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         Baga Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail

21. Fourth Grade - Visual Arts - Overview - April
the influence of Native American indigenous architecture of exhibition reveals theloss of baga traditions as for ancestors among West African peoples of Ife
http://www.cstone.net/~bcp/4/4AArt.htm
Fourth Grade - Visual Arts - Overview - April The Visual Arts lessons for the month of April follow the History lessons, centering on the arts of Ancient and Medieval Africa. The first lesson looks at some artworks of Kush (ancient Nubia) and Axum in East Africa. Students recall some of the tombs of Ancient Egypt, which they studied in First Grade; historians now know that many of these massive structures come from the civilization of Ancient Nubia. The students also look at a stele from Axum as well as churches carved out of rock under the Christian King Lalibela.
The Second Lesson moves to West Africa; the students look at indigenous architecture for West African mosques and compare it with that of other Islamic mosques they studied last month. They complete a model of an indigenous West African mosque as well.
In the Third Lesson, the students look at artworks from the three West African Medieval kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and Songhay, concentrating on masks and headdresses that either represent animals or incorporate human and animal aspects together. They then create their own masks or headdresses in the style they have observed.
Finally, the students look at some of the sculpture that was done at the height of the cultures of the cities of Ife and Benin, especially the cast bronze heads that honor kings and royal families. They learn that these strikingly naturalistic sculptures were made to honor kings and the ancestors of kings. They were placed on altars or shrines, which the students make in honor of their own ancestral families, by constructing simple dioramas with symbolic objects and images brought from home.

22. FRENCH LANGUAGE
The cotton and coffee plants are indigenous; banana plantations still the religionof the baga and other Many of the coast peoples show, however, distinct
http://14.1911encyclopedia.org/F/FR/FRENCH_LANGUAGE.htm
document.write("");
FRENCH LANGUAGE
Revenue is derived from taxes on land, rent paid by concession companies, a capitation or hut tax on natives, and customs receipts, supplemented by a subvention from France. In addition to defraying the military expenses, about £100,000 a year, a grant of £28,000 yearly was made up to 1906 by the French chambers towards the civil expensP~. In ‘907 the budget of the Congo balanced at about £250,000 without the aid of this subvention, in i~O9 the chambers sanctioned a loan for the colony of £840,000, guaranteed by France and to he applied to the establishment of administrative stations and public works. FRENCH GUINEA, a French colony in West Africa, formerly known as Rivières dii Sud. It is bounded W. by the Atlantic, N. by Portuguese Guinea and Senegal, E. by Upper Senegal and the Ivory Coast, and S. by Liberia and Sierra Leone. With a sea-board running N.N.W. andS.S.E. from Io° 50’ N. to 9° 2’ N.~ a distance, without reckoning the indentations, of 170 m., the colony extends eastward 450 m. in a straight line and attains a maximum width N. to S. of nearly 300 m., covering fully Ioo,ooc sq. m., and containing a population estimated at z,ooo,ooo tc Physical Features.—Though in one or two places rocky headland~ jut into the sea, the coast is in general sandy, low, and much broker by rivers and deep estuaries, dotted with swampy islands, giving ii the appearance of a vast delta. In about 9° 30’ N., off the promon tory of Konakry, lie the Los Islands (q.v.), forming part of the colony The coast plain, formed of alluvial deposits, is succeeded about 30 m inland by a line of cliffs, the Susu Hills, which form the first stel in the terrace-like formation of the interior, culminating in th~ massif of Futa Jallon, composed chiefly of Archean and graniti rocks. While the coast lands are either densely forested or covere with savannas or park-like country, the Futa Jallon tableland i:

23. Sculture Info
The baga, 15th or 16th-century migrants from the ndako gboya appears to be indigenous;a spirit diversity of sculptural tradition among peoples inhabiting the
http://users.pandora.be/african-shop/sculpture-info.htm
Home african art statues african art masks African Art objects ... Outside Africa Art antiques [ sculpture info ] african-art-buying-tips.htm bookmarks Stolen-art News African Art Auctions Fairs Exhibitions ... About You
Sculptures and associated arts
This page was made with the help from Britannica , follow the link for more related articles but they aren't free as in the past anymore.
Although wood is the best-known medium of African sculpture, many others are employed: copper alloys, iron, ivory, pottery, unfired clay, and, infrequently, stone. Unfired clay is and probably always was the most widely used medium in the whole continent, but, partly because it is so fragile and therefore difficult to collect, it has been largely ignored in the literature.
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Small Daima clay figures. Neolitic period.

