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         Fang Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail
  1. Fang: Visions of Africa series by Louis Perrois, 2008-10-01

61. Weird Stories From Asian Streets
Some of the Northern Thai indigenous peoples eat tarantulas. I saw video program ofPiaroa, indigenous people in the be eaten like crabs 3) use a fang as tooth
http://mirukashihime.cool.ne.jp/english/asia.htm

62. Art/Auctions: Arts Of Africa, Oceania And The Americas At Sotheby's, May 19, 200
2 is a thin New Guinea, Bungain peoples mask of Bokyi headdresses, a Lula mask, aFang reliquary guardian circular leather ear flaps with indigenous restoration
http://www.thecityreview.com/s01stamp.html
Arts of Africa, Oceania and the Americas Sotheby's Saturday, May 19, 2001, 10:15AM Sale 7659 By Carter B. Horsley This season Sotheby's has combined its Tribal Art, American Indian Art and Pre-Columbian Art auctions into one catalogue. The 87 lots of Oceanic Art start the auction at 10:15AM, Saturday, May 19, 2001, followed by 159 lots of the arts of Africa. The afternoon session, which starts at 2PM, will begin with 27 lots of American Indian Art, the smallest number in many seasons, followed by 148 lots of Pre-Columbian Art. While the sale recorded some good prices, only 75.66 percent of the 419 offered lots sold fora total of $6,767,745 including the buyer's premiums. Oceanic Art The Oceanic section of this auction has many fine works included a superb canoe prow, a fine canoe splash board, a wonderful dance paddle, an excellent gope board, a nice "pig killer," a fine ancestor plaque, and some good masks. Lot 38, canoe prow, 83 inches long, Geelvink Bay, Irian Jaya The canoe prow, shown, above, Lot 38, comes from the Geelvink Bay in Irian Jaya and measures 83 inches in length and has a conservative estimate of $60,000 to $90,000. It sold for $55, 375 including the buyer's premium as do all results mentioned in this article.

63. Africast.com - Cameroon People
Religions Christian 40%, Muslim 20%, indigenous African 40 the Beti, Bulu (subgroupof Beti), fang (subgroup of nonIslamic or recently Islamic peoples of the
http://www.africast.com/country_people.php?strCountry=Cameroon

64. History Of Weapons Collections And Display
has often been pointed out, no indigenous African language hypotheses which relatedthe migration of peoples to the headed knives of the Kota and fang of Gabon
http://sapir.ukc.ac.uk/PRM/prmroot/shieweap/hisweap.html
The history of weapons collections and display in the UK
Weapons in Museums, Galleries and Literature: extract A 19th century weapons collection: extract
Extract from C. Spring's African Arms and Armour
Introduction: Weapons in Museums, Galleries and in Literature
(pp 12 - 14; references given by Spring can be found in the bibliography Weapons cannot on their own be used to explain the complexities of and the reasons for conflict. Nonetheless, it is pertinent to note that anthropologists have only recently begun to be forthcoming on the subject of warfare. As Hallpike (1973) bluntly puts it, warfare is a 'form of behaviour which particularly horrifies intellectuals'. If, as Fukui and Turton (1979) suggest, those intellectuals happen to be anthropologists, their aversion may be compounded by the fact that 'warfare is one of those rare topics of anthropological research, the overwhelming practical significance of which is immediately apparent to the non-anthropologist'. In Africa, the colonial authorities had, to some extent, stamped out or at least suppressed warfare by the time most of the classic ethnographies came to be written. Perhaps the connivance, unwittingly or not, of some early twentieth-century anthropologists in this pacification process may have made the discussion of warfare somewhat distasteful to their immediate successors. As Hallpike points out, such attempts as there were unsuccessfully tried to explain away the sheer irrationality of certain aspects of warfare by forcing each of the large variety of cases to confirm to a simple, restrictive, functionalist model. More recently changes in anthropological theory have produced some stimulating work, for example the collection of essays edited by Fukui and Turton in 1979, but in general the study of traditional warfare in Africa has not received the attention it deserves.

