Focused
Ethnographic
Bibliography
for
the
Standard
Cross-Cultural Sample
From World Cultures
Original Author: Douglas R. White
Prepared by
William Divale
718-262-2982
Fall 2000
Contents
Page
Focused Ethnographic Bibliography:
Standard Cross-Cultural Sample.
World
Cultures, Vol.
2(1). Douglas R. White (University of
California, Irvine) 2
Assessment
of Sources 6
Discussion 6
Ethical
Considerations 8
Table
1. Listing of Societies in the Standard Sample 9
Bibliography
of Coded Studies Using the Standard Sample 14
Ethnographic Bibliography of the Standard
Cross-Cultural Sample.
World Cultures,
Vol. 2(1). Douglas R. White (University
of California, Irvine)
Focused to Time and Place. 16-125
Acknowledgement:
The bibliography listed
here was compiled primarily by Douglas R. White, Ph.D. who is also the author
of the article describing this bibliography.
Dr. White was the founder and for many years the Editor of the journal World Cultures. The massive amount of work and the
intellectual achievement of the bibliography, which was begun by George P.
Murdock and expanded by Douglas R. White is not something to be taken lightly
and is certainly appreciated by all cross-cultural researchers.
Reprinted from World Cultures Vol. 2 August
revision
Focused
Ethnographic Bibliography: Standard Cross-Cultural Sample
Douglas R. White -- University of
California, Irvine
Publication of the bibliography of ethnographic sources for
the Standard Cross-Cultural Sample (Murdock and White 1969) marks a new phase
in the development of professional access to the cross-cultural database. This phase builds on George Peter Murdock's
lifelong work of assessing the quality of ethnographic descriptions, coding the
ethno-graphic variables for his extensive Ethnographic Atlas (Murdock 1967), and
classifying these societies in terms of cultural similarities. From 1967-69 he
and I assessed thousands of candidate societies in order to pick the best
described societies in each of 186 world cultural provinces, and to choose the
earliest date of high-quality description for each so as to construct a
representative world sample of high-quality ethnographies for comparative
analysis. Each society was pinpointed
to a particular community or locale, in addition to a focal date, to which the
description applied. As contrasted to
the loose assemblage of ethnographic materials pertaining to societies in the
Human Relations Area Files -- of differing spatial and temporal foci and uneven
quality -- our sample construction procedures assured future generations of
cross-cultural researchers that the investment of time in coding the available
ethnographic materials on these pinpointed units would bear fruit for
comparative analysis. Many researchers
have had access to either (a) the "pinpointing" sheets which we
prepared for our 1969 article, which guided the coders for seven years of
National Science Foundation funding of the Cross-Cultural Cumulative Coding
Center (CCCCC), at the University of Pittsburgh, or (b) the shorter sample
bibliographies which were published with each successive set of ethnographic
codes (Murdock and White 1969; Murdock and Morrow 1970, Barry and Paxson 1971,
Murdock and Wilson 1972, Tuden and Marshall 1972, Barry, Josephson, Lauer, and
Marshall 1976).
Nearly twenty years later, the successful fruits of this
strategy are apparent. While this is
not the place to review the extensive findings of cross-cultural research, over
two-thirds of the hundreds of cross-cultural studies since 1969 (see Barry 1980
for a partial listing) have used the Standard Sample. Scores of authors have contributed anywhere from one to 100 coded
variables for this sample. The coded
data from the bulk of these studies have been assembled by researchers at the
University of California, Irvine (White, Burton, Brudner 1982), over the past
nine years, in a form suitable for electronic manipulation. In 1985, an electronic journal, World
Cultures, was inaugurated as a means for disseminating cross-cultural coded
data, bibliographies, codebooks, and related research materials. The current bibliography of ethnographic
sources for the Standard Sample is now available in electronic form, where it
can be employed by researchers for a variety of purposes.
This bibliography consists, for each society in the Standard
Sample, of:
(1) the sources cited by each of the major
studies which contributed extensive sets of coded ethnographic variables (CCCCC
studies including those cited above, plus others cited in the Appendix,
(2) new sources which have been published or
become available or known to the author since the original
"pinpointing" sheets were prepared; and
(3) citations to all of the above sources
contained, as of 1985, in the Human Relations Area Files (1976, 1985).
Some of the new sources
contained in this bibliography were located by a bibliographer in 1979 under
the direction of Alice Schlegel. The remainder were found by the author.
Preliminary to the bibliography, in Table 1, is a list of the
186 societies in the Standard Sample, showing (1) the SCCS number, (2) the
societal name, (3) the pinpointed date, (4) the sequential number in the
Ethnographic Atlas, (4) the Ethnographic Atlas regional identity code, (5) the
HRAF Outline of World Cultures (Murdock
1975) code, (6) the quality of the HRAF file, a=good, b=useful, c=inadequate,
and (7) the pinpointed focus. The
societies are listed by order of appearance in the Standard Sample. This list may be useful in organizing a
coding project, particularly in identifying sources in HRAF. The quality of HRAF sources code is defined
more fully (Murdock and White 1969: 28) as:
(a) Satisfactory (102), containing a good
selection of the source materials, including all the
major sources.
(b) Useful (45), including the major sources
but an incomplete selection of other
important ones and thus adjudged adequate for most cross-cultural research but
requiring supplementary library research on particular topics.
(c) Inadequate (4), lacking at least one of
the major sources or several important ones and thus to be used in
cross-cultural research only with caution and preferably with supplementary
library research.
A comparison of the 1969 and 1985 HRAF quality codes indicates
the extent to which the New Haven files have been upgraded:
1969 1985
a = good 74
98
b = useful 25
27
c = inadequate 18
10
Totals 117
135
The bibliography is presented in the same order as the
societies are listed in Table 1. Each
set of bibliographic entries for a society is headed by
(1) the SCCS number (Murdock and White 1969),
(2) sequential EA number (Murdock 1967),
(3) regional EA identity code (Murdock 1967),
(4) societal name,
(5) pinpointed focus; and, on the second
line,
(6) G: the geographic coordinates (latitude and
longitude) of the pinpointed group, and
(7) T: pinpointed time.
Groups of bibliographic entries are ordered under one of six
headings that were part of the initial design of the bibliography for the
sample (Murdock and White 1969, Murdock and White, n.d.):
1. Principal Authority(ies) - pertaining to
the pinpointed group and time.
2. Other Dependable Primary Sources -
pertaining to different dates, (1) and/or adjacent groups representing the same
ethnic and local cultures.
3. Auxiliary Primary Sources - pertaining to
other similar groups of the same culture, or the general region to which the
focal group belongs.
4. Useful Secondary Sources - summaries,
reviews, or analyses of the culture in question, based on readings of the
principal authorities and others. These
are asterisked (*) when they are of similar utility for coding as the principal
authorities.
5. Other Sources - regional histories,
bibliographies, etc.
6. Sources to be Avoided - pertaining to the
general ethnic group in question, but containing known inaccuracies, marked
differences from the focal group, etc.
Two lines of numbers and codes appear to the left of each
bibliographic item. The upper line is a
string of seven numbers, dashes, zeros, or new source (^) indicators. The numbers indicate the rank order of use
of the ethnographic sources, for a given society, for each of seven major sets
of coded variables. These seven numbers
thus indicate a rough ranking -- not an absolute scale -- of the quality of
each source for each of seven topics:
1. Subsistence and Economics (Murdock
and Morrow 1970)
2. Settlement Organization (Murdock
and Wilson 1972)
3. Infancy and Child Training [0-4 years of age] (Barry and Paxson 1971)
4. Childhood [4-12 years of age] (Barry,
Josephson, Lauer, and Marshall
1976)
5. Political Organization (Tuden
and Marshall 1972)
6. Division of Labor (Murdock
and Provost 1973a)
7. Illness Beliefs (Murdock,
Wilson and Frederick 1978)
Each of these seven major studies reported their own
evaluation of the usefulness of the sources for particular ethnographic
topics. Principal authorities, for
example, will often have a string of ones, twos or threes, e.g., 1111111,
1122111, 3101122 indicating that they were the often first, second, or third
most useful source in coding the respective topics above. Dashes indicate that a given source was
available and consulted, but not used in the coding of the given topic. Zeros (0) -- of which there are few --
indicate that the source may have been located by the CCCCC staff after the
coding on the topic was completed. This
could be clarified by further investigation at the CCCCC files in
Pittsburgh. New study (^) indicators
are sources that became available -- or known to the authors -- after the
completion of coding on the topic, usually because of a later date of
publication.
For some entries, an additional symbol (+ or &) is found
at the end of the string of seven numbers.
These indicate additional sources cited in studies of two other topics:
8. + Sexual Attitudes
(Broude and Greene 1976)
[all 186 societies coded: additional sources for 13
societies plus three alternates are cited].
& Status of Women
(Whyte 1979)
[93 societies
coded: additional sources cited for two societies].
The lower of the two lines of codes to the left of each entry
identify, where pertinent, the number of the source in the Human Relations Area
Files. For example, FX13= 1i indicates, for L. Schultze, 1907, Aus Namaland und
Kalahari, Jena, that this source on the Nama Hottentot is found in the FX13
file of HRAF, according to the Outline of World Cultures (OWC) classification
(F=Africa, FX=South Africa, FX13=Hottentot, FX13= 1 for the first source). If a small letter i is found after this
entry, it means that the HRAF file is incomplete in terms of pages from the
source (e.g., only those pages pertaining to the Hottentot have been included).
Sources which are lacking in HRAF are given successive small
letter codes in the seventh column of the lower line of codes where the number
of the source in HRAF normally appears.
Thus, any source in the bibliography can be referred to by the name of
the society, plus either a numeral (for the HRAF sources) or a letter (for
non-HRAF sources). This provides a
highly convenient way for new published codes to refer to sources in a compact
form, so that page references may also be given. It is strongly recommended that all future codes utilize this
convention and provide source and page numbers keyed to each individual
code. This will permit the electronic
database, currently being distributed through the World Cultures electronic
journal, to index specific coded information on each society back to the
published sources from which the information was extracted.
The bibliographic entries
give only:
(1) Author(s), last names and initials,
(2) date(s) of publication and relevant
editions,
(3) titles of books or articles, without subtitles,
(4) journal titles for articles,
(5) book titles for articles, and the editors
thereof,
(6) place of publication, and university in
the case of dissertations.
While abbreviated (e.g.,
in comparison to HRAF bibliographic format), this is sufficient information to
locate each source and its publisher.
Assessment of Sources
A considerable number of new ethnographic sources relevant to
the pinpointed Standard Sample of 186 societies have been published since
selection of the sample (Murdock and White 1969). New sources are of particular importance for the !Kung Bushmen
(Harvard Kalahari Research Group), Nyakyusa (Wilson 1977, others), Kikuyu
(Leakey 1977), Ganda (miscellaneous), Mbuti (Turnbull 1983), Ibo (Egboh ? ?),
Ashanti (Fortes 198?, Wilks 1975), Wolof (Irvine 1973), Songhai (minor), Fulani
(auxiliary), Hausa (Smith 1978, secondary to focus), ... Huron ( ) ... etc.
With the publication of so many new ethnographic sources in
the decades since this sample was prepared and pinpointed in terms of the best earliest description in
each cultural province a question naturally arises. Are the original sampling choices still the best early-described
focal units in their respective provinces?
For the Nyae Nyae focus among the !Kung Bushmen, based on extensive work
by the Marshall family beginning in the 1950's, has now been surpassed in depth
of coverage in many areas by the work, begun in the 1960's, of the Kalahari
Research Group on the neighboring Dobe !Kung.
