fighting against Sulayman: Wilhelm Junker, Adolf Schmidt, and Bruno Hassenstein, Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse von Dr. W. Junkers Reisen in Zentral-Afrika 1880-85 (Gotha, 1889) (=Petermanns Mitteilungen supplementary volume 20), 32; cf. Zaghi, Riconquista, 269n310, 293, 302. This shows the absurdity of ideological claims that Ndoruma had been persuaded by Gessi's “peaceful” policy to recognize the administration (as Gessi in ibid., 468, 471, 540; Casati, , Died anni, 1:5051).Google Scholar

211 cAbd al-Samad was killed in 1874 in a revolt of his Azande allies that was most likely led by Ngangi, the son of Muduba, whom Schweinfurth visited. It was probably instigated by Gbudwe, who then defeated Ngangi in his turn and incorporated his territory into his own principality ca. 1875). Cf. Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 321–32.Google Scholar

212 Zaghi, , Riconquista, 540Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 2:188, 201-02, 224, 346-47, 351-52, 354.Google Scholar

213 Ibid., 2:192; 3:153, 356-57; Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 332–38.Google Scholar

214 Gambali belonged to the Mabadi, a clan of the Bantu-speaking Gbote who lived among the Bangba.

215 Cf. Keim, Curtis A., “Precolonial Mangbetu Rule: Political and Economic Factors in Nineteenth-Century Mangbetu History (Northeast Zaire)” (Ph.D. diss., Indiana University, 1979), 230–73Google Scholar; also Casati, Died antti, 1:102-03, 212-16, 244; Junker, , Reisen, 3:46-54, 133–36Google Scholar; Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:166, 227, 412, 467–71.Google Scholar

216 Selected letters and reports sent by Gessi to L'Esploratore on his stay in the Sudan were published posthumously by his son, Gessi, Felice, and Camperio, Manfredo as Seite antii net Sudan egiziano: Memorie di Romolo Gessi (Milan, 1891)Google Scholar, but mixed arbitrarily with additional texts from other authors (including Camperio). Very informative are Zaghi's, Vita di Romolo Gessi (Milan, 1939)Google Scholar and especially his large, richly annotated collection of mainly unpublished documents from Gessi's time in the Sudan, Riconquista. But Zaghi took a fundamentally positive view of his countryman, which affected his judgement of Gessi's work in the Bahr al-Ghazal.

217 Sette anni, 380-82; Riconquista, 424, 428, 430, 468, 540, 542-43.

218 On the Mangbetu see in particular Zaghi, , Riconquista, 453–58Google Scholar; on the Azande, , Sette anni, 238-39, 379-82, 402-03, 408–11Google Scholar; Riconquista, 468, 471-72, 540.

219 Cf. Chaillé-Long, Charles, Central Africa: Naked Truths of Naked People. An Account of Expeditions to the Lake Victoria Nyanza and the Makraka Niam-Niam, West of the Bahr-el-Abiad (White Nile) (London, 1876), 244–89Google Scholar; Marno, , Reise, 71139.Google Scholar

220 Gray, , History, 55-56, 147-48, 159–60Google Scholar; Petherick, , Travels, 1:62-63, 65, 316Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 1:353-56, 373-75, 499, 509, 534, 544–45Google Scholar; 2:109, 528, 543; 3:373-74; Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:376.Google Scholar Contrary to the unanimous statements of European observers, one of Evans-Pritchard's informants said that Ringio belonged to the non-aristocratic Aboro clan: Evans-Pritchard, “Zande Kings and Princes” in idem, Essays in Social Anthropology (London, 1962), 110-11.

221 Marno, , Reise, 117–31.Google Scholar

222 Chaillé-Long, , Central Africa, 273, 287Google Scholar; Gessi, , “Sette anni nel Sudan egizi'ano. Memorie inédite di Gessi-Bascia,” Esploratore 8(1884), 337–38Google Scholar (reproduced in Zaghi, , Riconquista, 568, 570Google Scholar) and La guerra contro i negrieri del Fiume delle Gazzelle,” Esploratore 3, supplementary issue 2(1879), 23Google Scholar (also in Sette anni, 279 and in Zaghi, Riconquista, 290n355). It is clear from the descriptions, for instance, that the administrator of the main Khartoum zariba in Makaraka, Ahmad Agha, served as informant for both of them. The culinary preference for bodily extremities handed down by the northern Sudanese can already be found in Poncet, “Notice géographique et ethnologique,” 38-39). This may also be the origin of the ubiquity of hands and feet in Schweinfurth's “proofs” of cannibalism. Evans-Pritchard's informants also said that the bodies of slain enemies were mutilated, although they claim that the ears and genitals were brought as trophies to the Avungara courts: Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 265.Google Scholar

223 Cf. Zaghi, , Riconquista, 271-74, 290.Google Scholar

224 Marno, , Reise, 130, 134Google Scholar; Wilson, /Felkin, , Uganda, 2:168, 187–88.Google Scholar

225 Buchta, Richard, “Meine Reise nach den Nil-Quellseen im Jahr 1878,” Peternianns Mitteilungen 27(1881), 8189Google Scholar; cf. also Thomas, H. B., “Richard Buchta and Early Photography in Uganda,” Uganda Journal 24(1960), 114–19.Google Scholar

226 The photographs by Buchta purchased in 1881 are preserved in the Museum für Völkerkunde in Vienna. Other works by Buchta treat the political history of the Turco-Egyptian Sudan and the Mahdiyya: Der Sudan und der Mahdi (Stuttgart, 1884),Google Scholar and Der Sudan unter ägyptischer Herrschaft (Leipzig, 1888).Google Scholar

227 Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:50, 53Google Scholar; cf. also Wilson, /Felkin, , Uganda, 2:86.Google Scholar

228 “Reise nach den Nil-Quellseen,” 84, 89; on these Bamboy groups see also Junker, , Reisen, 1:354Google Scholar and plate 6.

229 Die oberen Nil-Länder, plate 86; Reisen, 1:429.

230 Die oberen Nil-Länder, plates 93, 96, 97.

231 Wilson, /Felkin, , Uganda, 2:139.Google Scholar

232 Many letters sent from Emin to Junker were published with his journals and in Buchta, Der Sudan unter ägyptischer Herrscleft. Junker lived with Emin in Lado and informed him of his observations (Reisen, 3:387, 404Google Scholar). Casati accompanied Emin on his tour of inspection to Monbuttu, procured ethnographical and zoological items for his collection (Casati, , Died anni, 1:xii, 136Google Scholar; Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:463Google Scholar; 3:40, 54), and also seems to have imparted ethnographical information to him. Thus a list of the Meje clans comes from Casati (Emin, , Tagebücher 2:468Google Scholar); the statement that the lances of the “Akka” (pygmies) really came from the Mabodo, can be found both in Casati (letter published in Esploratore 7[1883], 281Google Scholar) and in Emin, (Tagebücher, 2:464).Google Scholar Casati and Junker had also met in 1881 and 1882 in the area south of the Uele. As already mentioned, Junker's misunderstanding of the route followed by Miani might also originate from Casati.

