Kings and Clans: Ijwi Island and the Lake Kivu Rift, 1780-1840, Volume 10Univ of Wisconsin Press, 1991 - 371 pages By reconstructing the history of kings and clans in the Kivu Rift Valley (on the border of today's Rwanda and Zaire) at a time of critical social change, David Newbury enlarges our understanding of social process and the growth of state power in Africa. In the early nineteenth century, many factors contributed to the creation of new social relations in the Lake Kivu region--ecological change, population movement, the expansion of the Rwandan state from the east, the rise of new political units to the west, and the movement of many population groups and their ritual forms through the area. Newbury looks in particular at the role of clans in the establishment of a new kingdom on Ijwi Island in Lake Kivu. Drawing on detailed ethnographic observations of the social and ritual organizations of Ijwi society, an extensive body of oral data, and evidence from written sources, Newbury shows that the clans of Ijwi were not static formations, nor did the establishment of a royal family on the island emerge from military conquest and internal social breakdown. Instead, clan identities changed over time, and these changes actually facilitated the creation of kingship on Ijwi. Through a detailed examination of succession struggles, of local factors influencing the outcome of such struggles, and of specific clan participation in public rituals that legitimize royalty, Newbury's study illustrates the importance of clan identities in both the creation of state power and its reproduction over time. |
Table des matières
Ijwi Island Today | 21 |
List of Maps Figures and Tables Maps 1 Ijwi Island and neighboring areas 22242 | 22 |
Lake Kivu Rift Valley topography | 24 |
Ijwi Island mountain culture | 25 |
An Overview of Kivu Culture c 1750 | 43 |
Kivu Rift societies | 45 |
Archeological sites in the Kivu Rift area | 61 |
The Process of Social Transformation on Ijwi Island | 65 |
The Antecedents of Basibula Royalty | 145 |
The states southwest of Lake Kivu | 148 |
The Basibula domain | 154 |
The south end of Lake Kivu | 158 |
The Banyakabwa 104 | 160 |
The Social Alliances of the Basibula on Ijwi | 166 |
Baloho marriage ties with Basibula | 173 |
External Alliances and the Establishment of Royalty on Ijwi | 178 |
Rwanda and the Rift | 81 |
Regions of Rwanda | 83 |
Rwanda army placement in the mideighteenth century | 88 |
Ties across the Lake | 99 |
Banyakabwa settlements | 103 |
Eastern villages on Ijwi | 112 |
Creating Ritual Status | 126 |
Baziralo communities on Ijwi | 127 |
The Muganuro Ceremony | 200 |
The Kings of Rwanda 84 | 225 |
Conclusion | 227 |
Clan Statistics on Ijwi | 249 |
Glossary of Place Names | 325 |
Bibliography | 351 |
367 | |
Autres éditions - Tout afficher
Kings and Clans: Ijwi Island and the Lake Kivu Rift, 1780-1840 David S. Newbury Affichage d'extraits - 1991 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
administrative Africa alliance arrival on Ijwi associated Babambo Badaha bagingi Bahande Bakanga Balega Baloho Bany'Iju Banyakabwa Banyambiriri Bashaho Basibula Baziralo Beeru Beshaza Biebuyck Binyalenge Bugoyi Buhavu Buhunde Bukinanyana Bukunzi Burundi Bushi Butyangali Bwando Bwiiru Capita central court ceremony chapter claim clan identities colonial common concepts context cultural d'Hertefelt dynasty early east forms Gisaka groups Havu historical Hutu Ijwi Island Ijwi Nord Ijwi society Ijwi Sud immigrants important interaction Interlacustrine Ishungu Kabego Kagame kingdom Kingdom of Rwanda Kinyaga kumbi L'organisation politique Lake Kivu lineage mainland milices Mitumba Mountains Mpembe Mpene Mpinga mubake mubande Muganuro Mushaho mwami Mwendanga Ndogosa Ndorwa Newbury Nile-Zaire Divide Nkundiye Nyamuhiva Nyamuziga Nyanga Pagès patterns political population refer region reign relations Rift ritualists royal drum royal family royal rituals royalty royaume Hamite Ruganzu Rujugira Rundi Rusizi Rwabugiri Rwanda Rwandan court Rwandan traditions Sibula social status structures Tervuren tion Vansina village Zaire