24. WebGuinée/Société/Cl. Rivière/Guinea: Mobilization Of A People
if one takes into account the related tribes (baga and Landouman Forest peoples. thePeul immigrants established themselves among the indigenous farmers and
http://www.guinee.net/bibliotheque/sociology/rivieregn/chap1.html

Sociologie
Guinea: The Mobilization of a People

Ithaca. Cornell University Press. 1968. 260 p.
Chapter 1
Wealth in Diversity
Because traditions of the two great empires of Mali and of the Fouta Djalon still influence the sociopolitical behavior of two-thirds of the Guinean population, and because the head of state,
Before judging to what degree the reality corresponds to these expectations, it is advisable to examine all the favorable factors. A Guinean proverb observes that the balafon player tests his instrument, verifies its tone quality, and tries out his rhythms before playing his showpiece. An analysis of Guinea's basic geography, demography, ethnography, and history makes it easier to understand the hopes, resentments, vacillations, and decisions of its people. Lands and Peoples
Guinea's diverse cultural areas in the hinterland reflect fairly closely its administrative and geographic divisions. Indeed, its variations in altitude and the diversity of its climates and vegetation divide Guinea into four natural regions which, by and large, correspond to its major tribes . The country derives its wealth from the wide range of its mineral, agricultural, animal, and human resources.

25. WebGuinée/Bibliothèque/M. Binns/Guinea/Bibliography/Introduction
a complicated pattern of movements of peoples from different population, mostly Soussou(or Susu) and also baga. French was replaced by indigenous languages as
http://www.guinee.net/bibliotheque/general/mBinns/intro.html
Margaret Binns. Guinea
World Bibliographical Series. Vol. 191. CLIO Press.
Santa Barbara, Calif. 1996. 89 p. 1 map. Introduction Geography
Until 1994 Guinea was divided into four administrative divisions, which themselves coincided with the four main geographical areas.
  • Fouta Djallon , an area in the west-centre of Guinea composed of ancient sandstones, much of it over 900 m high, and forming a plateau with deeply incised and fertile river valleys, providing great hydroelectric potential.
  • Haute Guinea (Upper Guinea) covered the area which stretches from the Fouta Djallon in the west to the Mali border in the east, an area of savanna, through which flow the upper reaches of the River Niger.
Fouta Djallon
Guinea's climate varies throughout the different areas (see item no. 13). The coastal region has a monsoon climate with high temperatures throughout the year and heavy rainfall during the period from May to October, but virtually no rain during the rest of the year. Conakry has an average annual rainfall of 430 cm, of which 130 cm falls during July, making the highest monthly rainfall figure for West Africa. The Fouta Djallon has a more pleasant tropical climate, with the altitude giving lower temperatures and rainfall which is more evenly distributed throughout the year (see item no. 12). In the southern highland area the rainfall is higher again, but is more evenly distributed, with only one or two drier months.

