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The People of the Grey Bull: the Origin and Expansion of the Turkana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

John Lamphear
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Austin

Extract

While archaeology and linguistics provide an important basis for the reconstruction of the early history of those parts of eastern Africa inhabited by pastoral societies, oral traditions also can make a valuable contribution. In this paper an examination of the traditions of the Turkana of north-western Kenya reveals an often remarkably sophisticated rendering of complex processes of origin and migration. Moreover, those traditions also embody insights into basic factors concerning the development and spread of pastoralism in East Africa that the methodologies of other disciplines have only recently begun to identify.

Turkana traditions suggest that their society had not just one, monolithic ‘origin’, but rather what might be seen as a whole series of them. Highly dramatic and memorable tales of genesis provide vivid idioms of socio-political identity and also contain fundamental cosmological messages. But they also correspond to important stages of change in the development of the Turkana community, and, as such, they (together with less ‘formal’ traditions associated with them) provide vital historical information.

The factors which combined to enable the Turkana to carry out their vast and rapid territorial expansion are identified. For instance, one early tradition suggests a fundamental change in their pastoral system – the acquisition of Zebu cattle-while others emphasize important commercial contacts which provided a steady flow of iron-ware and grain. Still others trace the development of the office of Great Diviner, revealing how it became a primary focus of economic and cultural redefinition and corporate identity as alterations to the earlier generation-set system occurred. Another tradition provides a glimpse of Turkana expansion from the point of view of peoples absorbed by it.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1988

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References

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7 See Lamphear, History of the Jie, especially chs. iii and iv. The term ‘Ateker’ replaces ‘Central Paranilotes’ used in this and other earlier writings. It should be noted that all Ateker group names properly should include the prefix ‘Ngi-’, meaning ‘The people of or ’ Those of. For convenience I have not used the ‘ Ngi-’, form in this article. The letter ‘c’ in Ateker words represents the sound ‘ch’.

8 Oral interviews with Turkana informants conducted in 1969–71 and in 1976 are abbreviated ‘T’, followed by the chronological number of the interview.

The foregoing information was derived from interviews including T-2, T-4, T-6, T-7, T-9, T-12, T-14, T-15, T-16, T-17, T-18, T-40, T-47 and T-58.

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28 For a thorough examination of the Turkana military system, see Lamphear, John, The Scattering Time: Turkana Resistance to the Imposition of Colonial Rule (forthcoming), ch. iGoogle Scholar; see also Fukui and Turton, Warfare Among Herders.

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