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The Azande. By: Amber and Stacey. History. Live in south-western Sudan, north of Zaire and east of Central African Republic They developed sleeping sickness from the tse-tse fly, so authorities relocated them to concentrated settlements near roads. History continued.
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The Azande By: Amber and Stacey
History • Live in south-western Sudan, north of Zaire and east of Central African Republic • They developed sleeping sickness from the tse-tse fly, so authorities relocated them to concentrated settlements near roads
History continued • The clans that lived along the river were autonomous local groups • Azande tell of a person who’s wisdom and kindness, gained him power within the clan, the Avongara, and conquered more than 50 other clans which became the Azande group
Settlements • The home is the focus of their economic system • They are built of mud and grass framed on wooden poles, and thatched with grass • Each has a granary for millet and are built around courtyards • “Kitchen gardens” are planted adjacent to the courtyards, and are used to plant pineapple, mango, papaya, and other plants that are used immediately after picking
Courtyards • Courtyards are places for gathering and conversation, • Their upkeep is very important since they are evidence of the responsibility and status of their owners • It represents the structure of the households which it is attached to • Each women is required to have her own house and granary, so in a polygynous household the courtyard space is larger, than in a monogamous
Subsistence • They practice shifting cultivation • They cultivate maize, millet, gourds, pumpkins, manioc, bananas, groundnuts, and beans • They get their meat from hunting • In their region there’s plenty of rainfall and springs, so usable water is available year-round • Distance is measured by the number of streams between the points in question
Subsistence continued • The year has two seasons, a rainy and a dry • Rainy: • Land is cultivated • Dry: • Crops grow and are harvested • More hunting • Fish, smakes, and crustaceans are caught in the low rivers • Termites were a favorite food, rich in fat and protein
Manufacture • Each family was an independent unit of production • Iron tools were bride-wealth items • There was a sexual division of labor • There was little chance of inheritance of property because a person’s things were burned upon death • Men- repaired the house and granary • Women- maintained the courtyard and gardens • Woodworking, pottery, making clothing of bark, nets and baskets were their most important skills
Kinship and Chiefdoms • Clan affiliation is not stressed at the local level • They were organized into chiefdoms, each independent from the others • The Avongara were nobility, chiefs came from this lineage • Chiefs appointed emissaries (Avongara people) who manage sections of their territories • Chiefs were the military, economic, and political leaders
Warfare • Miles of unsettled land lay between chiefdoms, and this is where fights broke out • In the rainy season attacks were made on these borders by a provincial leader, without the Chief knowing
The Oracle and the Spy • A poison oracle was sought to tell what day and place for a raid, the number of casualties, and who should be the spy • An animal would be poisoned and its behavior interpreted • The spy would act like he is visiting a relative or wanting to trade, and gather information of the area that would be raided • They would usually raided on a feast day because the men would be unarmed and drunk • The spy could tell when the feast would be by the stage in the brewing process
Marriage • When a man wanted to marry a women he sent a intermediary to go to her father with the offer • The father discussed it with his brothers and sisters then with his daughter • If she agreed the money sent with the intermediary was accepted • Then the suitor would visit his promised bride’s parents, bringing gifts • The bride would also visit the suitor’s home for a “trial period” of several weeks, then she would com home and make her decision
Marriage continued • The suitor consulted oracles to determine whether the marriage would be a happy one • If both the bride and the oracle said the marriage would be successful, the women and her family went to the grooms home where the ceremony was held • Sealed by the installation of the wife’s cooking hearth • The husband was always in debt to his wife’s family, and had the responsibility to help in their fields, and mortuary obligations if one of them died
Homosexuality and Lesbianism • Homosexuality has been addressed because the unmarried warriors who spent years apart from women had relations with their apprentice warriors • Boy-wives • After this however they entered into hetero-sexual marriages • Lesbianism was practiced in polygamous homes • If the women wished to formalize their relationship they could do it in a ritual creating a permanent bond
Mbori • Is defined by Evans-Prichard as “a ghostly being to whom the creation of the world is attributed.” • They have no shrines to Mbori or any materials used in worship • They only have one ceremony that involves his name and is not preformed often
The Trickster Tales • Tales mainly serve to assert and affirm social rules. • Provided examples of consequence one can expect if moral dictates are not observed. • Told for benefit of children to supplement didactic social training. • Appeals to young audience by featuring main character who possess child’s curiosity and temptation to break rules.
Witchcraft • Mostly known for belief in witchcraft than any other aspect of culture • Thought to be actual physical property residing inside individuals, who might be unaware of their power • Believe if soul of father’s much stronger, the child born will be a boy, and same goes if mother’s is stronger • Supporting framework of entire judicial system
Witchcraft Continued • Child product of both mother and father, each having more of one particular parent • Witchcraft deployed by sheer willpower • “soul of the witchcraft” travels so Azande people more secure when distant from their neighbors • Believe witchcraft is base of ALL misfortune • No concept of “accidental” death, die only as victims of murder of either witches or magic of revenge
Oracles • Ask for guidance in planning marriage, taking a journey, building a house, organizing a raid • Oracle device for revelation • Most powerful benge, poison oracle used only by men • Older men likely to seek counsel from oracle • Poison elaborate procedure: poison poured on to small chicken. Expert must know how much and how much time between doses. Every movement counts that’s made from chicken
Oracles Continued • Termite oracle used often by women and men, and even children. • 2 branches cut from different trees, and inserted together into termite mound and left overnight. • Answer indicated by which branch was eaten. • More of a time consuming procedure because only 1 question at a time and wait over night to answer.
Oracles Continued • Least reliable is rubbing-board oracle, made of 2 small pieces of wood, easily carried anywhere. • 1 piece of wood carved w/ handle, and rubbed across top of second piece, fashioned w/ legs to stand on. • Questions answered as wood is moved, as sticks or catches answer revealed.
Accusing a Witch • 2 sorts of accusations of witchcraft: • When illness or misfortunate has occurred • After someone has died • Chicken dies during benge, wing cut off, placed on stick, and taken to local deputy of chief revealing the name of individual who has committed crime
Witchcraft as Social Control • Serves as effective agent of social control • Acts as leveling mechanism by keeping the wealth balanced, thus having the Azande not likely to attempt out producing each other