65. INET'97 Proceedings: Long Contents
Chan fang Khoon, National University of Singapore Information Technology in AfricaA Proactive Approach and Implications of the Internet for indigenous peoples
http://www.isoc.org/inet97/proceedings/LONGTOC.HTM
Long Contents
Application 1: Caching and Prefetching
  • W3Gate: Use and Abuse
    • Manfred Bogen, German National Research Center for Information Technology, GERMANY
    • Guido Hansen, German National Research Center for Information Technology, GERMANY
    • Michael Lenz, German National Research Center for Information Technology, GERMANY
  • An Adaptive WWW Cache Mechanism in the AI3 Network
    • Hiroyuki Inoue, Nara Institute of Science and Technology, JAPAN
    • Kanchana Kanchanasut, Asian Institute of Technology, THAILAND
    • Suguru Yamaguchi, Nara Institute of Science and Technology, JAPAN
  • An Interactive Prefetching Proxy Server for Improvement of WWW Latency
    • Ken-ichi Chinen, Nara Institute of Science and Technology, JAPAN
    • Suguru Yamaguchi, Nara Institute of Science and Technology, JAPAN
    Application 2 (see Engineering 1)
    Application 3: Next-Generation Applications
  • Desktop Video and Its Obstacles for Collaborative Work
    • Manfred Bogen, German National Research Center for Information Technology, GERMANY
    • Christian Bonkowski, German National Research Center for Information Technology, GERMANY
    • Richard Rodriguez-Val
  • 66. INTRODUCTION TO AN ELEUSINIAN REVIVAL
    offered in this book as to why there are few surviving indigenous uses of still heldin veneration and awe as sacred elements by certain peoples who have fang.
    http://www.well.com/user/dpd/shaman.html
    INTRODUCTION TO AN ELEUSINIAN REVIVAL
    by Donald P. Dulchinos
    illustration courtesy of Anton Saurian THIS JUST IN!! A book on this subject, titled Forbidden Sacraments, is forthcoming in the next couple of months from Autonomedia Press. Check here for updates, or at www.autonomedia.org Look there for my first book, Pioneer of Inner Space: The Life of Fitz Hugh Ludlow, Hasheesh Eater. In 1978, a vice president at Chase Manhattan Bank named R. Gordon Wasson, together with an eclectic group of scientists and scholars, published a book entitled The Road to Eleusis. The authors argued that the kykeon beverage consumed during the Eleusinian mysteries, the primary religious rite of Greco-Roman civilization, contained an hallucinogenic, or "entheogenic", barley fungus called claviceps purpurea. The testimony of a significant number of young and not so young people in the 1960's and since have testified to the religious nature of drugs, especially LSD, which not so coincidentally is based on ergot, the same alkaloid found in claviceps purpurea. Walter Pahnke conducted the famous "Good Friday Experiment" with a group of Harvard Divinity School students, most of whom had a religious experience far deeper than any in their lives before or since. What could be the connection between religion and entheogens?

    67. Worldstats: Providing Information About Our World!
    During the 17th cent. the mainland's indigenous pygmy peoples were displaced byother groups, principally the fang, who now inhabit the area.
    http://www.worldstats.org/world/equatorial_guinea.shtml
  • Home
  • Countries
  • Big Cities
  • World ... Useful Links
  • Equatorial Guinea
    Quick Overview:
    Geography:

    Location:
    Western Africa, bordering the Bight of Biafra, between Cameroon and Gabon Area:
    total: 28,051 sq km
    water: sq km
    land: 28,051 sq km Land boundaries:
    total: 539 km border countries: Cameroon 189 km, Gabon 350 km Elevation extremes: lowest point: Atlantic Ocean m highest point: Pico Basile 3,008 m Geography - note: insular and continental regions rather widely separated People: Population: 498,144 (July 2002 est.) Population growth rate: 2.45% (2002 est.) Life expectancy at birth: total population: 54.35 years female: 56.5 years (2002 est.) male: 52.26 years HIV/AIDS - adult prevalence rate: 0.51% (1999 est.) Ethnic groups: Bioko (primarily Bubi, some Fernandinos), Rio Muni (primarily Fang), Europeans less than 1,000, mostly Spanish Religions: nominally Christian and predominantly Roman Catholic, pagan practices Languages: Spanish (official), French (official), pidgin English, Fang, Bubi, Ibo Government: Country name: conventional long form: Republic of Equatorial Guinea conventional short form: Equatorial Guinea local short form: Guinea Ecuatorial local long form: Republica de Guinea Ecuatorial former: Spanish Guinea Government type: republic Capital: Malabo Administrative divisions: 7 provinces (provincias, singular - provincia); Annobon, Bioko Norte, Bioko Sur, Centro Sur, Kie-Ntem, Litoral, Wele-Nzas

    68. Africa
    Congo, Kikuyu in Kenya, and fang in Gabon certain favoured populations, most Africanindigenous languages would by Britain on behalf of suppressed peoples.
    http://www.ahtg.net/TpA/tpafrica.html
    Africa The African continent, stretching from the Sahara desert in the north to the Cape of Good Hope in the south, is an immense and diverse region of the world. It is in Africa that homo sapiens sapiens Beginning in the late 15th century, and continuing until well into the 19th century, Africa was subjected to the slave trade. Following the European discovery and conquest of the Americas, the various European colonizers particularly Portugal, France, and England began the large-scale purchase of millions of Africans via cooperative states located along the Atlantic coast. From European outposts, slaves were shipped out in the millions and sold to the highest bidder in the Americas. At least ten million Africans, taken all along the African coast from West Africa to Angola , may have been shipped to the Americas. Despite appalling mortality rates, enough Africans survived particularly in northern Brazil , the North American mainland, and the Caribbean to eventually create an African diaspora in their new homeland. Even though the slave trade provided some advantages to those Africans who collaborated with European slavers, in the long run it depopulated many of the states of the West African interior, and left Africa exposed to foreign imperialists. Centuries of contact and exchange between Europeans and Africans had culminated by the mid-19th century in the large-scale European colonization of Africa. Although Britain's acquisition of the Cape Province could be used to define British as the first modern colonial power in Africa, France actually was the first European state to embark on the colonization of all of Africa, particularly under the