26. Central-Eurasia-L Archive - Publications - Page 36
Politics, and Policy in South africa, (Oxford) Oxford in Kansas that has broughtindigenous peoples in the site in Mongolia, Tsagaan Salaa/baga Oigor, in the
http://cesww.fas.harvard.edu/calarc/calarc_publ36.html

Central-Eurasia-L Announcement Archive
3. Publications
Page 36
To Index of Publications Postings
Harvard Program on Central Asia and the Caucasus
PUBLICATION- Fourth Livshits Orientalist Workshop, Barnaul
bspu.secna.ru The proceedings of I-III Livshits Orientalist Workshops, as well The Third International Conference "Russia, Siberia, and Central Asia: Interrelation of Peoples and Cultures" are also available at our stock.
CALL FOR REVIEWERS- Int'l Journal for Comp. Sociology and Comp. Sociology
pscw.uva.nl
JOURNAL/CFP- Fiscal Decentralization and Local Government Issues
kimep.kz / hoodash kimep.kz NB: There is no submission fee. Deadline for submission: June 1, 2002 [Forwarded from: Announcements-l]
PUBLICATION- Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst, 24 April 2002 Issue on Web
pcr.uu.se and suggest some topics on which you would like to write. Please remember that The Analyst does not accept double submissions. Svante E. Cornell, Acting Editor Central Asia-Caucasus Analyst Central Asia-Caucasus Institute The Johns Hopkins University Nitze School of Advanced International Studies 1619 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20036 Tel. 1-202-663-7712 Fax. 1-202-663-7785 svante.cornell pcr.uu.se

27. GEOG332
was not as disruptive of african indigenous heritage because in Angola Tomba ofBaga (Guinea) -King description of africa's landscapes, peoples, culture and
http://www.siue.edu/~fodemer/geog332.htm
Home Teaching Research Service ... Contact Us GEOG332: GEOGRAPHY OF AFRICA SYLLABUS FOR GEOG332: GEOGRAPHY OF AFRICA SPRING Semester Instructor: Francis O. ODEMERHO , Ph.D. Office: Bldg III, Room 1402. Phone:
DESCRIPTION: The course describes the land and peoples of Africa and attempts to explain the varied socio-economic, cultural and political landscapes of the continent in light of its triple heritage, resource endowments, resource utilization and global relations.
COURSE OBJECTIVE: In this course, students should be able to:
  • identify all African countries and recognize its major geographic regions; locate on African maps its major relief features; understand the rich history of Africa and its peoples; understand why most African countries are relatively less developed; relate to African problems like: drought, health, refugee and food shortages and develop appropriate database for a better interpretation of African situations and issues.
COURSE OUTLINE TOPICS READINGS* 1. General Introduction: A World View of Africa 2. Africa: Location, Geology and Landforms Chap. 1

28. FABC Papers: 80
certain sacred objects such as the baga mask, the THE SOCIAL MARGINALIZATION OFTRIBAL peoples AND THEIR fact that both have to do with indigenous peoples.
http://www.ucanews.com/html/fabc-papers/fabc-80.htm
FABC Paper No. 80 Evangelization Among
the Indigenous Peoples of Asia
A Report of a Conference on the Concerns of Indigenous Peoples
Hua Hin, Thailand, September 3-8, 1995 I. The Challenge of Cultures
by Archbishop Thomas Menamparambil
II. Traditional Religions
by Father Sebastian Karotemprel
III. The Social Marginalization of Tribal Peoples
by Bishop Francisco Claver
IV. Recommendations of the Conference
V. List of Participants INTRODUCTION
Between September 3-8, 1995, a conference on "Evangelization among the Indigenous Peoples of Asia" was held in Hua Hin, Thailand. Organized by the Office of Evangelization of the Federation of Asian Bishops' Conferences, with the cooperation of the FABC Office for Ecumenical and Interreligious Affairs, this consultation brought together 45 participants from 10 Asian countries to study issues related to the indigenous peoples of Asia. About one-third of the participants themselves belonged to indigenous peoples. Defined as "people who were living on their lands before settlers came from elsewhere, the new arrivals later becoming dominant through conquest, occupation, or settlement," Asian indigenous peoples are often referred to as "tribals," or "aborigines," terms which they reject as perpetuating stereotypes that picture them as primitive and backward. The Indian term adivasi, meaning "original peoples,'' is much more acceptable.