The coverage of one unit, however, is often complementary to that in the
other, and in coding either one it is useful to examine both sets of
materials. In this case, rather than
replace one with the other for cross-cultural sampling purposes, the optimal
scientific strategy is to code both separately one after the other, note the
similarities and differences, make whatever inferences from one to the other as
are strictly justified, contribute both to the cumulative databank, and choose
one for sampling purposes.
Other questions of sample redesign will be taken up in a
separate article.
Discussion
The World Cultures electronic journal is distributing the
cross-cultural database, including nearly a thousand coded variables for
Murdock and White's (1969) Standard Cross-Cultural Sample. Many cross-cultural researchers are now
analyzing coded cross-cultural data at microcomputer work-stations. The codes are read by programs which enable
one to do statistical and distributional analysis, mathematical modeling, and
hypothesis testing. Codebooks in
electronic form are manipulated by word processing programs, and easily easily
reorganized to suit the particular aims of a research project, publication, or
classroom use.
The bibliography provided here is also available in electronic
form. It can be electronically
manipulated with the aid of a database management system. The entries can
be sorted by HRAF number, alphabetized by author, keyworded by topic and sorted,
or used in a bibliographic retrieval system.
Or, it can simply be edited in any word processing program, and culled
or reorganized for a particular publication, research project, or classroom
use.
Many anthropology and sociology departments now have
microcomputers available both for faculty and students. In a number of departments, instructional
use is made of these materials. For
many years at UC Irvine, I have taught an undergraduate course on Comparing
Cultures in which students read ethnographies, learn to make systematic comparisons,
rate their societies on code sheets, extract empirical hypotheses from their
readings that are testable with coded cross-cultural data, learn to use
codebooks for an existing ethnographic databank to find relevant variables for
testing their hypotheses, run cross-tabulations, and learn how to evaluate
comparative evidence for or against their hypotheses.
A set of rapid microcomputer developments relevant to
comparative ethnographic analysis is graphics, electronic cartography, and
electronic sensing. Many graphics
programs are available for presentation of data and visualization of
distributions or relationships in empirical findings. Color printers are now inexpensive for personal or
microcomputers, and a wide range of applications for the analysis of
comparative anthropological data has opened up. Maps can be converted to electronic/graphics form. For about triple the cost of an ordinary
microcomputer work-station or high-end personal computer, Geographic
Informations Systems (GIS) and remote sensing (RS) image processing (e.g., of
NOAA weather-satellite data) systems are available. They are within a tolerable range of complexity for
anthropologists who wish to develop skills in the use of electronic cartography
or ecological analysis from RS data.
The coupling of the electronic cross-cultural database, based on sources
in the current bibliography, with geographic information and remote imaging
systems has considerable potential for the development of anthropology at a
worldwide scale of analysis.
HRAF is beginning an ambitious project to computerize their
ethnographic text files. The current
bibliography and its compact source-referencing system provide the needed
linkage between HRAF's text files and the existing and future cross-cultural
data in the form of coded variables. As
researchers publish their source and page references for each of their codes on
a sample of societies, it will be possible to move electronically:
- from coded information to the text from which it was
extracted,
- from ethnographic text to codes extracted from the text.
It is a matter of time --
the technology being now available -- before researchers with a microcomputer
work-station can move back and forth between coded cross-cultural data on a
particular society and the descriptive ethnographic text, in electronic form.
The step of linking coded comparative data, through an indexed
source bibliography such as provided here, back to the original text, is much
needed both for comparative studies and for anthropology generally. One of the greatest current weaknesses of
the cross-cultural database is the fact that the researchers who constructed
the coded variables largely ignored the measurement of reliability and
assessment of the validity of codes and coding categories. Code-to-text linkage via indexed
bibliography will greatly facilitate studies of reliability and validity, and
aid in reconceptualizing and recategorizing coded ethnographic variables, or
developing new and improved measures of sociocultural phenomena.
For the anthropologist, researcher, or student interested in
one or a particular set of societies, the text-to-code linkage provides a means
of studying how particular ethnographic materials (texts, descriptions) have
been interpreted in a comparative framework.
Such use of these materials may help to identify key unsolved problems
of ethnographic and ethnological analysis.
In the meantime, the bibliography provided here will be a
useful scholarly research tool for comparative researchers organizing coding
projects, or instructors who need high-quality bibliographies for particular
societies.
Ethical Considerations
Discussion of a world databank and electronic data processing
raises the type of question posed by Margaret Mead, at the height of Anthropology's
self-questioning, in the 1970 meeting of the American Anthropological
Association. Are we not ethically
beholden to avoid the centralization of our data sources? The question, as we shall see, is wrongly
stated. The more appropriate question
is what are the safeguards of anthropological ethics in the construction and
use of databases?
Scientific databases of ethnographic materials, such as the
present case, do not provide comprehensive coverage of all human groups, or
even of contemporary data. Hypothesis
testing requires only a sampling of the available data. By summing the focal group sizes of the
Standard Sample and dividing by the world population, one arrives at an
estimate of the sampling fraction: 1/2000 is a high estimate. By design, however, we have over-sampled the
tribal groups of the world, at a ball park fraction of 1/200. The average pinpointed date in the sample is
ca. 1860, and the median 1910. For the
tribal groups, the average and medians are more recent: ca. 1900 and 1930,
respectively.
For tribal groups that are undoubtedly "at risk" in
the contemporary world, would anything be gained by scrapping the enterprise of
scientific databanking, or disguising the identities of the 1/200 groups
sampled at historical dates of 1900-1930, plus or minus 50?
Our research at UC Irvine has taken the opposite tack. We have not been content with the
anthropological fiction that the earliestethnographic descriptions provide a
picture of traditional societies in their relatively pure or isolated state, as
independent evolutionary experiments.
First, we developed a set of methods that would allow us to test
"functional" hypotheses more accurately given knowledge of actual historical
connections (White, Burton, Dow 1981, Dow, Burton and White 1982, Dow, White
and Burton 1982, Dow, Burton, Reitz and White, 1984). Second, well aware of the heavy colonial and world impacts on
"remote" societies even at the time of earliest ethnnographic
description, we have pursued a strategy, funded by NSF, of studying and coding
world system variables -- world commodity and labor markets, colonialism,
proselytization, dominant/non-dominant relations, etc. -- as they have impacted
on the Standard Sample societies. Much
of the material for these studies comes from regional and economic histories,
and is only sparsely discussed by the ethnographers.
Databanking of materials relevant to scientific questions, as
in the world systems study, can also illuminate the severe dimensions of the
problems of tribal peoples. At the end
of our world systems project we will add to the present bibliography a select
bibliography of sources relevant to an assessment of the relationships between
local level societies and larger world systems.
TABLE
1: Listing of Societies in the Standard
Sample
No.
Society (SCCS) Date Seq. E.A.
HRAF q Focus
1.
Nama Hottentot 1860 102
Aa3 FX13 a Gei/Khauan tribe
2.
Kung Bushmen 1950 1
Aa1 FX10 a Nyai Nyae region
3.
Thonga 1865 104
Ab4 FT6 a Ronga subtribe
4.
Lozi 1900 103
Ab3 FQ9 a Ruling Luyana
5.
Mbundu 1890 202
Ab5 FP13 a Bailundo subtribe
6.
Suku 1920 731
Ac17 Feshi territory
lineage center
7.
Bemba 1897 105
Ac3 FQ5 b Zambia branch
8.
Nyakyusa 1934 208
Ad6 FN17 a Age villages of Mwaya and Masoko
9.
Hadza 1930 726
Aa9 Tribe
10.
Luguru 1925 704
Ad14 Morogoro District
11.
Kikuyu 1920 108
Ad3 FL10 a Fort Hall or Metume
district
12.
Ganda 1875 306
Ad7 FK7 a Kyaddondo
district (V: Kampala)
13.
Mbuti 1950 202
Aa5 FO4 a Epulu net-hunters, Ituri forest
14. Nkundo Mongo 1930 110
Ae4 FO32 a Ilanga group
15.
Banen 1935 830
Ae51 Ndiki subtribe
16.
Tiv 1920 116
Ah3 FF57 a Tar of Benue Province
17.
Ibo 1935 643
Af10 FF26 a E. Isu-Ana group of South Ibo
18.
Fon 1890 10
Af1 City and environs of
Abomey
19.
Ashanti 1895 111
Af3 FE12 a Kumasi State
20.
Mende 1945 211
Af5 FC7 a Vicinity of town of Bo
21.
Wolof 1950 21
Cb2 MS30 a Upper and lower Salum in Gambia
22.
Bambara 1902 12
Ag1 FA8 a Segou to Bamako on Niger River
23.
Tallensi 1934 114
Ag4 FE11 a Tribe
24.
Songhai 1940 122
Cb3 Bamba division
25.
Pastoral Fulani 1951 1082
Cb24 Wodaabe of Niger
26.
Hausa 1900 1084 Cb26 MS12 b Zazzagawa of Zaria
27.
Massa (Masa) 1910 646
Ai9 Around Yagoua in
Cameroon
28.
Azande 1905 117
Ai3 FO7 a Yambio Chiefdom
29.
Fur (Darfur) 1880 875 Cb17 Jebel Marra
30.
Otoro Nuba 1930 647
Ai10 Nuba Hills
31.
Shilluk 1910 218
Ai6 FJ23 a Kingdom
32.
Mao 1939 1062 Ai47
Northern division
33.
Kaffa (Kafa) 1905 860
Ca30 Kingdom
34.
Masai 1900 119
Aj2 FL12 c Kisonko or S. Masai of Tanzania
35.
Konso 1935 18
Ca1 Town of Buso
36.
Somali 1900 19
Ca2 MO4 c Dolbahanta clan or subtribe
37.
Amhara 1953 679
Ca7 MP5 a Gondar district
38.
Bogo 1855 867
Ca37 Tribe
39.
Kenuzi Nubians 1900 24
Cd1 Kenuzi Nubians of
Dahmit
40.
Teda 1950 23
Cc2 MS22 Nomads of Tibesti
41.
Tuareg 1900 880
Cc9 MS25 a Ahaggaren tribe
42.
Riffians 1926 125
Cd3 MX3 b Entirety: Moroccan
43.
Egyptians 1950 124
Cd2 MR13 a Town and environs of
Silwa
44.
Hebrews - 621 230
Cj3 Kingdom of Judea
45.
Babylonians -1750 413
Cj4 City and environs of
Babylon
46.
Rwala Bedouin 1913 132
Cj2 MD4 a Unspecified
47.
Turks 1950 653
Ci5 MB1 b Northern Anatolian Plateau
48.
Gheg Albanians 1910 25
Ce1 EG1 a Mountain Gheg of No. Albania
49.
Romans 110
126 Ce3 EI9
City and environs of Rome
50.
Basques 1934 225
Ce4 Village of Vera de
Bidasoa
No.
Society (SCCS) Date Seq. E.A.
HRAF q Focus
51.
Irish 1932 128
Cg3 ER6 a County Clare
52.
Lapps 1950
129 Cg4 EP4
a Konkama District
53.
Yurak Samoyed 1894 136
Ec4 RU4 a Tribe
54.
Russians 1955 1257 Ch11 RF1
c Viriatino Village
55.
Abkhaz 1880 1265 Ci12 RI3
b Tribe
56.
Armenians 1843 912
Ci10 RJ1* - Vicinity of Erevan
57.
Kurd 1951 913
Ci11 MA11 c Town and environs of Rowanduz
58.
Basseri 1958 358
Ea6 Nomadic branch
59.
Punjabi (West) 1950 1258 Ea13
Mohla Village
60.
Gond 1938 142
Eg3 AW32 a Hill Maria
61.
Toda 1900 143
Eg4 AW60 a Tribe
62.
Santal 1940 42
Ef1 AW42 Bankura and Berghum Districts
63.
Uttar Pradesh 1945 1260 Ef11 AW19 c Village and environs of Senapur
64.