233 Cf. Junker, , Reisen, 2:1-2, 271Google Scholar; Hevesi, Ludwig, Wilhelm Junker. Lebensbild eines Afrikaforschers (Berlin, 1896), 2, 35-37, 63-83, 98.Google Scholar Junker's biographer Hevesi knew the traveler and was given his private letters and other documents by the family.

234 Junker, , Reisen, 2:208–09Google Scholar; 3:72, 169.

235 Junker/Schmidt/Hassenstein, Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse: Hassenstein's general map can be found there in four sheets, and in Reisen, l:plate 9. The account also contains several detailed maps.

236 As the name suggests, the goal of this geographical society and of the journal, which followed the line of popular science, was to promote commercial colonialism. It was supported by important personalities in the Milanese financial and industrial worlds, and had close links with Romolo Gessi, who was the representative in Africa of the pharmaceutical industrialist Carlo Erba. Cf. Battaglia, , Prima guerra, 103–06Google Scholar, and Surdich, Francesco, ed., L'esptorazione italiana dell'Africa (Milan, 1982), 1011.Google Scholar

237 Camperio in the introduction to Casati's letters in Esploratore 7(1883), 263.Google Scholar

238 For the problem of equipment see Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:410Google Scholar, and Casati's letters (in Esploratore 5[1881], 67Google Scholar and Esplorazione commerciale in Africa 2(1887], 173-74, 182Google Scholar).

239 Cf. Junker's and Emin's remarks on Casati's great household (Junker, , Reisen, 3:490Google Scholar; Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:436Google Scholar) and those of Jephson on Casati's “oriental” lifestyle: Jephson, A. J. Mounteney and Stanley, Henry M., Emin Pasha and the Rebellion at the Equator (London, 1890), 196.Google Scholar

240 Emin, , Tagebücher, 3:40, 54Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 3:469, 490Google Scholar; Casati, , Died anni, 1:266.Google Scholar

241 Evans-Pritchard, , “Zande Cannibalism,” 143Google Scholar; idem, “Sources,” 143.

242 Three letters, (7 September 1880 to 13 November 1880), Esploratore 5(1881), 66-67, 91-94, 124–25Google Scholar; “Dal Bahr-el-Gazàll all'Uelle” 6 letters (6 March 1881 to 29 December 1881), Esploratore 6(1882), 253–61Google Scholar; eight letters (10 September 1881 to 13 April 1883), Esploratore 7(1883), 263-65, 277–92Google Scholar; ten letters, Esplorazione commerciale in Africa 2(1887), 168–87.Google Scholar

243 Errors in the text of his travel account regarding the descent of two princes, which were critically remarked on by Evans-Pritchard (“Sources,” 141; cf. Junker, , Reisen, 2:172Google Scholar; 3:39), can be considered as oversights. The line of descent is given correctly in the genealogical table (ibid., volume 3).

244 Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse, 30.

245 See the maps of the Uele in the travel account and in Esplorazione commerciale in Africa 2(1887).Google Scholar

246 Cf. Evans-Pritchard, , “Sources,” 143–45.Google Scholar

247 Ibid.; Casati, , Died anni, 1:109.Google Scholar

248 In his travel account Casati only hinted at having lived in Yangala's territory (Died anni, 1:254Google Scholar), but the dates of his letters (Esplorazione commerciale in Africa 2([1887], 168–87Google Scholar) and of his metereological observations (Died anni, 1:299311Google Scholar), as well as a remark by Emin, (Tagebücher, 2:474)Google Scholar furnish the proof.

249 Cf. for instance Casati, , Died anni, 1:42, 47-48, 165-68, 246–49.Google Scholar As a soldier himself, Casati especially praised the “black soldier,” to whom he attributed “moral superiority” (probably in contrast to Egyptian and Turkish soldiers, who were considered to be corrupt), “physical strength,” “bravery,” and “obedience,” although he still thought that “education” was required (ibid., 1:54-56). Casati saw the social system of the peoples he visited as one of “equity and justice” (ibid., 1:251). Casati's positive opinions, which were in harmony with the commercial orientation of early Italian colonialism, naturally had an ideological bias, just like Junker's negative ones, but in contrast to Junker they seem to have enhanced his receptiveness for the cultures he observed.

250 E.g. Died anni, 1:106-12, 133-35, 153-55, 161–62.Google Scholar

251 Cf. ibid., 1:102. See also Keim, , “Precolonial Mangbetu Rule,” 41-42, 53, 56, 7276.Google Scholar

252 For remarks or behavior illustrating this attitude of Junker see Reisen, 1:297, 381, 444Google Scholar; 2:42, 85-86, 109, 127, 160, 183-85, 197-99, 225, 321, 329-30, 477-78, 545; 3:292, 348, 449, 666-67. For an analysis see Marx, , “Völker ohne Schrift und Geschichte,” 89100.Google Scholar

253 Reisen, 3:332, 660.Google Scholar

254 Sources,” 141; cf. Junker, , Reisen, 2:263, 282-83, 455–56.Google Scholar

255 Ibid., 2:197.

256 “if I frequently speak of princes, you must imagine in most cases a scoundrel with scarcely a hundred souls as his subjects. … These individuals have to be taught respect. A box on the ear is often more effective for this purpose than all the patience in the world.” Junker to his family, 28 January 1881, quoted in Hevesi, , Wilhelm Junker, 111–12.Google Scholar

257 Cf. for instance Junker, , Reisen, 2:162, 375–76Google Scholar; 3:352.

258 Hill, Richard, ed., The Sudan Memoirs of Carl Christian Giegler Pascha 1873-1883 (London, 1984), 6469.Google Scholar

259 In his journals and letters Emin complained several times (e.g. Tagebücher, 1:321Google Scholar; 2:9-10, 94-95, 167, 227) that his administrative work and researches were less appreciated than those of other Europeans in the Sudan. The most apposite characterization is given by Casati (Died anni, 1:228Google Scholar), who dispensed with Emin's “orientalization,” which is still evoked today for want of a better description: “Of a serious and concentrated character, fond of the natural sciences and of being alone, Emin avoided contacts. It seemed as if, while not exactly proud, he was exceedingly aware of his own superiority, and disdained the idea of looking closely into the talents of those around him; he believed that he could do everything by himself, and on the day when he alone could no longer halt the fast approaching dissolution, he erred in his judgements, changed them frequently, and thus did great harm to himself.”