29. AIO Keywords List
see Suffering and misfortune Afghanistan africa african influence Asia Asian AmericansAsian peoples Asians Asiatic Bedouin Baffin island Bafia baga bagam West
http://lucy.ukc.ac.uk/anthind/keywords.html
A B C D ... Y
Abagusii see Gusii Kenya
Aban see Shor
Abandoned settlements
Abashevo culture
Abbasids see also Islamic empire
Abduction
Abelam
Abenaki North American Indians (Algonquian) Northeast
Abetalipoproteinaemia
Abidjan
Ability
Abkhazia
Abnormalities
ABO blood-group system
Abolitionists
Abominable snowman see Yeti
Aboriginal studies
Abortion
Abrasion
Absahrokee language see Crow language
Absaraka language see Crow language
Absaroka language see Crow language
Absaroke language see Crow language
Absolutism see Despotism
Abu Hureyra site
Abusir site
Abydos site
Academic controversies see also Scientific controversies
Academic freedom
Academic publishing see Scholarly publishing
Academic status
Academic writing
Academics
Acadians (Louisiana) see Cajuns
Accents and accentuation
Accidents see also Traffic accidents
Acclimatisation
Accra
Accreditation
Acculturation see also Assimilation
Acetylcholine receptors
Achaemenid dynasty (559-330 BC)
Achaemenid empire
Ache see Guayaki
Acheulian culture
Achik see Garo
Achinese language
Achuar
Achumawi
Acidification
Acquiescence
Acquired immune deficiency syndrome see AIDS
Acronyms
Action theory
Acupuncture
Adam and Eve
Adamawa emirate
Adapidae see also Notharctus
Adaptation
Adat
Adena culture
Adhesives
Adipocere
Adisaiva see Adisaivar
Adisaivar
Adivasi
Adjectives
Adjustment (psychology)
Administration see also Government, Management, etc.

30. Basic Facts - Guinea
For peoples like the Coiagui, baga, and Nalou as assimilation, based on the selfproclaimedcultural superiority of the French over the indigenous people.
http://www.winne.com/Guinea2/BF-historical.htm
  • Pre-Colonial History
The pre-colonial history of Guinea still remains rather incomplete. Though archaeological research in Guinea has not made much progress, evidence seems to indicate that the area has been continuously inhabited by hunting-gathering populations for at least the past 30,000 years. It also seems probable that farming has been practiced in the area of Guinea for at least the past 3000 years. There is considerable evidence that iron smelting dates back 2000 years in this part of West Africa. But until further archaeological evidence is forthcoming, much of the early history of Guinea remains conjectural. The pre-colonial history of Guinea becomes much clearer from about 900 A.D. as sources in Arabic and oral traditions become available. Travelers' accounts in Arabic and professional history keepers' oral narratives offer information on the genealogies of royal families and traditions of ethnic groups who lived in Guinea in the past millennium. For peoples like the Coiagui, Baga, and Nalou, who now live on the Atlantic Coast, ethnological evidence supports the view that they lived in the area of modern Guinea even before the Christian era. For these tribes living along the coast there was little outside migrational pressure. Their political development was minimal as they existed in a loose confederation of proximitous family groupings up and down the coast. Their staple crop was rice, introduced from the Niger River Basin in the first century A.D.

