ETHAF 005178

figure de fécondité

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005178
Fertility figure
Lesotho or South Africa
Southern Sotho. 19th century
Calabash, terracotta, glass beads, leather, cotton
Gift of the Mission Museum circa 1880; formerly in the Théodore Vernet collection
MEG Inv. ETHAF 005178
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Cet objet était autrefois inscrit à l'inventaire du Musée des missions sous le numéro 486. Il faisait partie d'une collection offerte à l'institution par le Pasteur Théodore Vernet en 1880. Voici la description tirée de l'inventaire : "Bassoutos. Poupée nguana ou molula. Inv. 486. Collection donnée par Monsieur Théodore Vernet. Cette poupée est fabriquée par les femmes privées d'enfants ou par les mères séparées des leurs. On la présente dans une grande fête: la femme berce la poupée sur son dos. Les hommes immolent des bœufs. On enduit de graisse ladite poupée et on la soigne durant une année."

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Copie dactylographiée en 13 volumes de l'Inventaire original MEG manuscrit
Registres_inventaire_dactylographie/132.pdf

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Registres_inventaire_original/Registre_01_000159_006685.pdf

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Registre du Musée des Missions.pdf

 

East and Southern Africa

The MEG has over 700 items – everyday tools, weapons, jewellery and prestigious diplomatic gifts – testifying to the strong links between the southern African kingdoms and the Protestant missionaries who invested that immense territory in the second half of the nineteenth century. In the wake of David Livingstone, these explorers and cartographers, but more importantly men of God, founded numerous mission stations.

Fertility figures

In various African cultures, especially in East and Southern Africa, the education of girls for their future role as wives and mothers is materialised by the making and symbolic use of small female figures, often called "dolls". Social artefacts and also a precaution against sterility, such fertility figures are designed by the women during the initiation practices specific to each culture. They are cherished like real children until their owners bear children themselves; they are then often given to another member of the family. Whether realistic or abstract, the aesthetic of these dolls reflects the sophistication of their creators.


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