Burusho 1934 139 Ee2 AV7
a Hunza State
65.
Kazak 1885 35
Eb1 RQ2 b Great Horde
66.
Khalka Mongols 1920 134
Eb3 AH4* b Narobanchin Territory
67.
Lolo 1910 40
Ed2 AE4 c Liang Shan and Taliang S
68.
Lepcha 1937 140
Ee3 AK5 a Lingthem and vicinity
69.
Garo 1955 47
Ei1 AR5 Rengsanggri Village
70.
Lakher 1930 147
Ei4 Tribe
71.
Burmese 1965 146
Ei3 AP1 c Nondwin Village
72.
Lamet 1940 49
Ej1 Tribe, Northwestern Laos
73.
Vietnamese 1930 149
Ej4 AM1 a Red River Delta in Tonkin
74.
Rhade 1962 456
Ej10 Ko-Sier Village
75.
Khmer 1292 248
Ej5 City of Angkor,
Capital
76.
Siamese 1955 367
Ej9 AO7 c Bang Chan Village
77.
Semang 1925 148
Ej3 AN7 b Jehai Group or subtribe
78.
Nicobarese 1870 244
Eh5 Car Nicobar of North
Islands
79.
Andamanese 1860 45
Eh1 AZ2 a Aka-Bea of South Andaman
80.
Vedda 1860 145
Eh4 AX5 a Danigala Forest hunting group
81.
Tanala 1925 144
Eh3 FY8 b Menabe subtribe
82.
Negri Sembilan 1958 1262 Eh16
Inas District
83.
Javanese 1954 54
Ib2 OE5 Town and environs of Pare
84.
Balinese 1958 152
Ib3 OF7 c Tihingan Village
85.
Iban 1950 53
Ib1 OC6 a Ulu Ai Group
86.
Badjau 1963 1099 Ia13
Tawi-Tawi and adjacent islands
87.
Toradja 1910 254
Ic5 OG11 Bare'e subgroup
88.
Tobelorese 1900 1118 Ic10
Tobelo District
89.
Alorese 1938 154
Ic2 OF5 a Abui of Atimelang Village
90.
Tiwi 1929 157
Id3 OI20 a Tribe: Melville Island
91.
Aranda 1896 56 Id1 OI8 a Alice Springs and environs
92.
Orokaiva 1925 457
Ie9 OJ23 a Aiga subtribe
93.
Kimam 1960 1101 Ie18
Bamol Village
94.
Kapauku 1955 57
Ie1 OJ29 c Botukebo Village
95.
Kwoma 1960 655 Ie12 OJ13 Hongwam
subtribe
96.
Manus 1937 373
Ig9 OM6 a Peri Villag
97.
New Ireland 1930 163
Ig4 OM10 a Lesu Village
98.
Trobrianders 1914 62
Ig2 OL6 a Kiriwina Island
99.
Siuai 1939 61
Ig1 Northeastern group
100.
Tikopia 1930 66
Ii2 OT11 a Ravenga District
101.
Pentecost 1953 164
Ih3 Bunlap Village
102.
Mbau Fijians 1840 1267 Ih14
Bau Chiefdom, Vanua Levu
No.
Society (SCCS) Date Seq. E.A.
HRAF q Focus
103.
Ajie 1845 263
Ih5 Neje Chiefdom
104.
Maori 1820 167
Ij2 OZ4 c Nga Puhi Tribe
105.
Marquesans 1800 168
Ij3 OX6 c Te-i'i Chiefdom S.W. Nuku Hiva
106.
Western Samoans 1829 1263 Iil4
OU8 b Aana in Western Upolu Island
107.
Gilbertese 1890 633
If4 Makin and Butiritari Islands (N)
108.
Marshallese 1900 1266 Ih14 OR11 a Jaluit Atoll
109.
Trukese 1947 60
If2 OR19 b Romonum Island
110.
Yapese 1910 260
If6 OR22 a Island
111.
Palauans 1947 59
If1 Ulimang Village
112.
Ifugao 1910 150
Ia3 OA19 b Kiangan Group
113.
Atayal 1930 51
Ia1 AD1 c Tribe (but excluding Sedeq)
114.
Chinese 1936 1259 Ed15 AF1
a Kaihsienkung Village, Chekiang
115.
Manchu 1915 137
Ed3 AG1 a Aigun District
116.
Koreans 1947 39
Ed1 AA1 a Kanghwa Island
117.
Japanese 1950 237
Ed5 AB43 Southern Okayama
118.
Ainu 1880 325
Ec7 AB6 c Saru Basin in Hokkaido
119.
Gilyak 1890 37
Ec1 RX2 a Sakhalin Island
120.
Yukaghir 1850 236
Ec6 Upper Kolyma River
121.
Chukchee 1900 135
Ec3 RY2 a Reindeer Division
122.
Ingalik 1885 377
Na8 Shageluk Village
123.
Aleut 1800 458
Na9 NA6 a Unalaska Branch
124.
Copper Eskimo 1915 169
Na3 ND8 a Coronation Gulf
125.
Montaganais 1910 495
Na32 NH6 a Lake St. John & Mistassahi Band
126.
Micmac 1650
504 Na41 NJ5 b Mainland division
127.
Saulteaux 1930 496
Na33 NG6 b Berens River band
128.
Slave 1940 466
Na17 Lynx Point band
129.
Kaska 1900 170
Na4 ND12 a Upper Liard River
Group
130.
Eyak 1890 270 Nb5
Tribe
131.
Haida 1875 70
Nb1 Masset Town
132.
Bellacoola 1880 471
Nb9 NE6 a Central group, lower B.C. River
133.
Twana 1860 71
Nb2 Tribe
134.
Yurok 1850 172
Nb4 NS31 b Tsurai Village
135.
Pomo (Eastern) 1850 533
Nc18 NS18 a Clear Lake, Village of Cignon
136.
Yokuts (Lake) 1850 539
NC24 NS29 a Tulare Lake
137.
Paiute (North.) 1870 564 Nd22 NR13 a Wadadika of Harney Valley
138.
Klamath 1860
523 Nc8 NR10
Tribe
139.
Kutenai 1890 380
Nd7 Lower or eastern
branch
140.
Gros Ventre 1880 75
Ne1 NQ13 a Tribe
141.
Hidatsa 1836 622
Ne15 Village
142.
Pawnee 1867 342
Nf6 NQ18 c Skidi Band or
subtribe
143.
Omaha 1860 179
Nf3 NQ12 b Tribe
144.
Huron 1634 79
Ng1 Bear and Cord
Subtribes
145.
Creek 1800 180
Ng3 NN11 Upper division in Alabama
146.
Natchez 1718 385
Ng7 c Kingdom
147.
Comanche 1870 177
Ne3 NO6 Tribe
148.
Chiricahua 1870 81
Nh1 NT8 a Central band
149.
Zuni 1880 183
Nh4 NT23 Pueblo
150.
Havasupai 1918 175
Nd3 NT14 a Tribe
151.
Papago 1910 184
Ni2 NU28 a Archie division
152.
Huichol 1890 282
Ni3 a Tribe
153.
Aztec 1520 185
Nj2 NU7 City & environs of Tenochtitlan
154.
Popoluca 1940 284
Nj3 b Town and environs of
Soteapan
No.
Society (SCCS) Date Seq. E.A.
HRAF q Focus
155.
Quiche 1930 1166 Sa13
Town of Chichicastenango
156.
Miskito 1921 390
Sa9 SA15 Vicinity: Cape Gracias a Dios
157.
Bribri 1917 287
Sa5 SA19 b Tribe
158.
Cuna (Tule) 1927 85
Sa1 SB5 a San Blas Archipelago
159.
Goajiro 1947 391
Sb6 SC13 a Tribe
160.
Haitians 1935 1237 Sb9
SV3 b Town of Mirebalais
161.
Callinago 1650 87
Sb1 ST13 a Dominica Island
162.
Warrau 1935 88
Sc1 SS18 a Winikina of Orinoco
Delta
163.
Yanomamo 1965 1264 Sd9
SQ18 Shamatari Tribe
164.
Carib (Barama) 1932 189
Sc3 SR9 a Barama River
165.
Saramacca 1928 392
Sc6 SR8 a Upper Suriname River
166.
Mundurucu 1850
90 Sd1 SQ13 b Cabrua Village
167.
Cubeo (Tucano) 1939 293
Se5 SQ19 Village on Caduiari River
168.
Cayapa 1908 194
Sf3 SD6 a Rio Cayapas Basin
169.
Jivaro 1920 191
Se3 SD9 a Tribe
170.
Amahuaca 1960 634
Se8 Upper Inuya River
171.
Inca 1530 93
Sf1 SE13 b City and environs of
Cuzco
172.
Aymara 1940 193
Sf2 SF5 a Chucuito Clan community in Peru
173.
Siriono 1942 91
Se1 SF21 a Vicinity of the Rio
Blanco
174.
Nambicuara 1940 198
Si4 SP17 a Cocozu Group
175.
Trumai 1938 98
Si2 SP23 Village of Vanivani
176.
Timbira 1915 200
Sj4 SO8 b Ramcocamecra or Canella
177.
Tupinamba 1550 400
Sj8 SO9 a Hinterland of Rio de Janeiro
178.
Botocudo 1884 299
Sj5 Naknenuk subtribe
179.
Shavante 1958 1184 Sj11
Village of Sao Domingo
180.
Aweikoma 1932 199
Sj3 SM3 Duque de Caxias Reservation
181.
Cayua 1890 1170 Sj10 SM4
S. Mato Grosso & adj. Paraguay
182.
Lengua 1889 1168 Sh9
Those in contact with mission
183.
Abipon 1750 196
Sh3 SI4 a Those in contact with mission
184.
Mapuche 1950 195
Sg2 SG4 c Vicinity of Temuco
185.
Tehuelche 1870 349
Sg4 SH5 a Equestrian
186.
Yahgan 1865 94
Sg1 SH6 b Eastern and central
Notes:
8. Nyakyusa materials are found in the HRAF
Ngonde file (FN17)
56,66* The HRAF files are found in the OWC files
[Khalka, Armenians].
59. West rather than East Panjab (HRAF AW6)
102.
Mbau
rather than Lau Fijians (Atlas #165, Ih4, HRAF OQ6);although the Bau chiefdom
moved to Vanua Levu, the focus is not the same as the Atlas Vanua Levu (Atlas
#694, Ih8, 1940, village of Nakaroka).
106. Western rather than American Samoans (Atlas
#65, Ii1, OU4).
102.
Jaluit
rather than Majuro Marshallese (Atlas #160, If3, HRAF also OR11)
111. Ulimang village focus, not Koror (as in Atlas
#59, If1)
Synonyms:
9.
Kindiga 97. Lesu 156. Mosquito
17.
Igbo 101.
Bunlap 157. Talamanca
18.
Dahomey 125.
Naskapi 162. Warao
19.
Twi 127.
Ojibwa 163. Yanoama
39.
Barabra 129. Nahane 165. Bush Negroes
43.
Fellahin 143.
Dhegiha 180. Caingang
73.
Annamese 148. Eastern
Apache 181. Guarani
76.
Thai 150. Plateau
Yumans 184. Araucanians
Appendix: Bibliography of Coded Studies
Using the Standard Sample
1. G. P. Murdock and Diana O. Morrow. 1970.
Subsistence Economy and
Supportive Practices: Cross-Cultural Codes 1. Ethnology 9:302-330.
2. G. P. Murdock and Suzanne F. Wilson. 1972.
Settlement Patterns and
Community Organization: Cross Cultural Codes 3. Ethnology 11:254-295.
3. Herbert Barry III and Leonora M.
Paxson. 1971. Infancy and Early
Childhood: Cross-Cultural Codes 2.
Ethnology 10:466-508.