31. Basic Facts - Guinea
today and once housed the office of indigenous affairs. enough for him to study thevarious peoples living there the customs and lifestyle of the baga, who had
http://www.winne.com/Guinea2/BF-towns.htm
Conakry In the early nineteenth century a string of small islands lay strewn at the end of Sangareya bay. Tumbo, the easternmost island, was near the Kaloum peninsula and dotted with villages inhabited by fishermen. One of them was destined for bigger and better things. Why did the hamlet of Konakiri, rather than the neighboring communities of Bolobine, Krutown or Tumbo, become Conakry, Guinea's future capital?
  • Cabo do Sagres, a Portuguese cape A beautiful mansion
Nearby the villa "Belle Brise" stood across from what eventually became the Friacompany's aluminum port. One of the city's most beautiful colonial mansions, it still exists today and once housed the office of indigenous affairs. Today Belle Brise, its shutters curiously, permanently closed, is the Rumanian embassy. A bit further south stood the late-nineteenth-century governor's palace, which became the presidential palace in 1958. It was torn down, and the new palace is still under construction. The building site's scaffolding can be made out from far away. Bolbine, now known as Boulbinet, is at the western end of the island's southern coast. It was the site of a deep cove the villagers used as a fishing port and is still the city's largest. Tumbo was across from the isthmus and land's end. Two trails through the forest, which was once very dense and home to beasts of prey and monkeys, connected Tumbo to Boulbinet and the facilities to the northwest.

32. Symposium On Creation
The Bog of Russian, baga of Avestan, Buh of Bohemian of transportation poses no problemthe peoples of the It seems to be indigenous, although some have tried
http://www.creationism.org/symposium/symp5no1.htm
MAIN F A Q LINKS ARTICLES ... AUDIO
The article below (from "A Symposium on Creation" Vols. 1-5 @ http://www.creationism.org/symposium/ ) is used by permission of Baker Books , a division of Baker Book House Company Baker Book House Company The Gentile Names of God
by Gordon Holmes Fraser From: "A Symposium on Creation" (Vol. V), pg 11-38
Baker Book House
GORDON HOLMES FRASER
Former chancellor of Southwestern School of Missions, an institution which he founded and which combines an Indian Bible institute, a Navajo language school, and a missionary training school. It is located in Flagstaff, Arizona. He has studied at University of Oregon, University of California, California Baptist Theological Seminary, and Northern Arizona University (B.S. in anthropology, M.A. in the teaching of English as a second language). Born in Quebec in 1898, Fraser has made a lifetime study of primitive religions and tribal languages. One of the most unavoidable problems faced by evolutionists at the turn of the century was that of the origin of religion. If the concept of evolution was valid, religion must also have evolved. Andrew Lang, the Scottish ethnologist and folklorist who was one of the evolutionists' most vocal antagonists, defined their problem:
Variously stated by Darwin, Huxley, Mr. Herbert Spencer, and the manual-makers, the current hypothesis is this; beginning with the idea of human souls, or ghosts, and their propitiation, mankind, by ascending the steps of fetishes, departmental gods, nature gods, and polytheism generally, climbed to a conception of a Supreme Being. The advance of society to aristocracy and monarchy made it natural to imagine a heavenly Olympian aristocracy—the higher gods of polytheism—or a supreme being, a sort of heavenly king. In its earlier savage stages according to the hypothesis, religion is non-moral, lending little or no sanction to ethics.

33. Prescriptive Alliance And Ritual Collaboration In Loma Society
the Melspeaking Bullom, Temne, Limba, baga, and Nalu be of much consequence for itshinterland peoples. a new attitude toward indigenous cultural institutions
http://voom.si.edu/leopold/leopold_1991_chapter2.htm
Robert Leopold / Prescriptive Alliance and Ritual Collaboration in Loma Society Chapter 2 THE LOMA PEOPLE The Loma are a Mande-speaking people who practice swidden agriculture in a mountainous, sparsely populated region astride the border between Guinea and Liberia. Within the two countries there are perhaps 250,000 Loma, and despite regional variation in custom and dialect, dissimilar histories of colonization, and the political border that now crosses their landscape, Loma on both sides maintain frequent social relations and a sense of common identity. The Loma are members of the Central West Atlantic culture area, an ethnically plural and linguistically diverse region that lies within the littoral forest zone bounded by the Scarcies River and Cape Palmas (d'Azevedo 1962). Within this complex region ethnic groups of the Mande, Kwa and Mel language families are present and their members often comprise a significant portion of Loma towns. Along the southern and western boundaries of the Loma area the Mel-speaking Kuwaa (Belle) and southern Mande-speaking Bandi are found; to the northwest live the Kwa-speaking Kissi. To the north and east the Loma region is bounded by the Kuranko, Konyaka and Malinke, speakers of northern Mande languages; while the Kpelle, a southern-Mande speaking people, live to the southeast. A common history of ethnic movement, warfare, long-distance trade and political alliance has contributed to an extraordinary degree of heterogeneity that is one of the region's principal social and cultural features (d'Azevedo 1962, 1971).