260 Thus it was frequently claimed that Emin's adherence to Islam was only a camouflage in partibus infideliwn, but this is not tenable in view of the number of European officials in the Turco-Egyptian Sudan: cf. Schweinfurth, Georget al. eds., Eine Sammlung von Reisebriefen und Berichten Dr. Emin-Pascha's aus den ehemals ägyptischen Aequatorialprovinzen und deren Grenzländern (Leipzig, 1888), vviGoogle Scholar, and Schweitzer, Georg, Emin Pascha. Eine Darstellung seines Lebens und Wirkens mit Benutzung seiner Tagebücher, Briefe und wissenschaftlichen Aufzeichnungen (Berlin, 1898), 77.Google Scholar From scattered remarks in his journals and by people who knew him, it seems rather that Emin had tried to adopt a new, non-European identity in the Sudan; Emin, , Tagebücher, 1:137-38, 148-49, 151, 192Google Scholar; 2:33; Schweitzer, , Emin Pascha, 226–27Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 3:427Google Scholar; Hevesi, , Wilhelm Junker, 99, 211–12Google Scholar; Hill, , Memoirs, 6465.Google Scholar

261 For instance, Schweitzer, , Emin Pascha, 329Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 3:448, 457, 561–65.Google Scholar Among the many works on Emin, Roger Jones'The Rescue of Emin Pascha: The Story of Henry M. Stanley and the Emin Pascha Relief Expedition, 1887-1889 (London, 1972)Google Scholar is the most balanced. Emin Pascha, the biography written by Schweitzer, Emin's cousin, is still indispensable for the great number of unpublished documents it contains, although the author sometimes erred in his interpretation of political events in Equatoria and his judgments are nationalistically colored. Although Hassan's, Vita, Die Wahrheit über Emin Pascha, die ägyptische Aequatorialprovinz und den Sudan (2 vols.: Berlin, 1893)Google Scholar, and especially Casati's Died anni, contain some misjudgments, they are important eyewitness reports.

262 The journals are clearly of a scholarly nature and were intended for publication or for use in preparing scientific reports. In addition to his scientific, geographical, and ethnographic observations, Emin noted only major events and largely dispensed with recounting his personal opinions and experiences.

263 Schweinfurth et al., Sammlung.

264 Volumes 1 to 4 of the published journals cover the period from 1875 to 1889 (Emin's time in the Sudan up to the evacuation and the march to the East African coast), although the notes published in volume 4 have been cut by about a quarter. The journals from the period of Emin's last expedition in the service of German East Africa up to his death (1890-92) were to have been published in a fifth volume, but it has never appeared. They are preserved in the State Archives in Hamburg. Vol. 6, Zoologische Aufzeichnungen Emin's und seine Briefe an Dr. G. Hartlaub, revised by H. Schübotz, appeared in 1921. On writings by and on Emin, see also Simpson, D. H., “A Bibliography of Emin Pasha,” Uganda Journal 24(1960), 138–65.Google Scholar

265 A journey that was called off after only a few days in August 1880 (Tagebücher, 2:103–09Google Scholar) and a longer one from October to December 1882 (ibid., 2:352-401, as well as Sammlung, 357-88).

266 Tagebücher, 2:415500Google Scholar; Sammlung, 184-211, 439-52.

267 For instance, Evans-Pritchard, “Zande Cannibalism,” 144; idem., Azande, 96-97. In Lotar, “Souvenirs de l'Uele: Emin Pacha,” Congo 14/1(1933), 340, 347, there are only brief mentions of the Azande population. The route is shown in Junker's general map (Reise, 1:plate 9).

268 These were Wando and his sons, the sons of Gbudwe (all Yakpati's line), Mazinda (Bugwa's line) who ruled in the Amadi area in the bend of the Uele, and Bangoya and Bowili, son and grandson respectively of Kipa (Ndeni's line).

269 Emin also seems to have learned Kinyoro (Tagebücher, 2:353Google Scholar), and he had a good understanding of languages in general. He correctly described the division of the Bari-speaking groups of the Bahr al-Jabal region, for example: ibid., 2:384; Sammlung, 368.

270 Tagebücher, 2:378, 384Google Scholar; Sammlung, 375-76; cf. Ivanov, Vorkoloniale Geschichte, tables 32-36.

271 Tagebücher, 2:449–51Google Scholar; Sammlung, 202-03, 206.

272 Tagebücher, 2:445, 447-48, 452-57, 473Google Scholar; Sammlung, 188-89, 194, 208-11.

273 Tagebücher, 2:372-74, 381, 418–19Google Scholar; cf. de Schlippe, Pierre, Shifting Cultivation in Africa: The Zande System of Agriculture (London, 1956).Google Scholar

274 Tagebücher, 2:471–72Google Scholar; see also Sammlung, 448.

275 Keim, “Precolonial Mangbetu Rule,” 328, but also Junker, , Reisen, 3:141–42.Google Scholar

276 Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:465.Google Scholar

277 Junker, , Reisen, 2:297Google Scholar; 3:144; Casati, , Dieci anni, 1:110–12Google Scholar; Emin, , Sammlung, 200Google Scholar; Tagebücher, 2:449.Google Scholar See also Schildkrout, /Keim, , African Reflections, 3536.Google Scholar

278 Casati, , Died anni, 1:85, 116, 172Google Scholar; Emin, , Sammlung, 211.Google Scholar

279 Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse, 35; Reisen, 2:331, 514.Google Scholar

280 Sammlung, 442.

281 Casati's and Emin's descriptions of the Azande contrast strikingly with that of Schweinfurth: the Italian stressed (Casati, , Died anni, 1:182Google Scholar) their “docile and good character” as well as their openness and adaptability. Emin even wrote (Tagebücher, 2:422Google Scholar): “Their facial expression is peculiarly mild, and matches their language well, which is flowing and rich in vowels.” Junker still tried to include the notion of savagery in his description (Reisen, 1:296Google Scholar; 2:132-33, 288), but the relevant passages were inserted so clumsily and without any relation to the context that it is not hard to identify them as literary additions in the style of Schweinfurth.

282 Ibid, 3:559.

283 For example ibid., 2:207-08, 353; 3:592.

284 Ibid., 3:2; Casati, , Died anni, 1:176.Google Scholar

285 Reisen, 2:369.Google Scholar

286 Ibid., 2:142-43, 248, 295, 362, 369-70; 3:4, 157, 220, 292, 295; Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse, 31-32.

287 Junker, , Reisen, 2:297Google Scholar; cf. Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 338.Google Scholar

288 Reise, 2:237, 297, 316.Google Scholar On some other cannibalism passages in which Junker openly followed Schweinfurth see ibid., 1:285, 374; 2:205.