4. Herbert Barry III, Lili Josephson, Edith
Lauer, and Catherine Marshall.
1976.
Traits Inculcated in Childhood:
Cross-Cultural Codes 5.
Ethnology 15:83-114.
5. Arthur Tuden and Catherine Marshall. 1972.
Political Organization:
Cross-Cultural Codes 4. Ethnology 11:436-464. (Coded only as
additional sources to 1-3 above.)
6. George P. Murdock and Caterina
Provost. 1973. Factors in the Division
of Labor by Sex:
A Cross-Cultural Analysis.
Ethnology 12: 2-3-225.
7. George P. Murdock. 1980.
Theories of Illness: A World Survey.
PittsburgHRAF: University of Pittsburgh
Press.
8+ Gwen J. Broude and Sarah J. Greene. 1976.
Cross-Cultural Codes
on Twenty Sexual Attitudes and
Practices. Ethnology 12: 409-29.
[all 186 societies coded: additional
sources for 13 societies plus
three alternates are cited].
8& Martin K. Whyte. 1979.
Cross-Cultural Codes Dealing with the Relative
Status of Women. Ethnology 17:211-37. [93
societies coded:
additional sources cited for two
societies].
The initial sample design, several codes,
and suggested primary and
secondary
authorities, as well as the pinpointing of the best described
social
units in time and space, are found in:
9.
Murdock,
George P., and Douglas R. White.
1969. Standard Cross-
Cultural Sample.
Ethnology 8: 329-369.
Additional
codes drawing on the same bibliographic references are provided in:
10.
Murdock, George P., and Catherine Provost.
1973. Measurement of
Cultural Complexity. Ethnology 12: 379-392.
11.
Barry, Herbert, III, L. Josephson, E. Lauer, and C. Marshall. 1977.
Agents and Techniques for Child
Training: Cross-Cultural Codes 6.
Ethnology 16: 191-230.
12.
Murdock, George P., S.F. Wilson, and V. Frederick. 1978. World
Distributions of Theories of Illness. Ethnology 17: 449-470 (see #7).
13.
Schlegel, Alice, and Herbert Barry III.
1979. Adolescent Initiation
Ceremonies: A Cross-Cultural Code.
Ethnology 18: 199-210.
14.
Rohner, Ronald P., and Evelyn C. Rohner.
1981. Parental-Acceptance-
Rejection and Parental Control: Cross-Cultural Codes. Ethnology 20:
245-260.
Studies
1 through 6, 6A, 6B, and 8 through 12 are reprinted in:
15.
Herbert Barry III and Alice Schlegel, eds.
1980. Cross-Cultural Codes
and Samples. PittsburgHRAF: University of Pittsburgh Press.
Reserved
symbols: Orthography
ø o degree latitude, longitude ?
?? missing bibliographic information
0
0 0 0 unsure as to focus and whether to include ? ? ? ?
‚ e right accent (French) }
Š e left accent {
= HRAF source
HRAF:FX13
SCCS# 1 EA# 102
Aa3 Nama Hottentot. Focus:
Gei//Khauan tribe.
G:27ø30'S,
17øE. T:1860.
1. Principal Authority(ies)
1411112 Schultze, L. 1907. Aus Namaland und
Kalahari. Jena.
FX13= 1 i
2.
Other Dependable Primary Sources
0204000 Hoernl‚, A. W. 1925. The Social
Organization of the Nama
FX13= 4 Hottentots. American Anthropologist, n.s., 27: 1-24.
0000001 Hoernl‚, A. W. 1918. Certain Rites of
Transition and the
FX13= 3 Conception of !Nau among the
Hottentots. Harvard African
Studies 2:65-82.
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
2122221 *Schapera, I. 1930. The Khoisan Peoples
of South Africa.
FX13= 2 London.
030303 Murdock, G. P. 1934. Our Primitive
Contemporaries, pp.
a 475-507. New York.
5. [1]Other
Sources
^^^^^ Kohler, C. 1970. A new contribution
to Nama Studies. African
b Studies 29:
279-285.
HRAF:FX10
SCCS#
2 EA# 1 Aa1 Kung Bushmen. Focus: Nyae Nyae region.
G:19ø50'S, 20ø35'E. T:1950.
1. [1]Principal
Authority(ies)
^^^^^ Marshall, L(orna). 1976.
The !Kung of Nyae Nyae.
a Cambridge, Mass.
1022110 Marshall, L. 1960. !Kung Bushman
Bands. Africa 30: 325-355.
b
0100221 Marshall, L. 1965. The !Kung Bushmen
of the Kalahari Desert.
FX10=15 Peoples of Africa, ed. J. L. Gibbs, Jr.,
pp. 241-278. New York.
0011332 Marshall, L. 1959. Marriage among
!Kung Bushmen. Africa
FX10= 1 29: 335-364
2033000 Marshall, L. 1961. Sharing, Talking
and Giving. Africa
FX10=12 31: 231-249. Reprinted in R. B. Lee and I. DeVore 1976. (below).
0000001 Marshall, L. 1962. !Kung Bushman Religious Beliefs. Africa
FX10=13 32:221-252.
0000000 Marshall, L. 1957a. The Kin
Terminology System of the !Kung
FX10= 5 Bushmen.
Africa 27: 1-25.
0000000 Marshall, L. 1957b. N!ow. Africa 27: 232-240.
FX10= 6
0004000 Thomas, E. M. 1959. The Harmless
People. New York,
FX10= 9 Alfred A. Knopf.
0000400 Marshall, Lawrence, and Lorna
Marshall. 1956. !Kung Bushmen
c of South West
Africa. South West Africa Annual 1956:
11-23.
^^^^^ Marshall, J. 1956. The Hunters. Somerville, Mass. (Film)
d
^^^^^ Marshall, J. 1957. Ecology of the
!Kung Bushmen. Senior
e Honors Thesis,
Harvard.
0000000 Marshall, J. 1958. Man as a
Hunter. Natural History 67(6):
FX10=11 291-309, (7):376-395.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
^^^^^ Lee, R. B. 1979. The !Kung San. Cambridge.
[Dobe !Kung].
f
^^^^^ Lee, R. B. 1972. The !Kung Bushmen
in Botswana. Hunters and
g Gatherers Today,
ed. M. Bicchieri. pp. 327-368. New York.
^^^^^ Lee, R. B. 1966. Subsistence Ecology
of !Kung Bushmen.
FX10=16 Ph. D. Dissertation, University of
California, Berkeley.
^^^^^ Lee, R. B. 1968. What Hunters do for
a Living. Man the Hunter,
h ed. R. B. Lee and
I. DeVore, eds., pp. 30-48. Chicago.
^^^^^ Lee, R. B. 1974. Male-Female
Residence Arrangements and Political
i Power in Human
Hunter-Gatherers. Archives of Sexual
Behavior 3:
167-173.
^^^^^ Lee, R. B., and Irven DeVore, eds. 1976.
Kalahari Hunter-
j Gatherers. Cambridge, Mass. [Dobe !Kung: Chapters 1-3, 6-14].
^^^^^ Tobias, P. (ed.). 1978.
San Hunters and Herders of Southern
k Africa. Cape Town.
^^^^^ Draper, P. 1972. !Kung Bushman
Childhood. Ph. D. Dissertation.
l Harvard. [Dobe !Kung].
^^^^^ Draper, P. (forthcoming). !Kung
Subsistence Work at /Du/da.
m
^^^^^ Draper, P. 1975. !Kung Women:
contrasts in Sexual Egalitarianism
n in the foraging
and sedentary contexts. Toward an
Anthropology
of Women, ed. R.
Reiter, pp. 77-109. New York. [Dobe
!Kung].
^^^^^ Draper, P. 1978. The Learning
Environment for Aggression and
o Antisocial
Behavior among the !Kung. Teaching Non-Aggression,
ed. A. Montagu, pp. 31-53. New York.
^^^^^ Biesele, M. in press. !Kung
Folklore. Cambridge, Mass. [Dobe].
p
^^^^^ Biesele, M. 1975. Folklore and Ritual
of !Kung Hunter-gatherers.
q Ph. D.
Dissertation, Harvard. [Dobe !Kung].
^^^^^ Biesele, M. 1972. Hunting in
semi-arid areas - the Kalahari
r Bushmen
Today. Botswana Notes and Records
(special ed.).
^^^^^ Hansen, J. D. L., A. S. Truswell, C.
Freeseman, and B. MacHutchon.
s 1969. The Children of Hunting and Gathering
Bushmen. South
African Medical Journal 43: 1158. [Dobe !Kung].
^^^^^ Harpending, H. C. 1971.
!Kung Hunter-Gatherer Population
t Structure. Ph. D. Dissertation. Harvard.
[Dobe !Kung].
^^^^^ Howell, N. 1979. Demography of the
Dobe Area !Kung. New York.
u
^^^^^ Howell, N. n.d. Estimating Absolute
Age in a Remote and
Nonliterate Population.
Princeton. MS.
^^^^^ Konner, M. J. 1971. Infants of a Foraging
People. Mulch 1:
v 44-73. [Dobe !Kung].
^^^^^ Konner, M. J. 1972. Aspects of the
Developmental Ethology of
w a Foraging
People. Ethological Studies of Child
Behavior, ed.
N. G. Blurton Jones.
Cambridge.
^^^^^ Konner, M. J. 1973. Infants of a
Foraging People. Ph. D.
x Dissertation. Harvard.
^^^^^ Konner, M. J. in press. Infancy among
the Kalahari Desert San.
y Cultural and
Social Influences in Infancy and Early Childhood, ed.
P. H. Leiderman and S. Tulkin. Stanford.
^^^^^ Shostak, M. 1981. Nisa. Cambridge, Mass. [Dobe !Kung].
z
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
0005003 Schapera, I. 1930. The Khoisan Peoples
of South Africa. London.
aa
HRAF:FT06
SCCS#
3 EA# 104 Ab4 Thonga.
Focus: Ronga subtribe.
G:25ø50'S, 32ø20'E. T:1895.
1.
Principal Authority(ies)
1111111 Junod, H. A. 1927 (2d ed.). The Life
of a South African Tribe.
FT6=1-2 2v. London.
HRAF:FQ09
SCCS#
4 EA# 103 Ab3 Lozi.
Focus: ruling Luyana.
G:16øS, 23øE. T:1900.
1. [1]Principal
Authority(ies)
2122110 Gluckman, M. 1951. The Lozi of
Barotseland. Seven Tribes
FQ9 = 2 of British Central Africa, ed. E. Colson
and M. Gluckman,
pp. 1-93. London.
1000220 Gluckman, M. 1941. Economy of the
Central Barotse Plain.
FQ9 =10 Rhodes-Livingstone Papers 7.
0000000 Gluckman, M. 1972 (lst ed. 1965). The
Ideas in Barotse
FQ9 = 4 Jurisprudence. Manchester.
0000000 Gluckman, M. 1950. Kinship and
Marriage among the Lozi of
FQ9 = 6 Northern Rhodesia and the Zulu of
Natal. African Systems of
Kinship and Marriage, A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and D. Forde,
eds.
Oxford.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0200000 Bertrand, A. 1899. The Kingdom of the
Barotsi. London.
a
0011000 Holub, E.
1895. Seven Years in South
Africa, v.2. London.
b
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
0003010 *Turner, V. W. 1952. The Lozi Peoples of
Northwestern
FQ9 = 1 Rhodesia.
London.
^^^^^ Mainga, M. 1973. Bulozi under the Luyana Kings: Political
c Evolution and
State Formation in Pre-Colonial Zambia.
London.
FP13
SCCS#
5 EA# 203 Ab5 Mbundu.
Focus: Bailundo subtribe.
G:12ø15'S, 16ø30'E. T:1890.
1. [1]Principal
Authority(ies)
3111111 Childs, G. M. 1949. Umbundu Kinship and
Character. London.