34. Sources For The Numbers List
Jazyki Narodov SSSR Languages of the peoples of the Inca quipus worked) ClaudiaZaslavsky, africa Counts, Prindle R. The Harris volume (The indigenous Lgs of
http://www.zompist.com/sources.htm
Sources for the Numbers List
This page gives the sources for each language on the Numbers from 1 to 10 page . Sometimes half the work in dealing with a new language is finding out what it is, and relating it to the sometimes wildly varying classifications from Ruhlen , Voegelin, and the Ethnologue. There are notes relating to this, as well as information on dialects , and names of languages I don't have yet.
M.R.
Totals :4620 entries
-226 conlangs
-386 dead langs
-259 dialect/variant = living languages
I have 78.8% of Ruhlen's 4750 languages.
Dialects I have but not in the list: 775, so the grand total is about 5365.
Thanks to the following people who've sent me numbers over the net
(biggest contributors first; abbreviations in boldface): Jarel Deaton JD Eugene S.L. Chan Ch Pavel Petrov ( PP Jess Tauber, Carl Masthay ( CM Rick Schellen ( RS Claudio Salvucci ( CS Ivan Derzhanski, Reinhard Hahn, Jennifer Runner (who has a common expressions in many languages page), Marnen Laibow-Koser, waarki, Miguel Carrasquer Vidal, Mikael Parkvall

35. Www1.shore.net/~india/ejvs/ejvs0703/ejvs0703a.txt
with each other in a complete, indigenous framework? close relationship between thetwo peoples calling themselves though probably from N. Iranian *baga), Skt.
http://www1.shore.net/~india/ejvs/ejvs0703/ejvs0703a.txt

36. New Books A - L
collaboration between universities and indigenous nations / edited Turkic peoples Social life and customs 2000 Mongolyn undesnii bokhiin baga nevterkhii tol
http://www.library.wwu.edu/ref/newbooks/archives/apr02a_l.htm
New Books A - L at
April 2002
This list is updated every month. Titles are arranged in call number order.
For previous lists, check the Archives page. Back to New Materials page
Back to Library Catalog
Gale directory of learning worldwide : a guide to faculty and institutions of higher education, research and culture / Kim Hunt, ed.
Detroit, Mich. : Gale Group, 2001.
Education, Higher Directories.
Research institutes Directories.
Museums Directories.
Libraries Directories. Learned institutions and societies Directories. Directories. local Selections. English. 1988 Kant : selections / edited, with introduction, notes, and bibliography by Lewis White Beck. Kant, Immanuel, 1724-1804. New York : Macmillan ; London : Collier Macmillan, c1988. Philosophy. Im Bann der Utopie : Ernst Blochs Hoffnungsphilosophie in der DDR-Literatur / Verena Kirchner. Kirchner, Verena. Heidelberg : Universitatsverlag C. Winter, c2002 Bloch, Ernst, 1885-1977 Philosophy. Bloch, Ernst, 1885-1977 Influence (Literary, artistic, etc.) Utopias in literature.

