Article contents
Pre-European Ironworking in Central Africa with Special Reference to Northern Rhodesia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 January 2009
Extract
Pre-European ironworkers in Central Africa reached a high standard of metallurgical skill, culminating in the production of beautiful ceremonial objects and instruments which show a Congo origin and inspiration. Many of these specimens, especially hoes, were traded over enormous distances. One can probably detect three phases of ironworking in Northern Rhodesia:
(1) The Earliest Period (c. a.d. 0 to ? a.d. 1000). Little is known about these earliest settlers, associated with channelled and stamped ware. Slag and tuyère fragments occur, and simple forms of weapons were probably made. Acculturation of Later Stone Age peoples took place.
(2) The Middle Period (c. ? a.d. 1OOO to a.d. 1740). Iron was still extremely rare, and iron objects are normally associated with some functional purposes. Coiled iron bangles occur, and a few ceremonial objects including gongs are rarely found; at Lusitu and in Southern Rhodesia, they are more common. The Chewa/Maravi migration brought in new ideas and tool forms around a.d. 1500.
(3) The Late Period (a.d. 1740–1900). Over the more northerly portion of the territory, there was considerable standardization of iron tool forms and techniques, which found their origin in Luba country, and were carried over the Luapula into Northern Rhodesia by repeated migrations. These forms survived to the present day when they are now dying out, and many ceremonial pieces have lost their ritual value.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1961
References
1 Walton, J., ‘Iron Gongs from the Congo and Southern Rhodesia’. Man, 1955, 30.Google Scholar
2 Livingstone, D., Missionary Travels and Researches in South Africa. London, 1861, 135.Google Scholar
3 Stanley, H. M., Through the Dark Continent. II, 289. London.Google Scholar
4 Bent, T., The Ruined Cities of Mashonaland. London, 1896.Google Scholar
5 Hall, R. N., Great Zimbabwe. 1905, 121ff.Google Scholar
6 Cline, W., Mining and Metallurgy in Negro Africa. General Series in Anthropology, Wisconsin, No. 5, 1937.Google Scholar
7 Cline, W., op. cit. 23.Google Scholar
8 Dart, R. A. and Del, Grande N., ‘The Ancient Iron Smelting Cavern at Mumbwa’, Trans. Roy. Soc. S. Afr. (1931), XIX, Pt. IV, 379–427.Google Scholar
9 Stanley, G. H., ‘On a specimen of supposed slag from the Mumbwa Cave,’ S. Afr. Journ. Sci., XXI, 505–9.Google Scholar
10 Clark, J. D., ‘Further excavations (1939) at the Mumbwa Cave, Northern Rhodesia’, Trans. Roy. Soc. S. Afr. (1942), XXX, 133–201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
11 Summers, R. F. H., ‘Environment and Culture in Southern Rhodesia’, Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc., CIV, no. 3, 06 1960, 266–92.Google Scholar
12 Leakey, L. S. B. and Leakey, M. D., Dimple Based Pottery from Central Kavirondo, Kenya Colony. Coryndon Museum Occ. Papers, 2, 1948.Google Scholar
13 Hiernaux, J. and Maquet, E., ‘Cultures préhistoriques de l'âge des métaux au Ruanda-Urundi…’ Première partie, Bull. des Séances de l'Acad. Roy. des Sciences Coloniales. Brussels, 1957, 1126–49.Google Scholar
14 Hiernaux, J. and Maquet, E., ‘Cultures préhistoriques de l'âge des métaux au Ruanda-Urundi …’ Première partie, Bull. des Séances d' l'Acad. Roy. des Sciences Coloniales. Brussels, 1957, 1126–49.Google Scholar
15 I am most grateful to Messrs. R. F. H. Summers and K. R. Robinson for permission to make use of these unpublished observations.
16 Clark, J. D., ‘A note on the Pre-Bantu inhabitants of Rhodesia and Nyasaland’, S. Afr. Journ. Sci., XLVII, no. 3, 80–5.Google Scholar
17 Fagan, B. M., A Nachikufan site at Kasama, Northern Rhodesia (in the press).Google Scholar
18 Clark, J. D., personal communication.Google Scholar
19 Clark, J. D., op. cit. (16), 83, fig. 2.Google Scholar
20 Schofield, J. F., Primitive Pottery, S. Afr. Arch. Soc. Capetown, 1948.Google Scholar
21 Fagan, B. M., op. cit. (Kasama).
22 Chaplin, J. H., a preliminary account of Iron Age Burial with gold in the Gwembe Valley, Northern Rhodesia. Proc. 1st Federal Science Congress, 1960 (in the press).Google Scholar
23 Walton, J., ‘Iron Gongs from Northern Rhodesia’. Man, 1959, 92.Google Scholar
24 Robinson, K. R., ‘An early Iron smelting site near Khami Ruins, Matabeleland, Southern Rhodesia,’ Occ. Papers, Nat. Mus. S. R. Bulawayo (1953) no. 8, 508–17.Google Scholar
25 Caton, Thompson G., Zimbabwe Culture (1931), 26.Google Scholar
26 Robinson, K. R., Khami Ruins, London (1959), 149.Google Scholar
27 Hall, R. N., Great Zimbabwe, 121 ff.Google Scholar
28 The evidence for this section of the paper is drawn for the most part from Hall and Caton Thompson's work. The publication of the 1958 excavations at Zimbabwe is eagerly awaited, and should throw much light on the problems of pre-European ironworking in Central Africa.
29 Inskeep R. R. (in the press).
30 Cullen, Young T., ‘A note on Iron objects of Unknown origin from Northern Nyasaland’. Man, 1929, 147.Google Scholar
31 Thomas, F. M., ‘Historical notes on the Bisa Tribe, Northern Rhodesia’, RhodesLivingstone Communication, no. 8, 1958.Google Scholar
32 Coxhead, J. C. C., ‘The Native Tribes of North Eastern Rhodesia’, 1914, R.A.I. Occ. Paper No. 5.Google Scholar
33 Fagan, B. M., ‘A collection of ninteenth-century Soli Ironwork from the Lusaka area of Northern Rhodesia’, J.R.A.I., XCI (Pt. 1) 1961 (In the press).Google Scholar
34 Burton, R. F., The Lands of Cazembe, London (1873), 33–46.Google Scholar
- 7
- Cited by