FP13= 1
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
1300221 Hambly,W. D. 1934. The Ovimbundu of
Angola. Field Museum
FP13= 3 Anthropological Series 21:89-362.
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
0200002 Edwards, A. C. 1962. The Ovimbundu under
Two Sovereignties.
FP13= 6
London.
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
2000003 McCulloch, M. 1952. The Ovimbundu of
Angola. London.
FP13= 2
00003005. Duffy, J. 1959.
Portuguese Africa. Cambridge,
Mass.
SCCS#
6 EA# 731 Ac17 Suku.
Focus: "lineage center" in Feshi
terr.
G: 6øS, 18øE. T:1920.
1. [1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1111111 Kopytoff, I. 1965. The Suku of
Southwestern Congo. Peoples
a of Africa, ed. J.
L. Gibbs, Jr., pp. 441-477. New York.
2224223 Kopytoff, I. 1964. Family and Lineage
Among the Suku of the
b Congo. The Family Estate in Africa, ed. R. F. Gray
and P. H.
Gulliver, pp. 83-116.
Boston.
0300000 Kopytoff, I. 1961. Extension of
Conflict as a Method of
c Conflict
Resolution Among the Suku of the Congo.
Journal
of Conflict
Resolution 5:61-69.
0002000 Kopytoff, I. 1971. Thå Suku of the
Congo: an ethnographic
d test of Hsu's
hypothesis. Kinship and Culture, ed. F.
L. K.
Hsu. pp. 69-86. Chicago.
^^^^^ Kopytoff, I. 1977. Matrilineality,
residence, and residential
e zone. American Ethnologist 4: 539-558.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0000010 Torday, E., and T. A. Joyce. 1906.
Notes on the Ethnography
f of the
Bayaka. Journal of the Royal Anthropological
Institute 36:39-58.
0033000 Van de Ginste, F. 1947. Le mariage chez les
Basuku.
g Bulletin des
Jurisdictions IndigŠnes et du Droit Coutumier
Congolais, no. 5. 1-2.
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
3000002 Holemans, K. 1959. Etudes sur
l'alimentation en milieu
h coutumier du
Kwango. Annales de la Soci‚t‚ Belge de
M‚decine Tropicale 39:361-374.
HRAF:FQ05
SCCS#
7 EA# 105 Ac3 Bemba.
Focus: of Zambia.
G:10øS, 31øE. T:1897.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1011110 Richards, A. I. 1939. Land, Labour and
Diet in Northern
FQ5 = 2 Rhodesia.
Oxford.
3100220 Richards, A. I. 1951. The Bemba of
North-eastern Rhodesia.
a Seven Tribes of
British Central Africa, ed. E. Colson and
M. Gluckman, pp. 164-191. London.
0200000 Richards, A. I. 1940. The Political
System of the Bemba
FQ5 = 7 Tribe.
African Political Systems, ed. M. Fortes and E. E.
Evans-Pritchard, pp. 83-120. Oxford.
2022000 Richards, A. I. 1940. Bemba Marriage and
Present Economic
b Conditions. Rhodes-Livingstone Papers 4.
0033000 Richards, A. I. 1948. Hunger and Work in
a Savage Tribe.
c Glencoe.
0044000 Richards, A. I. 1956. Chisungu: A Girl's
Initiation
FQ5 = 3 Ceremony Among the Bemba. London.
0400000 Richards, A. I. 1950. Some Types of
Family Structure Amongst
d the Central
Bantu. African Systems of Kinship and
Marriage,
ed. A. R. Radcliffe-Brown and D. Forde, pp. 206-251. London.
^^^^^ Richards, A. I. 1968. Keeping the King
Divine. Proceedings of
e the Royal
Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland
1968: 23-25.
^^^^^ Richards, A. I. 1971. The Consilar System
of the Bemba of
f Northern
Zambia. Councils in Action, ed. A. I.
Richards and A.
Kuper. Cambridge.
^^^^^ Richards, A. I. and C. Tardits. 1974.
A propos du marriage Bemba.
g L'Homme 14:
111-118.
^^^^^ Tardits, C. 1974. Prix de la femme et mariage entre cousins
h croises, la cas
des Bemba d'Afrique centrale. L'Homme
14: 5-30.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
4355000 Gouldsbury, C., and A. Sheane. 1911.
The Great Plateau of
i Northern Rhodesia. London.
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
0500000 Delhaise, C. 1908. Chez les
Wabemba. Bulletin de la
j Soci‚t‚ Royale
Belge de G‚ographie 32: 173-227, 261-283.
HRAF:FN17
SCCS#
8 EA# 208 Ad6 Nyakyusa. Focus: age village near Mwaya
and Masoko.
G: 9ø30'S, 34øE. T:1934.
1. [1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1101111 Wilson, M.
1951. Good Company. London.
FN17= 1
0013000 Wilson, M.
1957. Rituals of Kinship Among
the Nyakyusa.
FN17= 2 London.
0000030 Wilson, M.
1959. Communal Rites of the
Nyakyusa. London.
FN17= 9
^^^^^ Wilson, M. 1977. For Men and Elders:
Change in the Relations of
a Generations and of
Men and Women among the Nyakyusa-Ngonde
People 1875-1971.
New York.
2022221 Wilson, G.
1936. An Introduction to
Nyakyusa Society.
FN17= 8 Bantu Studies 10: 253-292.
0200000 Wilson, G.
1951. The Nyakyusa of
South-Western Tanganyika.
b Seven Tribes of
British Central Africa, ed. E. Colson and
M. Gluckman, pp. 253-291. London.
0030000 Wilson, G.
1938. The Land Rights of
Individuals Among the
FN17= 5 Nyakyusa.
Rhodes-Livingstone Papers 1: 1-52.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0040000 Lehmann, F. R. 1951. Notes on the Daily
Life of the
FN17=14 Nyakyusa.
Sociologus n.F, 1: 138-148.
^^^^^ McKenny, M. G. 1973. The social
structure of Nyakyusa: a re-
c evaluation. Africa 43: 91-107.
^^^^^ Charsley, S. R., and M. G. McKenny. 1974.
The social structure of
d Nyakyusa. Africa 44: 422-424.
SCCS#
9 EA# 726 Aa9 Hadza.
Focus: Entirety.
G: 3ø45'S, 35øE. T:1930.
1. [1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1312111 Kohl-Larsen, L. 1958. Wildbeuter in
Ostafrika. Berlin.
a
0121221 Woodburn, J. 1964. The Social
Organization of the Hadza of
b North
Tanzania. Ph.D. dissertation,
University of Cambridge.
2000000 Woodburn, J. 1968. An Introduction to
Hadza Ecology. Man the
c Hunter, ed. R. B.
Lee and I. DeVore, pp. 49-55. Chicago.
0200000 Woodburn, J. 1968. Stability and
Flexibility in Hadza
d Residential
Groupings. Man the Hunter, ed. R. B.
Lee and I.
DeVore, pp. 103-110.
Chicago.
^^^^^ Woodburn, J. 1970. Hunters and
Gatherers: the Material Cultures
e of the Nomadic
Hadza. London.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0030003 Bleek, D. F. 1931. The Hadzapi or
Watindiga of Tanganyika
f Territory. Africa 4:273-286.
SCCS# 10
EA# 704 Ad14 Luguru. Focus: Morogoro District.
G: 6ø50'S, 37ø40'E. T:1925.
1. [1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1200110 Beidelman, T. C. 1967. The Matrilineal
Peoples of Eastern
a Tanzania. London.
2411220 Scheerder, ??, and Tastevin, ??. 1950.
Les Wa lu guru.
b Anthropos
45:241-286.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0100000 Young, R., and H. Fosbrooke. 1960.
Land and Politics Among
c the Luguru of
Tanganyika. London.
0302000 Christensen, J. B.
1963. Utani: Joking, Sexual
License and
d Social Obligations
Among the Luguru. American
Anthropologist
65:1314-1327.
0400000 McVicar, J. n.d. Notes on the
Waluguru. Ms.
e
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
^^^^^ Brain, J. L. 1969. Matrilineal descent
and marital stability:
f A Tanzanian
case. Journal of Asian and African
Studies 4(2):
122-131.
^^^^^ Mluanda, M. 1971. Traditional
practices among the Luguru in
g Eastern
Tanzania. Bulletin of the International
Committee on
Urgent Anthropological and Ethnological Research 13:
57-65.
HRAF:FL10
SCCS# 11
EA# 108 Ad4 Kikuyu. Focus: Fort Hall or Metume District.
G: 0ø40'S, 37ø10'E. T:1920.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1221110 Kenyatta, J. 1939. Facing Mount
Kenya. London.
FL10= 4
0303000 Lambert, H. E. 1956. Kikuyu Social and
Political
FL10= 2 Institutions. London.
3000000 Lambert, H. E. 1950. The Systems of Land
Tenure in the
FL10= 5 Kikuyu Land Unit. Communications from the School of
African Studies, n.s. 22: 1-185.
2030000 Leakey, L. S. B. 1952. Mau Mau and the
Kikuyu. London.
FL10= 3
^^^^^ Leakey, L. S. B. 1977.
The Southern Kikuyu before 1903.
a 3 vols. New York.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0012000 Cagnolo, C. 1933. The Akikuyu. Nyeri.
b
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
^^^^^ Routledge, W. S., and Routledge, K. 1910.
With a Prehistoric
FL10= 7 i People: The
Akikuyu of British East Africa. London.
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
4130220 Middleton, J. 1953. The Kikuyu and
Kamba of Kenya. London.
FL10= 1 i
0000300 Hailey, W. M. H. 1950. Native
Administration in the British
c African
Territories, pt. I. London.
0000400 MacPhee, A. M. 1968. Kenya. New York.
d
0000500 Ross, W. M. 1968. Kenya from Within:
A Short Political
e History. London.
^^^^^ Tignor, R. 1976. The Colonial
Transformation of Kenya: The
f Kamba, Kikuyu, and
Masai from 1900-1936. Princeton.
HRAF:FK07
SCCS# 12
EA# 306 Ad7 Ganda. Focus: Kyaddondo district.
G: 0ø20'N, 32ø30'E. T:1875.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1211111 Roscoe, J.
1911. The Baganda. London.
FK7 = 2
0002002 + Mair, L. P. 1934
(2d ed. 1965 New York). An
African People
FK7 = 1 in the Twentieth Century. London.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0123220 Southwold, M. 1965. The Ganda of
Uganda. Peoples of
FK7 =15 Africa, ed. J. L. Gibbs, Jr., pp.
81-118. New York.
^^^^^ Southwold, M. 1971. The Meanings of
Kinship. Rethinking
a Kinship and
Marriage, ed. R. Needham, pp. ??.
London.
0000000 Richards, A. I. 1960. The Ganda. East African Chiefs, ed.
FK7 = 9 A. I. Richards, pp. 41-77. London.
0000000 Richards, A. I. 1966. The Changing
Structure of a Ganda
FK7 =13 Village: Kisozi 1892-1952. Nairobi.
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
0000003 Kagwa, A.
1934. The Customs of the
Baganda. New York.
FK7 = 8
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
2000000 Fallers, M. C. 1960. The Eastern
Lacustrine Bantu. London.
FK7 =12
0304003 + Murdock, G.
P. 1934. The Ganda of Uganda. Our
Primitive
b Contemporaries,
pp. 508-550. New York
^^^^^ Perlman, M. L. 1969. Law and the status
of women in Uganda: A
c Systematic
comparison between the Ganda and the Toro.
Tropical
Man 2: 60-106.
5. [1]Other
Sources
^^^^^ Kottack, C. P. 1972. Ecological variables
in the origin and
d evolution of
African States: the Buganda example.
Comparative
Studies in Society and History 14: 351-380.