289 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 410Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 2:461Google Scholar; 3:187, 313; Emin, , Sammlung, 190–91.Google Scholar

290 Junker, , Reisen, 2:237Google Scholar; Casati, , Died anni, 1:157, 174.Google Scholar

291 “Zande Cannibalism,” 141-44; apart from the passages mentioned here see Junker, , Reisen, 2:316-17, 473, 491, 540Google Scholar; Casati, , Died anni, 1:75, 141, 150-51, 156, 183, 190, 216, 262.Google Scholar

292 Reisen, 3:144Google Scholar, where he called Im Herzen von Afrika a “classic work.”

293 Reisen, 3:707Google Scholar; see also ibid., 2:5.

294 Hevesi, , Wilhelm Junker, 196–97.Google Scholar

295 See Sammlung, 439-52.

296 Ibid., 186-87, 442.

297 Ibid., 191; cf. Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 334.Google Scholar

298 Sammlung, 442; cf., for example, Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 86, 106, 136.Google Scholar

299 In comparison, Tagebücher, 2:448–54Google Scholar; Sammlung, 190-91, 205-08.

300 Dieci anni, 1:156Google Scholar and earlier in a letter published in Esploratore 7(1883), 281.Google Scholar

301 Reisen, 3:111.

302 Baumann, Hermann, “Likundu. Die Sektion der Zauberkraft,” Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 60(1928), 7485Google Scholar; Vansina, Jan, Paths in the Rainforests: Toward a History of Political Tradition in Equatorial Africa (Madison, 1990), 97-98, 299.Google Scholar

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308 Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:464Google Scholar; Sammlung, 447.

309 The activities of the traders from the Swahili coast, known in the region as “Wangwana,” mainly affected the Mangbetu/Matchaga and their southern neighbors and the southern Abandia, but only the borders of the Avungara territories.

310 Im Herzen, 218, 248-49, 258-60, 278-79, 379-89, 395, 408-09, 413-14, 417-18, 440. Cf. also Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 300-01, 312-13, 395Google Scholar; Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 218–19.Google Scholar

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314 Im Herzen (1874), 2:520Google Scholar, and map.

315 Hutereau, , Histoire des peuplades, 194–95.Google Scholar

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317 Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 283, 551, table 18.Google Scholar

318 See, for instance, Mire, , “Al-Zubayr,” 116Google Scholar; Thuriaux-Hennebert, , Zande, 3435Google Scholar; and Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 308, 322.Google Scholar

319 Emin, , Sammlung, 440Google Scholar; cf. idem, Tagebücher, 2:432-40, 480-83; Casati, , Dieci anni, 1:76-77, 222-23, 242Google Scholar; and the maps in Junker, Reisen, 1:plates 7 and 9.

320 Calonne-Beaufaict, , Azande, 60, 63Google Scholar; Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 407Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 1:545.Google Scholar For an overview of the historical background see Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 261–65, table 19.Google Scholar

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325 Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 436-51, 525–26.Google Scholar

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328 For the Abandia from Ndunga's line see Dampierre, Des ennemis. We should possibly exclude from this statement the Abandia territories (not taken into account here) of the lines of Lezia and Kasanga, in which settlement by the traders was far advanced, but for whom we still have no adequate information. The destiny of the members of the third powerful ruling line of the Avungara, the descendants of Ndeni, was scarcely affected by the expansion of the traders, due to the marginal location of their principalities in the western Bomokandi area: cf. Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 113-14, 298, table 25.Google Scholar

329 On the Mahdiyya in the Bahr al-Ghazal cf. Collins, Robert O., The Southern Sudan, 1883-1898: A Struggle for Control (New Haven, 1962), 2242Google Scholar; Gray, , History, 156–59Google Scholar; Holt, Peter M., The Mahdist State in the Sudan 1881-1898 (2nd rev. ed.: Oxford), 7880.Google Scholar On the trade of the northern Abandia and Avungara princes with Wadai, Dar Fur, and Kordofan see de Mézières, M. A. Bonne, Rapport sur le Haut-Oubangui, le M'Bomou et le Bahr-el-Ghazal (Paris, 1901), 23, 90-92, 105–08Google Scholar; Henri Bobichon, , “Les peuplades de l'Oubangui-M'Bomou à l'époque des missions Liotard et Marchand (1891-1901),” Ethnographie ns23(1931), 152–53.Google Scholar

330 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 138Google Scholar; Evans-Pritchard, , “Bongo,” Sudan Notes and Records 12(1929), 45Google Scholar; Baxter, /Butt, , Azande, 130Google Scholar; Santandrea, , Tribal History, 132–35Google Scholar; Kronenberg, /Kronenberg, , Bongo, 3-6, 58-59, 78Google Scholar; Braukämper, Ulrich, Migration und ethnischer Wandel: Untersuchungen aus der östlichen Sudanzone (Stuttgart, 1992), 230.Google Scholar

331 Cf. the discrepant information on the territory and thus the population size of the Bongo in Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 137–38.Google Scholar The explanation offered by the Kronenbergs is not acceptable. They suggest (Bongo, 3-7) that Schweinfurth did not distinguish the Bviri, who today live close by the Bongo, as an independent group and included them in his Bongo count. The Bviri moved close to the Bongo only during the colonial period, however, and Schweinfurth did not mention them because he did not travel through their former territory, which was south of his routes (cf. Santandrea, , Tribal History, 107–30Google Scholar).

332 Cf. Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 332Google Scholar and Keim, , “Precolonial Mangbetu Rule,” 3.Google Scholar

333 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 138.Google Scholar

334 Kronenberg, /Kronenberg, , Bongo, 58-60, 74-79, 86.Google Scholar

335 Cf. the list of Bongo clans in ibid., 75-78, and the names of the zara'ib given in Schweinfurth's itineraries (Im Herzen [1874], Appendix 2); see also Santandrea, Tribal History, 137-38.

336 It should also be remembered that in the time following Schweinfurth's journey groups of Bongo were increasingly integrated into the principalities of the Avungara princes Tembura and Gbudwe, situated in the Sue basin, where they lived scattered among the other groups of the Azande complex.

337 Cf. also Mire, , “Al-Zubayr,” 111–12.Google Scholar

338 Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:428, 433–35Google Scholar; cf. Hutereau, , Histoire des peuplades, 313–15Google Scholar; Czelcanowski, , Ethnographie, 493, 513Google Scholar; Baxter, /Butt, , Azande, 105, 113–14.Google Scholar

339 Junker, , Reisen, 3:268–80Google Scholar; de Ryhove, Charles de la Kéthulle, “Deux années de résidence chez le sultan Rafai: Voyage et exploration au nord du Mbomou,” Bulletin de la Société royale belge de géographie 19(1895), 424-26, 518-21, 526–27Google Scholar; Santandrea, , Tribal History, 201-04, 215-26, 258–61.Google Scholar See also Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 429-35, 488–93.Google Scholar

340 In Ringio's case it is insignificant that he was probably an Avungara; unlike the princes who were allied with the traders, he did not rule in accordance with traditional customs but clearly derived his power from his connections with the Khartoumers.

