Mwana wa Chentcherere II, or Chentcherere Rock Shelter II, the name by which it was more generally known when it was excavated in 1972, is one of the largest rock painting sites in Malawi. It has been a national monument since 1972 and has been the subject of extensive archaeological research. This report draws together unpublished recordings on the site from the 1960s through to the 1990s and analyses these in the context of recent advances in the knowledge of Central African rock art and local ethnography. In particular, the report explores the link between Chentcherere rock art and girls' initiation ceremonies ('chinamwali') among the Chewa. [ASC Leiden abstract
This thesis is not available on this repository until the author agrees to make it public. If you ar...
Cette photographie a été prise durant la période de 2005 par la chercheuse linguiste Margaret Dunham...
This paper focuses on southern Ethiopia, along the outer rim of the Rift Valley and not far from the...
iii In this thesis I examine the material culture of initiation in central Malai, eastern Zambia and...
Located in the UNESCO World Heritage Center in Kondoa, Tanzania, the Kisese II rock shelter (4.49° S...
<div><p>We review the history of rock art research in Kondoa District, Tanzania, specifically the ar...
This work is based on the comparative iconographic analysis of a distinct corpus of paintings within...
The subject of rock art elicits a lot of interests. Although the Trust for African Rock (TARA) Proje...
This talk examines six petroglyph (rock engraving) sites in the Sandawe homeland of north-central Ta...
The rock art site of Gua Tambun in Perak, Malaysia was first reported by J. M. Matthews in 1959, fol...
Lower Congo rock art is concentrated in a region that stretches from Kinshasa to the Atlantic coast ...
Thesis submitted to fulfilment of the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Scho...
Rock art is an archaeological phenomenon that occurs fairly frequently throughout Southeast Asia but...
uMhwabane Shelter (also known as eBusingatha Shelter) is a rock art site alongside the eBusingatha R...
J. Desmond Clark and his colleagues were first to investigate the rich Middle Stone Age (MSA – from ...
This thesis is not available on this repository until the author agrees to make it public. If you ar...
Cette photographie a été prise durant la période de 2005 par la chercheuse linguiste Margaret Dunham...
This paper focuses on southern Ethiopia, along the outer rim of the Rift Valley and not far from the...
iii In this thesis I examine the material culture of initiation in central Malai, eastern Zambia and...
Located in the UNESCO World Heritage Center in Kondoa, Tanzania, the Kisese II rock shelter (4.49° S...
<div><p>We review the history of rock art research in Kondoa District, Tanzania, specifically the ar...
This work is based on the comparative iconographic analysis of a distinct corpus of paintings within...
The subject of rock art elicits a lot of interests. Although the Trust for African Rock (TARA) Proje...
This talk examines six petroglyph (rock engraving) sites in the Sandawe homeland of north-central Ta...
The rock art site of Gua Tambun in Perak, Malaysia was first reported by J. M. Matthews in 1959, fol...
Lower Congo rock art is concentrated in a region that stretches from Kinshasa to the Atlantic coast ...
Thesis submitted to fulfilment of the requirement for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Scho...
Rock art is an archaeological phenomenon that occurs fairly frequently throughout Southeast Asia but...
uMhwabane Shelter (also known as eBusingatha Shelter) is a rock art site alongside the eBusingatha R...
J. Desmond Clark and his colleagues were first to investigate the rich Middle Stone Age (MSA – from ...
This thesis is not available on this repository until the author agrees to make it public. If you ar...
Cette photographie a été prise durant la période de 2005 par la chercheuse linguiste Margaret Dunham...
This paper focuses on southern Ethiopia, along the outer rim of the Rift Valley and not far from the...