^^^^^ Lugira, A. M. 1970. Political
civilization. Cahiers des
e Religiones
Africains 4(8): 191-202.
^^^^^ Malyseua, D. B. Buganda. Voprosy Istorii
4: 113-120. (Russian)
f
^^^^^ Semakula Kiwanuka, M. S. M. 1972.
A History of Buganda from the
g Foundation of the
Kingdom to 1900. New York.
^^^^^ Rusch, W. 1975. Classes and State
in Buganda before the Colonial
h Period. Berlin. (German)
HRAF:FP13
SCCS# 13 EA# 202
Aa5 Mbuti Pygmies. Focus: net
hunters of the
Epulu.
G: 1ø45'N, 28ø20'E. T:1950.
1. [1]Principal
Authority(ies)
^^^^^ Turnbull, C. M. 1983. The Mbuti Pygmies:
Change and Adaptation.
a New York.
2113111 Turnbull, C. M. 1965a. Wayward
Servants. Garden City, N.Y.
FP13= 2
1021223 Turnbull, C. M. 1961. The Forest
People. New York.
FP13= 3
0030031 Turnbull, C. M. 1965b. The Mbuti
Pygmies. Anthropological
FP13= 1 Papers of the American Museum of Natural
History 50:iii, 1-282.
0002000 Turnbull, C. M. 1965c. The Mbuti Pygmies
of the Congo. Peoples
a of Africa, ed. J.
L. Gibbs, Jr., pp. 279-317. New York.
3040003 Putnam, P.
1948. Thå Pygmies of the Ituri
Forest. A Reader in
FP13= 4 General Anthropology, ed. C. S. Coon, pp.
322-342. New York.
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
^^^^^ De Leeuwe, J. 1966. Development in
Bambuti society. Antropos 61:
b 737-763. (German).
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
^^^^^ Hart, J. A. 1978. From Subsistence to
Market: A case study of
c the Mbuti net
hunters. Human Ecology 6(3): 325-353.
HRAF:FO32
SCCS# 14
EA# 110 Ae4 Nkundo Mongo. Focus: Ilanga group.
G: 0ø45'S, 19øE. T:1930.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1111111 Hulstaert, G. 1938. Le mariage des
Nkundo'. M‚moires de
FO32= 2 l'Institut Royal Colonial Belge 8:
1-520. Brussels.
^^^^^ Hulstaert, G. 1971. Sur quelques
croyances magiques des Mongo.
a Cahiers des
Religion Africaines 5(9): 145-167.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0300002 Brepoels, H. 1930. Het familiehoofd
bij de Nkundo negers.
FO32= 5 Congo 2: ii, 332-430.
0000200 Schebesta, P. 1936. My Pygmy and Negro
Hosts. London.
b (Transl. of
1934. Vollblutneger und
Halbzwerge. Leipzig.)
[focus on the Pygmy vassals of the Ilanga].
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
0200000 Boelaert, E. 1940. De
Nkundo-Maatschappij. Kongo-Overzee
FO32= 3 6: 148-161.
2000000 Gutersohn, Th. 1920. Het economisch
leven van den
FO32= 4 Mongo-neger. Congo 1: i, 92-105.
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
0022000 Van der Kerken, G. 1944.
L'ethnie Mongo. M‚moires de
c l'Institut Royal
Colonial Belge 13: 1-1143.
SCCS# 15
EA# 830 Ae51 Banen. Focus: Ndiki subtribe.
G: 4ø40'N, 19øE. T:1935.
1. [1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1011111 Dugast, I.
1959. Monographie de la tribu
des Ndiki. Vie sociale
a et familiale. Travaux et M‚moires de l'Institut
d'Ethnologie 58:
(ii) 1-635.
Paris.
0000000 Dugast, I.
1955. Monographie de la tribu
des Ndiki: Vie
b mat‚rielle. Travaux et M‚moires de l'Institut
d'Ethnologie 58:
(i) 1-824. Paris.
0000010 Dugast, I.
1944. L'agriculture chez les
Ndiki de population
c BanŠn. Bulletin de la Soci‚t‚ d'Etudes Cameroun,
n.s., 8:7-130.
2133222 McCulloch, M., M. Littlewood, and I.
Dugast. 1954. Peoples
d of the Central
Cameroons. London.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0022000 Tessmann, G. 1934. Die Bafia und die
Kultur der Mittelkamerun
e Bantu. Stuttgart.
HRAF:FF57
SCCS# 16
EA# 116 Ah3 Tiv. Focus: tar of Benue province.
G: 7ø15'N, 9øE. T:1920.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1011111 Bohannan, P., and L. Bohannan. 1958.
Three Source Notebooks
FF57=22 in Tiv Ethnography. New Haven.
0000000 Bohannan, P., and L. Bohannan. 1968.
Tiv Economy. Evanston.
a
^^^^^ Bohannan, P., and L. Bohannan. 1969.
A Source Notebook on
FF57=30 Tiv Religion. 5v. New Haven.
0000000 Bohannan, P., and L. Bohannan. 1957.
Tiv Markets. New York
FF57=24 Academy of Sciences, Transations, series 2:
613-621.
2122221 Bohannan, L., and P. Bohannan. 1953.
The Tiv of Central
FF57=19 Nigeria.
London.
0200000 Bohannan, L. 1957. Political Aspects of
Tiv Social
b Organization. Tribes Without Rulers, ed. J. Middleton and
D. Tait, pp. 33-66.
London.
0000000 Bohannan, L. 1952. A Genealogical
Charter. Africa 22: 301-315.
FF57=21
0000030 Bohannan, P. 1953. Concepts of Time Among
the Tiv of
FF57=27 Nigeria.
Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 9: 251-262.
0000040 Bohannan. P. 1954a. Tiv Farm and
Settlement. London.
FF57=18
3000000 Bohannan, P. 1960. Tiv Trade and
Markets. Ms. (see FF57=24)
c
4000000 Bohannan, P. 1955. Some Principles of
Exchange and Investment
FF57=26 Among the Tiv. American Anthropologist 57: 60-70.
0003000 Bohannan, P. 1965. The Tiv of
Nigeria. Peoples of Africa.
d ed. J. L. Gibbs,
Jr., pp. 279-317. New York.
0000000 Bohannan, P. 1957. Justice and
Judgment among the Tiv. London.
e
0000000 Bohannan, P. 1954b. The Migration and
Expansion of the Tiv.
FF57=20 Africa 24: 2-16.
0000000 Bohannan, P. 1954c. Circumcision among
the Tiv. Man 54: 2-6.
FF57=23
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0044051 East, R., ed., 1939. Akiga's Story. London.
FF57= 1 i
^^^^^ Akiga, B. S. 1954. The 'descent' of
the Tiv from Ibenda Hill.
FF57=25 Transl. & Annot. P. Bohannan. Africa 24: 295-310.
0030003 Abraham, R. C. 1933 (3d ed. 1968. London).
The Tiv People.
FF57= 3 Lagos.
0000003 Downes, R. M. 1933 (2d ed. 1969). The
Tiv Tribe. Kaduna.
FF57# 2 i
^^^^^ Downes, R. M. 1971. Tiv Religion. Ibadan.
f
HRAF:FF26
SCCS# 17
EA# 643 Af10 Ibo. Focus: Isu-Ana division, Owerri or
Southern Ibo.
G: 5ø30'N, 7ø20'E. T:1935.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1122110 Green, M. M. 1947 (2d ed. 1964). Ibo
Village Affairs. London.
FF26= 3
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
2233220 Uchendu, V. C. 1965. The Igbo of
Southeast Nigeria. New York.
FF26= 4 [home village in Nisirimi group of villages
south of Isu-Ana].
0011000 Leith-Ross, S. 1939. African Women: A
Study of the Ibo of
FF26= 5 Nigeria.
New York. [Southern Ibo region,
embracing Isu-Ana].
^^^^^ Ardener, E. W. 1954. The Kinship
Terminology of a group of
a Southern Ibo. Africa 24: 85-99. [Ezenihite group so. of Isu-Ama].
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
^^^^^ Meek, C. K. 1937. Law and Authority
in a Nigerian Tribe. London.
FF26= 8
0 0 0 0 Egboh, E. O. 1971. The beginning of
the end of traditional
b religion in
Iboland, Southeastern Nigeria.
Civilizations 21:
269-279.
0 0 0 0 Egboh, E. O. 1972. A reassessment of
the concept of Ibo
c traditional
religion. Numen 19: 68-79.
0 0 0 0 Egboh, E. O. 1972. Polygamy in
Iboland, South-eastern Nigeria:
d with special
reference to polygamy practice among Christian Ibos.
Civilizations 22: 431-444.
0 0 0 0 Egboh, E. O. 1973/4. The place of
women in the Ibo society of
e Southeastern
Nigeria, from earliest times to the present.
Civilizations 23-24: 305-316.
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
0300000 Forde, D., and G. I. Jones. 1950.
The Ibo and
FF26= 1 i Ibibio-speaking
Peoples of South-Eastern Nigeria.
London.
SCCS# 18
EA# 10 Af1 Fon. Focus: city and
environs of Abomey.
G: 7ø12'N, 1ø56'E. T:1890.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1111111 Herskovits, M. J. 1938. Dahomey. 2v.
New York.
a
0400000 Herskovits, M. J. 1932. Some Aspects of
Dahomean
b Ethnology. Africa 5: 266-296.
0002000 Herskovits, M. J. 1937. A Note on 'Woman
Marriage' in
c Dahomey. Africa 10: 335-341.
0000001 Herskovits, M. J., and F. S.
Herskovits. 1933. An Outline of
d Dahomean Religious
Belief. Memoirs, American
Anthropological
Association 41:1-77.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0000010 Skertchley, J. A. 1874. Dahomey as It
Really Is. London.
e
0000020 Tardits, C., and C. Tardits. 1962.
Traditional Market
f Economy in South
Dahomey. Markets in Africa, ed. P.
Bohannan and G.
Dalton, pp. 89-102. New York.
0000003 Le Heriss‚, A. 1911. L'ancien royaume du
Dahomey. Paris.
g
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
0200000 Murdock, G. P. 1934. Our Primitive
Contemporaries, pp.
h 551-595. New York.
0300003 Argyle, W. J. 1966. The Fon of
Dahomey. London.
i
0003000 Bohannan, L. 1949. Dahomean
Marriage. Africa 19: 273-278.
j
0000000 Lombard, J. 1967. The Kingdom of
Dahomey. West African
k Kingdoms in the
Nineteenth Century, ed. D. Forde and P. M.
Kaberry, pp. 70-92.
London.
0000000 Mercier, P. 1954. The Fon of
Dahomey. African Worlds, ed.
l D. Forde, pp.
210-234. London.
HRAF:FE12
SCCS# 19
EA# 111 Af3 Ashanti. Focus: Kumasi state.
G: 7øN, 1ø30'W. T:1895.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
0210223 Fortes, M.
1950. Kinship and Marriage Among
the Ashanti.
FE12= 5 African Studies of Kinship and Marriage,
ed. A. R.
Radcliffe-Brown and D. Forde, pp. 252-284. London.
0301000 Fortes, M.
1949. Time and Social Structure:
An Ashanti Case
FE12= 8 Study.
Social Structure, ed. M. Fortes, pp. 54-84. Oxford.
^^^^^ Fortes, M. 1969. Kinship and the
Social Order. pp. 138-216.
a Chicago.
0200000 Fortes, M., R. W. Steel, and P. Ady. 1947.
Ashanti Survey,
FE12= 7 1945-46.
Geographical Journal 110: 149-179.
0100003 Rattray, R. S. 1923. Ashanti. Oxford.
FE12= 1
0420021 Rattray, R. S. 1927. Religion and Art in
Ashanti. Oxford.