341 Cf., for instance, Gray, , History, (writing in the 1960s)Google ScholarPubMed; as well as works by O'Fahey, and Cordell, Dar al-Kuti, and Ewald, Soldiers. See also Hasan, Y. F. and Ogot, B. A., “The Sudan, 1500-1800” in Unesco General History of Africa, 5 (Paris, 1992), 170–99.Google Scholar

342 Heuglin, , Tinne'sche Expedition, 3Google Scholar; idem, Reise, 173; Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 93, 467Google Scholar; Zaghi, Riconquista, 269n310, 293; Junker, , Reisen, 3:205-06, 210Google Scholar; Lotar, L., “Souvenirs de l'Uele: les traitants nubiens,” Congo 15/1(1934), 1011Google Scholar; Mire, , “Al-Zubayr,” 110–11.Google Scholar See Willis, John Ralph, “Ideology of Enslavement,” 115Google Scholar, on the role of the wukala in Islamic trade in Africa. In addition to relatives, slaves and clients (freed slaves integrated in the master's kinship group) often served as wukala, because the Muslim ideology of enslavement, according to which the formerly uncivilized slave was “formed” into the “alter ego” of his master, meant that their relations with the master were more likely to be based on mutual trust and loyalty.

343 Anonymous, “L'Expédition Vankerckhoven,” La Belgique coloniale 2(1896), 20Google Scholar; de Mézières, Bonnel, Rapport, 22Google Scholar; Salmon, , Reconnaissance, 72-76, 79.Google Scholar De Calonne-Beaufaict wrote (Azande, 50) Hajj cAli's name in the Zande fashion as “Azali” and took him for a brother of Zemoi.

344 For an early example, see Junker, , Reisen, 2:383-84, 387Google Scholar; for the post-Mahdiyya period: de Mézières, Bonnel, Rapport, 90Google Scholar; Salmon, Pierre, La dernière insurrection de Mopoie Bangezegino (1916) (Brussels, 1969), 17, 25, 27.Google Scholar Even at the court of the “Arab-hostile” Gbudwe, there was an “Arab” or Arabized southern Sudanese (Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 358Google Scholar). See the Arabic correspondence in Abel, Armand, “Traduction de documents arabes concernant le Bahr el Ghazal (1893-1894),” Bulletin des Séances de l'Académie royale des Sciences coloniales 25(1954), 13851409.Google Scholar

345 Kéthulle, La, “Deux années,” 426, 526.Google Scholar

346 Ibid., 527-28; Santandrea, , Tribal History, 141–89Google Scholar; idem, Ethno-Geography, 86-87; Ivanov, , Vorkotoiiiale Geschichte, 202–04Google Scholar; on the historical cliché of the “Wise Stranger” in the eastern Sudan, Holt, Peter M., “Funj Origins: A Critique and New Evidence,” JAH 4(1963), 5152CrossRefGoogle Scholar; O'Fahey, , “Slavery,” 2930.Google Scholar

347 Collins, Robert O., Shadows in the Grass: Britain in the Southern Sudan, 1918-1956 (New Haven, 1983), 178–95.Google Scholar Even in the present-day southern Sudanese civil war, the “Fartit,” including especially the Feroge and the Kresh, flank the Khartoum government in its struggle against the “southern Sudanese” SPLA (Sudan People's Liberation Army).

348 E.g., Van de Vliet, Clément, “L'exploration de l'Uelle: De Djabbir à Suruangu,” Congo Illustré 3(1894), 121-22, 134Google Scholar; la Kéthulle, “Deux années,” 414-20; de Mézières, Bonnel, Rapport, 20Google Scholar; de Montrozier, Raymond Colrat, Deux ans chez les anthropophages et les sultans du centre africain (Paris, 1902), 126-29, 151.Google Scholar

349 Cf. the study of the relationship between trade and the spread of Islam in Africa by Levtzion, Nehemia, “Slavery and Islamization in Africa: A Comparative Study” in Willis, , Slaves and Slavery, 1:182–98.Google Scholar

350 Ibid., 187, 191.

351 la Kéthulle “Deux années,” 406-07, 417-18, 540; de Mézières, Bonnel, Rapport, 34Google Scholar; Geyer, Franz Xaver, Durch Sand, Sumpf und Wald. Missionsreisen in ZentralAfrika (Freiburg, 1914), 283Google Scholar; Salmon, , Reconnaissance Graziani, 53Google Scholar; idem, Dernière insurrection,” 16-17; von Wiese, Walther und Kaiserwaldau, , “Zum Nil heraus” in zu Mecklenburg, Adolf Friedrich Herzog, ed., Vom Kongo zum Niger und Nil (2 vols.: Leipzig, 1912), 1:267-68, 285Google Scholar; Chaltin in Lotar, L., La grande chronique de l'Uele (Brussels, 1946), 251.Google Scholar Information given by European observers (mostly colonial officers) on the question of whether the Avungara rulers were influenced by Islam is, however, problematical since there was a tendency, depending on political interests, to deny any Islamic influence in the case of friendly princes, and to exaggerate it in the case of hostile ones.

352 Glassman, Jonathon, Feasts and Riot: Revelry, Rebellion, and Popular Consciousness on the Swahili Coast, 1856-1888 (Portsmouth, 1994), 134–35Google Scholar; Levtzion, , “Slavery and Islamization,” 189–93.Google Scholar

353 These interpretations can perhaps be applied to the—not legitimate—Chief Ringio, who observed the daily prayers (Junker, , Reisen, 2:543Google Scholar).

354 See also Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 34, 42–43, 289–90.Google Scholar

355 Cf. especially Collins, Southern Sudan; idem, King Leopold, England, and the Upper Nile, 1899-1909 (New Haven, 1968); idem, Land beyond the Rivers: The Southern Sudan, 1898-1918 (New Haven, 1971); L. Lotar, La grande chronique du Bomu (Brussels, 1940); idem, Grande chronique de l'Uele; Thuriaux-Hennebert, , Zande, 195291Google Scholar; Michel, Marc, La mission Marchand, 1895-1899 (Paris, 1972).CrossRefGoogle Scholar For a summary, see Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 144–77.Google Scholar

356 Cf. Lotar, , Grande chronique de l'Uele, 60–128, 141–49; 181209Google Scholar; Collins, , Southern Sudan, 124–30.Google Scholar By the end of the Nile expedition Zemoi had lost more than 600 of his men (Michel, , Mission Marchand, 44Google Scholar).

