This study analyzes the consumption of European glass beads at two fugitive slave villages in nineteenth-century Kenya, Koromio and Makoroboi. The consumer choices of Koromio and Makoroboi residents reveal a strategic and symbolic material language. Specifically, the inter-household distribution of European glass beads reflects considerable variation in the performance of female identity. This distribution suggests varying norms of feminine adornment. Some of these norms likely originated in runaways’ natal communities; others may have developed during enslavement. The variability in adornment practices additionally points to women’s improvisation amid shifting gender relations in these nascent fugitive slave communities
Archaeological research on Maroons—that is, runaway slaves—has been largely confined to the Americas...
This article examines the necklaces used in the Afro-Cuban Rule of Orisha, more commonly known as Sa...
Despite their different trajectories, the Witu and Shimoni cases are interesting to compare as they ...
This article presents a dissertation proposal for doctoral research scheduled to begin in September ...
A wide variety of glass beads poured into Central East Africa during the second half of the 19th cen...
Beads are objects of infinite diversity among the Mina-Guen of southern Togo. They accompany the peo...
none1noThe study of monetary systems in the history of Africa is a subject that by its nature crosse...
Beads have played an important role in the personal lives of Africans. They have been valued as cur...
The link between Europe and the rest of the world is often studied with Europe being the consumer of...
It is the intention of this paper to place the Diakhité beads into a historical and archaeological p...
The ancient Kingdom of Kongo originated in Central Africa in the 14th century. In the 15th century, ...
Shimoni slave caves in Kenya are a significant historical site reminiscent of the history of slave t...
In the nineteenth century, the coalescence of a plantation economy on the Swahili Coast provoked an ...
Artisans in Kiffa and several other towns in southern Mauritania have produced a unique kind of powd...
This article presents the discovery and analysis of a new glass bead assemblage from the Swahili sit...
Archaeological research on Maroons—that is, runaway slaves—has been largely confined to the Americas...
This article examines the necklaces used in the Afro-Cuban Rule of Orisha, more commonly known as Sa...
Despite their different trajectories, the Witu and Shimoni cases are interesting to compare as they ...
This article presents a dissertation proposal for doctoral research scheduled to begin in September ...
A wide variety of glass beads poured into Central East Africa during the second half of the 19th cen...
Beads are objects of infinite diversity among the Mina-Guen of southern Togo. They accompany the peo...
none1noThe study of monetary systems in the history of Africa is a subject that by its nature crosse...
Beads have played an important role in the personal lives of Africans. They have been valued as cur...
The link between Europe and the rest of the world is often studied with Europe being the consumer of...
It is the intention of this paper to place the Diakhité beads into a historical and archaeological p...
The ancient Kingdom of Kongo originated in Central Africa in the 14th century. In the 15th century, ...
Shimoni slave caves in Kenya are a significant historical site reminiscent of the history of slave t...
In the nineteenth century, the coalescence of a plantation economy on the Swahili Coast provoked an ...
Artisans in Kiffa and several other towns in southern Mauritania have produced a unique kind of powd...
This article presents the discovery and analysis of a new glass bead assemblage from the Swahili sit...
Archaeological research on Maroons—that is, runaway slaves—has been largely confined to the Americas...
This article examines the necklaces used in the Afro-Cuban Rule of Orisha, more commonly known as Sa...
Despite their different trajectories, the Witu and Shimoni cases are interesting to compare as they ...