37. EthnoMed: Cultural Aspects Of TB Screening And Management
and discussed as mahina ang baga which literally In other words, new indigenous categoriesof illness Thirtyseven percent used other peoples medications for
http://ethnomed.org/ethnomed/clin_topics/tb/tb.html
Search Ethnomed:
Linguistic and Cultural Aspects of Tuberculosis Screening and Management for Refugees and Immigrants
Carey Jackson, MD, MPH, MA
Medical Director, The Refugee Clinic
Co-Director, Community House Calls
Harborview Medical Center, Seattle, WA The following talk was presented at the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease Conference on March 1-2, 1996 in Chicago, IL.
Topic Selections
Introduction
We are here to focus on tuberculosis screening. However, I am not working in TB control per se. I am a general internist who provides primary care in an inner-city clinic where I see a large number of people who have recently immigrated from Africa and Asia. The relevance of that experience for TB screening and the management of active cases is based on my familiarity with communication and management issues relevant to diagnosis and treatment of disease across the linguistic and cultural differences between biomedicine and non-western cultures. The Refugee Clinic is now 14 years old. It serves the Asian and African refugee communities in Seattle, Washington. The clinic began in 1982 after the large influx of Southeast Asian refugees into Seattle, and has continued to care for each subsequent wave of arrivals. We now see about 6,000 patients a year in Harborview Medical Center, a tertiary care referral center and teaching hospital in the University of Washington system. Our clinic provides general internal medicine, family medicine, psychiatric services, and oriental medicine for patients from 13 distinct linguistic groups.

38. Forest Products Certification - Country Reports
NGO, the Foundation for the peoples of the Some logging of indigenous forest occurredin the of the Western Province (principally Gizo, baga and Kolombangara
http://www.efi.fi/cis/english/creports/solomon_islands.phtml
(5)Unable to open: /cis/english/creports/solomon_islands.phtml - is your DOCUMENT_ROOT of /var/www/html set right?

39. Print Discussion And Post
kill innocent people and creation of a patriotic peoples army one Jihad is not aimedat them, that indigenous people are baga 9/29/2001 124817 AM ( 68 of 70
http://www.outlookindia.com/printdis.asp?refer=3625&childid=3625

40. GEMILANG 130 - BALI: "The Eastern Paradise".(June 2002)
sculptures, Demonfigure from the baga(french upper ceremonies, with so-called 'primitive'peoples ( ao Toraja the ethnography of the indigenous population of
http://www.antiquariaten.com/gemilang/catalogs/c00018.htm
Antiquariaat Gemilang P.O. Box 26, 7126 ZG Bredevoort, The Netherlands. Tel. (+31)[0] 543 452325 Fax. (+31)[0] 543 452300 Back to homepage Orderform E-mail: gemilang_antiq.booksellers.nl@planet.nl GEMILANG 130 - BALI: "The Eastern Paradise".(June 2002) ABRAHAM, J.J.,
ADAT LAW-
Bezorgd door de commissie voor het Adat-recht.. Vol. XLII: GEMENGD (MIXED). 's-Gravenhage, Nijhoff, 1943. Thick 8°. orig. wraps., (iv), 494pp. EUR 20.00
Mengcultuur. Cultuuren in contact. Exhib.catalogue Museum "Het Oude Raadhuis", 9 december 2000 t/m 24 februari 2001.Leerdam, 2000. sm.oblong 8°. orig. pict.col. stiff wraps. after a design by C. de Bueger. 64pp. 28 col. plates, some plain & col. text-ills., portrs. of 3 artists involved on a plate, C.V. of artists at end, incl. list of exhibitions. Added the original invitation-card, with matching design as catalogue, printed text on recte/verso, for the vernissage. EUR 40.00
ATLAS - ROAD ATLAS COLONIAL INDONESIA -
BAKKER, P.,
Bali in kleuren. Joure/Utrecht, nd. [c.1947], Small 4°, clothbacked pictorial boards, lay-out by F. ten Have r.i.. 72pp., with coloured plates tipped-in, after photos. by Wim Berssenbrugge, large head-and-tail pieces after drawings, coloured sketch-map on f.e.p. with legenda in margins. "Douwe Egberts Plaatjesalbum". EUR 10.00
A so-called "Plaatjes-Album", issued by a dutch Coffee-trader "Douwe Egberts". A rather popular account, however supplying nice information on Bali: ceremonies & dances, arts & crafts, cremation-ceremonies, &c...Fine copy.

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