357 Cf. especially Van de Vliet, , “L'exploration de l'Uelle: De Djabbir à Suruangu,” Congo Illustré 3(1894), 114–17, 121–25, 131–35, 140–43, 147–50, 164–67, 172–75Google Scholar; la Kéthulle, “Deux années,” and the notes of Van Kerckhoven, who died in the course of the expedition, but whose records are summarized in the anonymous article L'expédition Vankerckhoven,” Belgique coloniale 2(1896), 18–20, 27–28, 35–36, 47–49, 59–60, 7172Google Scholar; 3(1897), 2-4, 15-16, 27-28, 39-40, 51-52, 63-64, 86-88, 99-100, 111-12, 123-24, 134-36, 146-48. On the French occupation see the series of anonymous articles “Notre action dans le M'Bomou: La mission Liotard-Marchand,” “Dem-Ziber,” “De l'Oubangui au Nil: Les missions Liotard et Marchand,” “La mission Marchand,” “Dans le Bahr-el-Ghazal,” L'occupation de Dem-Ziber,” Bulletin du Comité de l'Afrique française 8(1898), 3–5, 44–45, 102–03, 325–32, 363–67, 367–70.Google Scholar

358 For instance la Kéthulle, “Deux années;” Craffen, Enrico and Colombo, Edoardo, “Les Niam-Niam,” Revue Internationale de Sociologie 11(1906), 769800Google Scholar; Nys, Fernand, Chez les Abarambo (Anvers, 1896).Google Scholar See also the work of Van Overbergh, C. and De Jonghe, E., eds., Les Mangbetu (Congo beige) (Brussels, 1909)Google Scholar, in which the ethnographic observations of the Congo State officers were collected and the Azande are taken into account. Probably the most complete source concerning the organization of the “sultanates” of the Mbomu in the early period of the colonial conquest is the Rapport sur le Haut-Oubangui, le M'Bomou et le Bahr-el-Ghazal by Bonnel de Mézières, the leader of a French commercial mission lasting about one year which explored the possibilities of economic exploitation of the region.

359 E.g., Burrows, Guy, The Land of the Pygmies (London, 1898).Google Scholar Burrows served in the Congo State as commander of the Makua and Rubi/Uele “zones.”

360 Laplume, and De Renette, in Van Overbergh, /De Jonghe, , Mangbetu, 56, 124–25, 425Google Scholar; Burrows, , Land of the Pygmies, 5779.Google Scholar

361 Ibid., 78; Craffen, /Colombo, , “Niam-Niam,” 784.Google Scholar

362 Schweinfurth, , Im Herzen, 262, 298Google Scholar; Junker, , Reisen, 1:503Google Scholar; 2:132-33.

363 E.g., Milz in Van de Vliet, “Exploration de l'Uelle,” 134n1; la Kéthulle, , “Deux années,” 404, 419, 513, 541–42Google Scholar; Expédition Vankerckhoven,” La Belgique coloniale 2(1896), 59Google Scholar; de Mézières, Bonnel, Rapport, 21–23, 34–35, 99Google Scholar; and the remarks made by the first British officers who made contact with the friendly prince Tembura, in Gleichen, Edward, ed., The Anglo-Egyptian Sudan: A Compendium Prepared by Officers of the Sudan Government (2 vols.: London, 1905), 1:161.Google Scholar It is striking that more mixed opinions, and in the course of time even negative ones, were expressed with regard to the Abandia Bangasu, who collaborated, but always with an eye to his own independence, and that princes like Wando and his sons, who in their alliance with the colonial forces obviously only followed the aim of expanding their own conquests, tended rather to arouse mistrust and dislike: cf. Dampierre, , Ancien royaume, 459–60Google Scholar; Expédition Vankerckhoven,” Belgique coloniale 3(1897), 87.Google Scholar

364 This policy was explicitly formulated only by Van Kerckhoven, , “Expédition Vankerckhoven,” La Belgique coloniale 3(1897), 99Google Scholar, and la Kéthulle, , quoted in Lotar, , Grande chronique du Bomu, 34.Google Scholar

365 See, among others, the French administrator Liotard in Michel, , Mission Marchand, 175Google Scholar; de Mézières, Bonnel, Rapport, 16, 19, 22Google Scholar; Dampierre, , Ancien royaume, 466, 476Google Scholar; Salmon, , Reconnaissance Graziani, 76.Google Scholar The subject of weapons supplies was usually omitted in the writings of the officers of the Congo, so that relevant information is mostly found in French sources dating after the territories of the princes north of the Mbomu had been taken over by France. For a detailed discussion of the question (including weapons supplied by the French), see Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 153–54.Google Scholar

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367 la Kéthulle, , “Deux années,” 426–28Google Scholar; de Mézières, Bonnel, Rapport, 99Google Scholar; Santandrea, , Tribal History, 199–200, 204, 215–16, 226–27, 248–49, 252, 258–60, 269–70Google Scholar; Dampierre, , Ancien royaume, 104–05.Google Scholar

368 Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 156–57, 434–35, 449–50.Google Scholar Cf. Abel, “Traduction;” Santandrea, , Tribal History, 94–95, 100, 142, 149–51, 159–60.Google Scholar

369 “De l'Oubangui au Nil;” Santandrea, , Tribal History, 67–68, 91Google Scholar; Michel, , Mission Marchand, 163, 173–78, 185–86Google Scholar; Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte und Expansion, 157–59, 450–51.Google Scholar

370 Thus Rafai's claim to have been granted control over the region of the middle/upper Chinko by the Turco-Egyptian administration (de Mézières, Bonnel, Rapport, 1819Google Scholar) can be found in recent historical works (cf. Thuriaux-Hennebert, , Zande, 224Google Scholar), although this is clearly contradicted by Junker's precise information (Reisen, 3:256–80, and plate 5Google Scholar). See also the maps in Bonnel de Mézière, Rapport, and in Mecklenburg, , Vom Kongo zum Niger und Nil, 1Google Scholar, which were based on the territorial divisions of the French colonial administration and in which the size of the “sultanates” is patently exaggerated.

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373 Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 22Google Scholar; Reining, Conrad C., The Zande Scheme: An Anthropological Case Study of Economic Development in Africa (Evanston, 1966), 7.Google Scholar

374 Hutereau, , Histoire des peuplades, 213–21Google Scholar; Keim, , “Precolonial Mangbetu Rule,” 283–88Google Scholar; Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte,, 499–510, 664–65.Google Scholar

375 Salmon, , Reconnaissance Graziani, 42, 48–49, 62, 78–79, 83, 86–87, 8990Google Scholar, who quoted unpublished reports by several officers, as well as the retrospective account by Bertrand, A., “La fin de la puissance Azande,” Bulletin de l'Institut royal colonial belge IRCB 14(1943), 268–69.Google Scholar

376 Zemoi had moved into French colonial territory shortly beforehand. Salmon, , Reconnaissance Graziani, 81, 86107Google Scholar; idem, Dernière insurrection, 19-26.

