ETHAF 018336

poignard de ceinture attaché à sa gaine

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018336
Belt dagger and sheath
Zambia, Western Province, Barotseland
Lozi. Late 19th - early 20th century
Wood, iron, leather
Gift of Alice Bertrand in 1940. Collected in the Upper Zambezi between 1895 and 1909 by Alfred Bertrand
MEG Inv. ETHAF 018336
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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.

Ambassador Objects

During his expedition in South Africa in 1895, the Genevan traveller Alfred Bertrand, accompanied by English officers, crossed "the threshold of central Africa" beyond the Zambezi River and discovered the kingdom of the Barotse. He was welcomed by the local chiefs with numerous presents and in turn gave them the trade goods he had brought with him. These "prestige objects" were regarded as "diplomatic" gifts by the chiefs of societies that had recently come under missionary influence and were soon to come under colonial control. Bertrand showed his collections and hunting trophies at the national exhibition in Geneva in 1896.

Bibliograpy

  • Bertrand, Alfred. 1898. Au pays des Ba-Rotsi : Haut-Zambèze : voyage d'exploration, en Afrique et retour par les chutes Victoria, le Matébéléland, le Transvaal, Natal, Le Cap. Paris : Hachette, MEG AF 317

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