FE12= 2
0040010 Rattray, R. S. 1916. Ashanti
Proverbs. Oxford.
FE12=14
0530000 Rattray, R. S. 1929. Ashanti Law and
Constitution. London.
FE12= 3
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
1002111 Lystad, R. A. 1958. The Ashanti. New Brunswick.
b
2600000 Busia, K. A. 1951. The Position of the
Chief in the Modern
FE12= 6 Political System of Ashanti. London.
0000000 Busia, K. A. 1954. The Ashanti of the
Gold Coast. African
c Worlds, ed. D.
Forde, pp. 190-209. London.
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
0000030 Service, E. E. 1963. The Ashanti of West
Africa. Profiles
d in Ethnology, pp.
366-386. New York.
3003000 Manoukian, M. 1950. Akan and Ga-Adangme
Peoples of the Gold
FE12= 4 i Coast. London.
0000000 Wilks, I.
1967. Ashanti Government. West African Kingdoms
e in the Nineteenth
Century, ed. D. Forde and P. M. Kaberry,
pp. 206-238.
London.
^^^^^ Wilks, I. 1975. Asante in the
Nineteenth Century: the Structure
f and Evolution of a
Political Order. Cambridge.
HRAF:FC07
SCCS# 20
EA# 211 Af5 Mende. Focus: vicinity of the town of Bo.
G: 7ø50'N, 12øW. T:1945.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1111111 Little, K. L. 1951. The Mende of Sierra
Leone. London.
FC7 = 2
0002000 Little, K. L. 1954. The Mende in Sierra
Leone. African
a Worlds, ed. D.
Forde, pp. 111-137. London.
0200000 Little, K. L. 1948. The Mende Farming
Household.
FC7 = 4 Sociological Review 40: 37-56.
0000200 Little, K. L. 1947. Mende Political
Institutions in
b Transition. Africa 17:8-23.
^^^^^ Little, K. L. 1970. The Social Cycle
and Initiation among the
c Mende. From Child to Adult, ed. J. Middleton, pp.
??. New York.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
2000002 Staub, J.
1936. Beitrage zur Kenntnis der
materiellen
FC7 = 1 Kultur der Mendi. Solothurn.
0004000 Crosby, K. H. 1937. Polygamy in Mende
Country. Africa 10:
FC7 = 6 249-264.
^^^^^ Bockani, J. 1945. Mende Warfare. Farm and Forest 6(2): 104-105.
d
4. [1]Useful
Secondary Sources
3303003 McCulloch, M. 1950. The Peoples of
Sierra Leone Protectorate.
FC7 = 3 i London.
HRAF:MS30
SCCS# 21
EA# 21 Cb2 Wolof. Focus: Upper
and Lower Salum, Gambia.
G:13ø45'N, 12øW. T:1950
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1212111 Gamble, D. P. 1957. The Wolof of
Senegambia. London.
MS30= 1
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
2121221 Ames, D. W. 1953. Plural Marriage
Among the Wolof in the
MS30= 8 Gambia.
Ph.D. dissertation, Northwestern University.
3400000 Ames, D. W. 1962. The Rural Wolof of
the Gambia. Markets
a in Africa, ed. P.
Bohannan and G. Dalton, pp. 29-60.
Evanston.
0000000 + Ames, D. W. 1959.
Selection of Mates. Continuity
and Change
b in African
Cultures, ed. W. R. Bascom and M. J. Herskovits,
pp. 156-68.
Chicago.
4303000 Ames, D. W. 1959. Wolof Co-operative
Work Groups.
MS30= 2 Continuity and Change in African Cultures,
ed. W. R. Bascom
and M. J. Herskovits, pp. 224-237. Chicago.
3. [1]Auxiliary
Primary Sources
0034000 Falad‚, S.
1963. Women of Dakar and the
Surrounding Urban
MS30=42 Area.
Women of Africa, ed. D. Paulme, pp. 217-229. London.
^^^^^ Irvine, J. T. 1973. Caste and
Communication in a Wolof Village.
c Ph. D.
Dissertation, University of Pennsylvania.
5. [1]Other
Sources
0000300 Gailey, H. A. 1965. A History of the
Gambia. New York.
e
0000400 Gray, J. M. 1966. A History of the
Gambia. New York.
e
^^^^^ Trimingham, J. S. 1962. A History of Islam in West Africa.
MS30=41 London.
HRAF:FA08
SCCS# 22
EA# 12 Ag1 Bambara. Segou to
Bamako.
G:12ø30'N, 6øto 8øW. T:1902.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
1110110 Monteil, C. 1924. Les Bambara du
S‚gou et du Kaarta. Paris.
FA8 = 2
^^^^^ Monteil, C. 1967. The Wolof Kingdom
of Kayor. West African
a Kingdoms in the
Nineteenth Century, ed. D. Forde and P. M.
Kaberry, pp. 260-281.
London.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
2220220 Paques, V.
1954. Les Bambara. Paris.
FA8 = 3
3040000 Dieterlen, G. 1951. Essai sur la
religion Bambara. Paris.
FA8 = 1
^^^^^ Dieterlen, G., and Y. Cisse. 1972.
Les fondaments de la soci‚t‚
b d`initiation du
Komo. Paris.
^
0030010 Henry, J.
1910. L'ame d'un peuple
Africain: Les Bambara.
FA8 = 4 Bibliot‚que Anthropos 1: ii, 1-240.
HRAF:FE11
SCCS# 23
EA# 114 Ag4 Tallensi. Focus: Entirety.
G:10ø40'N, 0ø35'W. T:1934.
1.
[1]Principal
Authority(ies)
0100001 Fortes, M.
1945 (new ed. 1967). The
Dynamics of Clanship Among
FE11= 2 the Tallensi. London.
0211111 Fortes, M. 1949. The Web of Kinship
Among the Tallensi. London.
FE11= 3
0300010 Fortes, M.
1940. The Political System of
the Tallensi.
a African Political
Systems, ed. M. Fortes and E. E.
Evans-Pritchard, pp. 239-271. London.
0020200 Fortes, M.
1938. Social and Psychological
Aspects of
FE11= 5 Education in Taleland. Supplement to Africa 9 No. 4.
0000030 Fortes, M.
1937. Communal Fishing and
Fishing Magic in the
FE11= 6 Northern Territories of the Gold
Coast. Journal of the Royal
Anthropological Institute 67: 131-142.
^^^^^ Fortes, M. 1975. Tallensi Ritual
Festivals and the Ancestors.
b Cambridge
Anthropology 2(2): 3-31.
1000022 Fortes, M., and S. L. Fortes. 1936.
Food in the Domestic
FE11= 4 Economy of the Tallensi. Africa 9: 237-276.
2. [1]Other
Dependable Primary Sources
0000203 Rattray, R. S. 1932. Tribes of the
Ashanti Hinterland. Oxford.
FE11= 1
2000040 Lynn, C. W. 1937. Agriculture in
North Mamprusi. Bulletins
FE11= 7 of the Gold Coast Department of Agriculture
34: 1-93.
SCCS# 24
EA# 122 Cb3 Songhai. Focus: Bamba division.
G:16ø40'N, 2øW. T:1940.
1. [1]Principal Authority(ies)
1111111 Rouch, J.
1954. Les Songhay. Paris.
a
0000000 Rouch, J.
1960. La Religion et la Magie
Songhay. Paris.
b
2. [1]Other Dependable Primary
Sources
0022021 Miner, H.
1953 (rev. ed. 1965). Thå
Primitive City of Timbuctoo.
c
Princeton.
0000030 Jacquemond, M. S. 1959. Les pŠcheurs du
boucle du Niger. Paris.
d
0200000 Prost, A.
1954. Notes sur les
Songhay. Bulletin de l'Institut
e
Francais de l'Afrique Noire, ser. 3, 16: 167-213.
'
^^^^^ Prost, A. 1970. Statut du la femme
Songhay. Bulletin de
f l'Institut fondamental de l'Afrique noire 32(2): 486-517.
3. [1]Auxiliary Primary
Sources
^^^^^ Sarr, M.
1973. Le Songhay. Etudes maliennes 4: 1-74.
g
SCCS# 25
EA#1082 Cb24 Fulani. Focus: Wodaabe of Niger.
G:15øN, 7øE. T:1951.
1. [1]Principal Authority(ies)
1311111 Dupire, M.
1962. Peuls nomades: Etude
descriptive des Wodaabe
a
nomades du sahel nigerien.
Travaux et M‚moires de l'Institut
d'Ethnologie 64:1-327. Paris.
2000000 Dupire, M.
1962. Trade and Markets in the
Economy of the Nomadic
b
Fulani of Niger. Markets in
Africa, ed. P. Bohannan and G.
Dalton, pp. 335-62. Evanston.
0020001 Dupire, M.
1963. The Position of Women in a
Pastoral Society
c (Wodaabe). Women of Tropical Africa, ed. D. Paulme, pp.
47-92.
Berkeley (and London).
2. [1]Other Dependable Primary
Sources
0202003 Stenning, D. J. 1959. Savannah
Nomads. London.
d
0100000 Stenning, D. J. 1965. The Pastoral Fulani
of Northern Nigeria.
e
Peoples of Africa, ed. J. L. Gibbs, Jr., pp. 361-401. New York.
0400000 Stenning, D. J. 1958. Household
Variability Among the Pastoral
f
Fulani. Cambridge Papers in
Social Anthropology 1: 92-119.
3. [1]Auxiliary Primary
Sources
0003023 Hopen, C. E. 1958. The Pastoral Fulbe
Family in Gwandu.
g
London.
^^^^^ Riesman, P. 1977. Freedom in Fulani
Social Life, trans. M.
h
Fuller. Chicago.
^^^^^ St. Croix, F. W. de. 1972.
The Fulani of Northern Nigeria: Some
i
General Notes. Farnborough.
4. [1]Useful Secondary Sources
^^^^^ Johnson, H. A. 1967. The Fulani Empire
of Sokoto. London.
j
HRAF:MS12
SCCS# 26
EA#1084 Cb26 Hausa. Focus: Zazzagawa.
G:10ø30'N, 7øE. T:1900.
1. [1]Principal Authority(ies)
1122110 Smith, M. G. 1965. The Hausa of
Northern Nigeria. Peoples of
MS12=17 Africa, ed. J. L. Gibbs Jr., pp.
119-155. New York.
2000032 Smith, M. G. 1955. The Economy of
Hausa Communities of Zaria.
MS12=
1 Colonial Office Research Studies
16:1-264.
0200200 Smith, M. G. 1960. Government in
Zazzau 1800-1950. London.
MS12=15
3000000 Smith, M. G. 1962. Exchange and
Marketing Among the Hausa.
a Markets in Africa,
ed. P. Bohannan and G. Dalton, pp. 69-81.
Evanston.
0110020 Smith, M. F. 1954 (rev. ed. 1964).
Baba oæ Karo: A Woman of the
MS12=
3 Muslim Hausa. New York.
2. [1]Other Dependable Primary
Sources
^^^^^ Smith, M. G. 1978. The Affairs of
Daura: History and Changes in
b
a Hausa State 1800-1958.
Berkeley.
0000000 Smith, M. G. 1967. A Hausa Kingdom:
Maradi under Dan Baskore,
c
1854-75. West African Kingdoms
in the Nineteenth Century,
ed. D. Forde and P. M. Kaberry, pp.
93-122. London.
0333000 Dry, D. P. L. 1956. Some Aspects of
Hausa Family Structure.
MS12=13 Proceedings of the International West
African Conference (1949),
pp. 158-163.
4000000 Prothero, R. M. 1957. Land Use at Soba.
Economic Geography
MS12=12 33:72-86.