377 Gleichen, , Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, 1:278Google Scholar; Collins, , Land beyond the Rivers, 103–04, 115–16, 121–22, 163Google Scholar; Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 388–93.Google Scholar

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379 Ibid., 28-29; Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 394.Google Scholar

380 Reining, , Zande Scheme, 17Google Scholar; Collins, , Land beyond the Rivers, 126–27, 250Google Scholar; Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 163–66.Google Scholar

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382 Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 160–61, 176–77Google Scholar; Evans-Pritchard, , Azande, 394.Google Scholar

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384 E.g., Alexander, Boyd, From the Niger to the Nile (2 vols.: London, 1907).Google Scholar The American Museum of Natural History financed an expedition into the Uele region led by the zoologists Herbert Lang and James P. Chapin (1909-15). The ethnographical material they collected has been analyzed by Schildkrout and Keim (African Reflections; cf. also Keim, “Western Discovery”).

385 zu Mecklenburg, Adolf Friedrich Herzog, Ins Innerste Afrika. Bericht über den Verlauf der deutschen wissenschaftlichen Zentral-Afrika-Expedition 1907-1908 (Leipzig, 1909).Google Scholar

386 “Vom Kongo zum Schari” and idem., Zum Nil heraus” in Mecklenburg, , Vom Kongo 1:9–76, 235–44.Google Scholar

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388 Notes sur la vie familiale et juridique de quelques populations du Congo belge (Brussels, 1909).Google Scholar

389 (Brussels, 1922).

390 Cf. De Jonghe in Hutereau, Histoire des peuplades, 143n2, and Czekanowski, , Ethnographie, 96.Google Scholar How much and what information he obtained in this way is not known.

391 The inaccuracies in Hutereau's and also de Calonne-Beaufaict's reconstructions based on oral data become evident in cases where the accounts of earlier travelers contain eyewitness reports of the same events and in the (few) cases where more detailed reconstructions have been made using the local historical tradition: e.g., Santandrea, who included in his Tribal History the relations between the Bahr al-Ghazal peoples and the northern Avungara principalities; Evans-Pritchard's reconstruction of the history of the principality of Gbudwe; and Costermans, B. J., Mosaïque Bangba (Brussels, 1953).Google Scholar

392 Cf. also his Les Ababua,” Le Mouvement Sociologique International 10/2(1909), 285431.Google Scholar

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394 Cf. Azande, 2-3.

395 Czekanowski, Ethnograpbier; idem, Forschungen im Nil-Kongo-Zwischengebiet, 5, Ethnographisch-anthropologischer Atlas: Azande/Uete-Stämme/Niloten (Leipzig, 1927). See also Czekanowski's, interim report “Die anthropologisch-ethnographischen Arbeiten der Expedition S, H. des Herzogs Adolf Friedrich zu Mecklenburg für den Zeitraum vom 1. Juni 1907 bis 1. August 1908,” Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 41(1909), 591615.Google Scholar His ethnographic records were based on the outline provided by Felix von Luschan.

396 As for example in the reconstruction of the history of the descendants of Ndeni, in which there are several discrepancies between his version and Hutereau's, (Ethnographie, 8996).Google Scholar

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402 Grandin, , Soudan nilotique, 217–21Google Scholar; Evans-Pritchard, , “Ethnological Survey of the Sudan” in Hamilton, J. A. de C., ed., The Anglo-Egyptian Sudan from Within (London, 1935), 7993.Google Scholar

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404 For the area treated here see The Bongo,” Sudan Notes and Records 12(1929), 161Google Scholar; The Mberidi (Shilluk Group) and Mbegumba (Basiri Group) of the Bahr el Ghazal,” Sudan Notes and Records 14(1931), 1548Google Scholar; The non-Dinka Peoples of the Amadi and Rumbek Districts,” Sudan Notes and Records 20(1937), 156–59.Google Scholar The questionnaire elaborated by the Khartoum government for use by Evans-Pritchard can be found in Grandin, Soudan nilotique, 218-19n4.

405 (Oxford, 1937).

406 “Sources” and “Zande Cannibalism.”

407 “Zande State.”

408 Workes and Lives, The Anthropologist as Author (Stanford, 1988), 70.Google Scholar

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410 Account,” 21-24.

411 Notes, 45; Histoire des peuplades, 12.

412 E.g., ibid., 151-52, 156-57.

413 Ethnographie, 49-50.

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418 Ibid., 434-39.

419 Larken, , “Account,” 3435.Google Scholar

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421 “Zande State,” 102-03.

422 Reining, , Zande Scheme, 1727Google Scholar; Collins, , Shadows, 320–23.Google Scholar

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424 Vansina, , Paths, 246Google Scholar; Ranger, Terence, “The Invention of Tradition Revisited: The Case of Colonial Africa” in idem and Vaughan, Olufemi, eds., Legitimacy and the State in Twentieth-Century Africa (Houndmills, 1993), 7374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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427 E.g., Calonne-Beaufaict, , Azande, 3, 249–50Google Scholar; Bertrand in ibid., xxiv-xxx; Evans-Pritchard, , “Zande State,” 110Google Scholar; idem, Azande, 119-20.

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429 L'ethnie Mongo (2 vols.: Brussels, 1944), 2:506–08Google Scholar; cf. Bertrand, in de Calonne-Beaufaict, , Azande, xxixxxx.Google Scholar The idea that the “first” Azande were primarily mobile, warlike hunters (Evans-Pritchard, , “Zande State,” 109–10Google Scholar) can be seen as a remnant of the theory. Schweinfurth's emphasis on the Azande as hunters provided the basis for this interpretation.

430 Although de Calonne-Beaufaict was the only writer to systematize the migration movements into four “waves” (three “Sudanic” and one Bantu “invasion;” cf. especially Azande, 247-48), the reconstructions of authors such as Hutereau, Vanden Pias, or Czekanowski were also based on the migration postulate. In his study of the ethnic composition of Azande society, Evans-Pritchard also included the groups worked out by de Calonne-Beaufaict..

431 Vajda, László, “Zur Frage von Völkerwanderungen,” Paideuma 19/20(1973/1974), 653.Google Scholar

432 Cf. among others Van Noten, Francis, The Uelian: A Culture with a Neolithic Aspect, Uele-Basin (N. E. Congo Republic) (Tervuren, 1968)Google Scholar; Ehret, Christopheret al., “Some Thoughts on the Early History of the Nile-Congo Watershed,” Ufahamu 5/2(1974), 85112Google Scholar; David, Nicholas, “Prehistory and Historical Linguistics in Central Africa: Points of Contact” in Ehret, Christopher and Posnansky, Merrick, eds., The Archaeological and Linguistic Reconstruction of African History (Berkeley, 1980), 7895Google Scholar; McMaster, M., “Patterns of Interaction: A Comparative Ethnolinguistic Perspective on the Uele Region of Zaire, c. 500 B.C. to A.D. 1900” (Ph.D. UCLA, 1988)Google Scholar; Vansina, , Paths, 169–75.Google Scholar

433 See Costermans, Mosaïque Bangba, and Santandrea, Tribal History, which contain numerous examples.

434 Calonne-Beaufaict, , Azande, 92106Google Scholar; Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 348–85.Google Scholar

435 Ibid., 410-520, 570-72, 586-89.

436 Cf. the historical information given by Santandrea, , Tribal History, 191228Google Scholar, and the linguistic classification in Tucker, Archibald N. and Bryan, Margaret A., The Non-Bantu Languages of North-Eastern Africa (London, 1956)Google Scholar, which is also maintained by Mann, Michael and Dalby, David, A Thesaurus of African Languages (London, 1988), 70.Google Scholar

437 Ethnographie, 23-26.

438 Bertrand, in de Calonne-Beaufaict, , Azande, xxi.Google Scholar

439 Cf. in particular “Arbeiten der Expedition,” 605-06, and Ethnographie, 206, 220. By the term “Mangbetu” Czekanowski meant both the Mangbetu dynasty and the kingdoms or principalities founded by it, as well as the peoples of the Mangbetu group of languages, which involves additional difficulties.

440 Czekanowski, , Ethnographisch-anthropologischer Atlas, 57, plates 166 and 167.Google Scholar In his Ethnographic 221, the pots were correctly attributed to the Barambu.

441 The name “sabre” has become accepted for this weapon, although the cutting edge is on the inside of the curve, and not on the outside as with normal sabres.

442 Czekanowski, , Ethnographie, 143–44 and figure 32Google Scholar; idem., Ethnographisch-anthropologischer Atlas, 23, plate 57. The specimens are now in the Berlin Ethnologisches Museum. In the inventory of the museum their provenance is (correctly) given as “Azande (Ababua).” On the distribution of these weapons in central Africa see Maes, Joseph, “Les sabres et massues des populations du Congo Belge,” Congo 4(1923), 351–67.Google Scholar

443 African Reflections; cf. also Schildkrout, Enid, Hellman, Jill, and Keim, Curtis A., “Mangbetu Pottery: Tradition and Innovation in Northeast Zaire,” African Arts 22/2(1988/1889), 3847.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

444 Azande, 85, 93, 95-102.

445 African Reflections, 19, 22, 99, 198, 214-15, 238-39, 240-56; Dampierre, , Harpes zandé, 65155.Google Scholar

446 Azande, 96.

447 Sammlung, 211.

448 Azande, 96-97; cf. Casati, , Dieci anni, 1:85.Google Scholar

449 Azande, 97-98.

450 Emin, , Tagebücher, 2:464–73.Google Scholar In addition Casati had also supplied Emin with objects from the principalities of Kipa's sons, Kana and Bakangai: ibid., 2:463.

451 Ibid., 2:476.

452 Casati, , Dieci anni, 1:116, 172.Google Scholar

453 Schildkrout, /Keim, , African Reflections, 237–43.Google Scholar

454 Geertz, , Works and Lives, 5758.Google Scholar

455 For “transparencies” see ibid., 64-69.

456 “Sources,” 143; Casati, , Dieci anni, 1:186–93.Google Scholar

457 Cf. among the sources known to Evans-Pritchard: Junker, , Reisen, 3:2326Google Scholar; Hutereau, , Histoire des peuplades, 231–32, 239n1, 245Google Scholar; Czekanowski, , Ethnographie, 16, 25, 6566Google Scholar; Lagae, , Azande, 6263Google Scholar, Lotar, , Grande chronique de l'Uele, 191, 195.Google Scholar For details of the significance of ancestor worship among the Avungara see Ivanov, , Vorkoloniale Geschichte, 554–64.Google Scholar

458 All the more so since he failed to mention that in his fieldwork area access to Gbudwe's grave had been prohibited by the Anglo-Egyptian government: Giorgetti, , Cannibalism in Zandeland, 199200.Google Scholar

459 “Zande Cannibalism,” 144-50. A significant exception is the work of de Calonne-Beaufaict, whose freedom from prejudice has already been pointed out.

460 Here he also included early colonial officers.

461 “Zande Cannibalism,” 153.

462 Frank, Erwin, “‘Sie fressen Menschen’,” 221Google Scholar, described this argument as one “which translated into mathematical terms says that three times nothing must be more than nothing.”

463 “Zande Cannibalism,” 153. Note the way Evans-Pritchard introduced the statements by Lagae and Larken: on Lagae he wrote (ibid., 150): “One of the most authoritative descriptions of the Azande is undoubtedly that by my friend Mgr Lagae, a Dominican Father who spent many years among the Azande and is the first of our witnesses who was able to converse easily with that people.” On Larken (ibid., 151): “My old and much esteemed friend Major P. M. Larken, who has also resided among the Azande for many years and who speaks their tongue fluently, says … much the same as the Monsignor.”

464 Lagae, , Azande, 4950Google Scholar; Larken, , “Impressions,” 115.Google Scholar

465 “Zande Cannibalism,” 150-61.

466 Evans-Pritchard, , “Cannibalism: a Zande Text,” Africa 26(1956), 7374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

467 The Matt-Eating Myth (Oxford, 1979), 150.Google Scholar

468 Ibid., 84, 139-45; Frank, , “‘Sie fressen Menschen’,” 200–05.Google Scholar

469 Witchcraft, 352-53, 425-26, 445-46, 470.

470 “Zande Cannibalism,” 153.

471 Though presumably not in French: Craffen, /Colombo, , “Niam-Niam,” 792.Google Scholar

472 Schildkrout, /Keim, , African Reflections, 34, 258n3.Google Scholar

473 “Zande Cannibalism,” 161; Schlippe, , Shifting Cultivation, 30.Google Scholar

474 “Zande Cannibalism,” 161.

475 In Zande Scheme, Reining mainly discussed the transformation of Azande society in the later colonial period, although he did give some valuable information on the precolonial and early colonial situation. Éric de Dampierre's comprehensive study of the Abandia Nzakara kingdom, Un ancien royaume Bandia du Haut-Oubangui, which was little known until then, included the Abandia Azande only briefly, and relied on the reconstructions by Evans-Pritchard and former scholars for comparisons with the Avungara political system.