3. [1]Auxiliary Primary
Sources
0044001 Greenberg, J. H. 1946. The Influence of
Islam on a Sudanese
MS12=
2 Religion. Monographs of the American Ethnological Society 10:1-73.
0000001 Greenberg, J. H. 1947. Islam and Clan
Organization among the
MS12=
8 Hausa. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 3:193-211.
^^^^^ Hill, P.
1972. Rural Hausa. New York.
MS12=18
SCCS# 27
EA# 646 Ai9 Massa. Focus: in Cameroon.
G:10ø20'N, 15ø30'E. T:1910.
1. [1]Principal Authority(ies)
0111111 von Hagen, G. 1912. Die Bana. Baessler-Archiv 2:77-116.
Berlin.
a
1202223 Garine, I. de. 1964. Les Massa du
Cameroun. Paris.
b
2. [1]Other Dependable Primary
Sources
0323001 Lembezat, B. 1961. Les populations
paiennes du Nord-Cameroun et
de l'Adamoua. Paris.
HRAF:FO07
SCCS# 28
EA# 117 Ai3 Azande. Focus: Yambio chiefdom.
G: 5øN, 28ø15'E. T:1905.
1. [1]Principal Authority(ies)
^^^^^ Evans-Pritchard, E. E. (ed.). 1974.
Man and Woman among the
Azande. London.
0213111 Evans-Pritchard, E. E. 1937.
Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic Among
FO7
= 2 i the Azande. Oxford.
0020000 Evans-Pritchard, E. E. 1932.
Heredity and Gestation, as the
FO7
=35 i Azande See Them. Sociologus 3:
400-414.
^^^^^ Evans-Pritchard, E. E. 1956.
The Azande System of Agriculture.
b
London.
^^^^^ Evans-Pritchard, E. E. 1963.
The Zande State. London.
c
^^^^^ Evans-Pritchard, E. E. 1971.
The Azande: History and Political
FO7
=68 Institutions. Oxford.
(revision of earlier articles)
0000220 above, chs. XIV-XVI. (See FO7 =64 revised articles)
d
0000200 Evans-Pritchard, E. E. 1957.
The Zande Royal Court. Zaire 11:
FO7
=64 361-389, 493-511, 687-713.
2. [1]Other Dependable Primary
Sources
1000000 De Schlippe, P. 1956. Shifting
Cultivation in Africa. London.
FO7
=60
3440443 Larkin, G. M. 1926-27. An Account of
the Azande. Sudan Notes
FO7
= 8 i and Records 9: 1-56; 10: 85-134.
3. [1]Auxiliary Primary
Sources
0031030 Legae, C. R. 1926. Les Azande ou
Niam-Niam. Bibliothque Congo
FO7
= 3 i 18: 1-224.
2000000 Schweinfurth, G. 1873. The Heart of
Africa. 2v. New York.
FO7
= 4 i
4. [1]Useful Secondary Sources
0152000 Baxter, P. T. W. and A. Butt. 1953.
The Azande and Related
FO7
=56 i Peoples of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan and Belgian Congo. London.
0360003 Seligman, C. G., and B. Z. Seligman. 1932.
Pagan Tribes of the
FO7
= 1 i Nilotic Sudan. London.
5. [1]Other Sources
0004000 Reining, C. C. 1966. The Zande
Scheme. Evanston.
e
SCCS# 29
EA# 875 Cb17 Fur (Darfur). Focus: Jebel Marra.
G:13ø30'N, 25ø30'E. T:1880.
1. [1]Principal Authority(ies)
1211110 Felkin, R. W. 1885. Notes on the Fur
Tribe. Proceedings of
a
the Royal Society of Edinburgh 23:205-265.
2. [1]Other Dependable Primary
Sources
0122220 Beaton, A. C. 1948. The Fur. Sudan Notes and Records 29:1-39.
b
3. [1]Auxiliary Primary
Sources
0333000 Muhammad Ibn 'Umar, al-Tunusi. 1845.
Voyage au Darfour,
c
traduit de l'Arabe par le Dr. Perron.
Paris.
0404000 Barth, F.
1967. Economic Spheres in
Darfur. Themes in
d
Economic Anthropology, ed. R. Firth, pp. 149-174.
Association for Social Anthropology
Monographs 6.
5. [1]Other Sources
0000300 MacMichael, H.A. 1922. A History of the
Arabs in the Sudan I:
e
91-121. Cambridge.
SCCS# 30
EA# 647 Ai10 Otoro Nuba. Focus: Entirety.
G:11ø20'N, 30ø40'E. T:1930.
1. [1]Principal Authority(ies)
1111111 Nadel, S. F. 1947. The Nuba. London.
a
HRAF:FJ23
SCCS# 31
EA# 218 Ai6 Shilluk. Focus: Entirety.
G: 9ø45'N, 31ø30'E. T:1910.
1. [1]Principal Authority(ies)
1211111 Hofmayr, W. 1925. Die Schilluk. Wien.
a
3122221 Seligman, C. G., and B. Z. Seligman. 1932.
Pagan Tribes
FJ23=
2 i of the Nilotic Sudan. London.
2. [1]Other Dependable Primary
Sources
2000003 Westermann, D. 1912. The Shilluk
People. Philadelphia.
FJ23=
3 i
0003010 Cann, G. P. 1929. A Day in the Life
of an Idle Shilluk.
FJ23=16 Sudan Notes and Records 12: 251-253.
0300000 Howell, P. P. 1941. The Shilluk Settlement. Sudan
FJ23=18 Notes and Records 24: 47-66.
0404000 Pumphrey, M. E. C. 1941.
The Shilluk Tribe. Sudan Notes
FJ23=17 and Records 24: 1-45.
4000000 Dempsey, J. 1955. Mission on the
Nile. London.
FJ23=29
i
4. [1]Useful Secondary Sources
0500000 Butt, A.
1952. The Nilotes of the
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
FJ23=
4 i and Uganda. London.
0000000 Evans-Pritchard, E. E. 1948.
The Divine Kingship of the
FJ23=
1 Shilluk of the Nilotic Sudan. Cambridge.
0000000 Lienhardt, G. 1954. The Shilluk of the
Upper Nile.
FJ23=
5 African Worlds, ed. D. Forde, pp.
138-163. London.
SCCS# 32
EA#1062 Ai47 Mao. P:northern
division.
G:9ø20'N, 34ø40'E. T:1939.
1111111 Grottanelli, V.L. 1940. I Mao. Missione Etnografica nel
Uollega Occidentale I:1-387. Roma.
0222220 Cerulli, E. 1956. Peoples of
South-west Ethiopia and Its
Borderland. London.
0000010 Grottanelli, V.L. 1972. Personal
communication.
SCCS# 33
EA# 860 Ca30 Kafa.
G:7ø15'N, 36ø15'E. T:1905.
1111111 Bieber, F.J. 1920-23. Kaffa. 2v.
Munster.
0000030 Cerulli, E. 1932-33. Ethiopia
occidentale. 2v. Roma.
0200222 Huntingford, G.W.B. 1955.
The Galla of Ethiopia: The
Kingdoms of Kafa and Janjero. International African
Institute. London.
HRAF:FL12
SCCS# 34
EA# 119 Aj2 Masai. P:of
Tanzania.
G:3øS, 36øE. T:1900.
1111110 Merker, M.
1904. Die Masai. Berlin.
2200000 Huntingford, G.W.B. 1953.
The Southern Nilo-Hamites.
London.
0000010 Hollis, A. C. 1905. The Masai: Their
Language and
Folklore. Oxford.
3000000 Fosbrooke, H. A. 1948. An Administrative
Survey of the
Masai Social System. Tanganyika Notes and Records 26: 1-50.
0300000 Baumann, O. 1894. Durch Massailand
zur Nilquelle. Berlin.
SCCS# 35
EA# 18 Ca1 Konso. P:town of
Buso.
G:5ø15'N, 37ø30'E. T:1935.
2111110 Hallpike, C. R. 1969. The Konso of
Ethiopia. Ms.
0222220 Jensen, A. E. 1936. Im Lande des Gada. Stuttgart.
1000000 Kluckhohn, R. 1962. The Konso
Economy. Markets in Africa,
ed. P. Bohannan and G. Dalton, pp.
409-428. Evanston.
0003000 Cerulli, E. 1956. Peoples of
South-west Ethiopia and Its
Borderland. London.
HRAF:MO4
SCCS# 36
EA# 19 Ca2 Somali. P:Dolbahanta
subtribe.
G:9øN, 47øE. T:1900.
0110111 Lewis, I. M. 1961. A Pastoral
Democracy. London.
1034223 Lewis, I. M. 1955. Peoples of the Horn
of Africa. London.
2021330 Lewis, I. M. 1965. The Northern
Pastoral Somali. Peoples
of Africa, ed., J. L. Gibbs, Jr.,
pp. 319-360. New York.
0203000+ Lewis, I. M. 1962. Marriage and the
Family in the Northern
Somaliland. Kampala: East African Institute for Social
and
Economic Research.
East African Studies 15.
Kampala, Uganda.
0000*00 Lewis, I. M. 1957. Ms. The Somali Lineage System and the
Total Geneaology: A General
Introduction to Basic Principles
of Somali Political Institutions. Hargeisa.
3000000 Lewis, I. M. 1962. Trade and Markets
in Northern
Somaliland. Markets in Africa, ed., P. Bohannon and
G.Dalton, pp. 365-385. Evanston.
0052000 Paulitschke, P. 1888. Beitrage zue
Ethnographie und
Anthropologie der Soma, Gaua, and
Harari. Leipzig.
0045003 Puccioni, N. 1936. Antropologia e
etnografia delle genti
della Somalia 3: 1-140. Bologna.
HRAF:MP5
SCCS# 37
EA# 679 Ca7 Amhara. P:Gondar
district.
G:13ø30'N, 37øE. T:1953.
1111111 Messing. S.D. 1957. The
Highland-Plateau Amhara of
Ethiopia. Ph.D. dissertation, University of
Pennsylvania.
0022000 Lipsky, G.A. 1962. Ethiopia. New Haven.
SCCS# 38
EA# 867 Ca37 Bogo or Belen.
G:15ø45'N, 38ø45'E. T:1855.
1111110 Munzinger, W. 1859. Ueber die Sitten
und das Recht der
Bogos. Winterthur.
SCCS# 39 EA# 24 Cd1
Barabra. P:Kenuzi Nubians of Dahmit.
G:23øN, 38ø45'E. T:1900.
1221113 Herzog, R.
1957. Die Nubier. Berlin.
0013010 Schafer, H. 1935. Nubisches
Frauenleben. Mitteilungen des
Seminars fur Orientalische
Sprachen zu Berlin 38.
0100220 Fernea, R. A., ed. 1966.
Contemporary Egyptian Nubia. 2v.
New Haven.
0002001 Callender, C., and F. el Guindi. 1971.
Life-Crisis Rituals
Among the Kenuz. Case Western Reserve University Studies in
Anthropology 3. Cleveland.
0000001 Kennedy, J.G. 1977. Struggle for Change
in a Nubain
Community. Palo Alto.
SCCS# 40
EA# 23 Cc2 Teda. P:Nomads of
Tibesti.
G:21ø30'N, 17ø30'E. T:1950
4111111 Chapelle, J. 1957. Nomades noirs du
Sahara. Paris.
2334223 Cline, W.
1950. The Teda of Tibesti, Borku
and Kawar.
General Series in Anthropology 12:
1-52.
0222000 Fuchs, P.
1956. Ueber die Tubbu von
Tibesti. Archiv. fur
Volkerkunde, 11: 43-66.
0403000 Nachtigal, G. 1879. Sahara und Sudan I:
377-464. Berlin.
1000000 Le Coeur, C. 1950. Dictionnaire
ethnographique Teda.
Memoires de l'Institut Francais
d'Afrique Noire 9: 1-213.
3500000 Briggs, L. L.