    69. Fuji Lozada's Homepage: 1997 AAA Paper
    Others contend that the Hakka are a sinified southern indigenous peoples (cf Fang1994 africa was included because of the number of village members and other
    http://blue.butler.edu/~elozada/papers/97AAA/good_notes.htm
    Modified 17 October 2001
    Anthropology Program
    Butler University
    4600 Sunset Avenue
    Indianapolis, IN 46208
    USA
    office: Jordan Hall 249B
    tel. 317-940-9270
    fax. 317-940-8815
    email. elozada@butler.edu
    Eriberto P. Lozada Jr. Dept. of Anthropology, Harvard University For information only; please do not cite without permission of author. Notes Go to Paper Section ... Section 1: Introduction Section 2: Governor Patten attends his last Mass in Hong Kong Section 3: Building a village Church in Guangdong Section 4: The Return of Hong Kong and the Chinese Catholic Church Conclusion Appendix 1: Figures Appendix 2: Tables References Cited 1. I define transnational processes as the social and cultural practices associated with the flows of ideas, products, people, capital, and technologies across national boundaries. 2. The analytical perspective used in this paper, centered on the "diagnostic event," follows the processual framework delineated by Sally Falk Moore (1987, 1989, 1994). 3. For proper names, I will be using the romanization used in Hong Kong publications, with the correct

    70. Africans Art
    and sculptural inventiveness of the cultures indigenous to these the Baga from Guineaand the fang from Equatorial of objects from the Bidjogo peoples who live
    http://www.webzinemaker.net/africans-art/index.php3?action=page&id_art=534

    71. Adherents.com: By Location
    1998), indigenous beliefs 51%, Christian 33%, Muslim 16%; Total population In Cameroonthe fang are a Original src Weeks, R. (ed.), Muslim peoples A World
    http://www.adherents.com/adhloc/Wh_54.html
    Adherents.com - Religion by Location
    Over 42,000 religious geography and religion statistics citations (membership statistics for over 4,000 different religions, denominations, tribes, etc.) for every country in the world. To Index back to Cambodia, Dhammakaya
    Cambodia, continued...
    Group Where Number
    of
    Adherents % of
    total
    pop. Number
    of
    congreg./
    churches/
    units Number
    of
    countries Year Source Quote/ Notes Hinduism Cambodia 1150 C.E. Crim, Keith (ed.). The Perennial Dictionary of World Religions . San Francisco: Harper Collins (1989). Reprint; originally pub. as Abingdon Dictionary of Living Religions , 1981; pg. 321. "The eleventh and twelfth centuries saw the climax of Indianized civilizations with Angkor in Cambodia, Champa in southern Vietnam, Pagan in Burma, and Majapahit in Java. " Islam Cambodia *LINK* Web site: "Arabic Paper "; web page: "Muslim Countries of the World " (viewed 15 June 1999). [Written 1998.] NOTE: Unreliable statistical methodology. Islam Cambodia Goring, Rosemary (ed). (Larousse: 1994) pg. 581-584. Table: "Population Distribution of Major Beliefs "; "Figures have been compiled from the most accurate recent available information and are in most cases correct to the nearest 1% "

    72. Society : Link2 Exports - World Export Trade Information For UK Exporters From B
    Chairman, indigenous peoples Council Chen Chiennien. Chairman, National Youth CommissionLin fang-mei.
    http://www.link2exports.co.uk/regions.asp?lsid=1969&pid=1285

    73. Cameroon (05/02)
    Religions Christian 53%, Muslim 22%, indigenous African 25%. Ewondo, Bulu (subgroupof Beti), fang (subgroup of nonIslamic or recently Islamic peoples of the
    http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2822.htm
    [Print Friendly Version]
    Bureau of African Affairs
    May 2002
    Background Note: Cameroon

    PROFILE OFFICIAL NAME:
    Republic of Cameroon
    Geography
    Area: 475,000 sq. km. (184,000) sq. mi.), about the size of Califo rnia.
    Cities (2000 census): Capital Yaounde (pop. 1,000,000). Other major cities Douala (1.5 million), Garoua (170,000), Maroua (150,000), Bafoussam (140,000), Bamenda (130,000), Nkongsamba (110,000), and Ngaoundere (100,000).
    Terrain: Northern plains, central and western highlands, southern and coastal tropical forests. Mt. Cameroon (13,353 ft.) in the southwest is the highest peak in West Africa and the sixth in Africa.
    Climate: Northern plains, the Sahel regionsemiarid and hot (7-month dry season); central and western highlands where Yaounde is locatedcooler, shorter dry season; southern tropical forestwarm, 4-month dry season; coastal tropical forest, where Douala is locatedwarm, humid year-round. People
    Nationality: English noun and adjective Cameroonian(s); French noun and adjective Camerounais(e).

    74. People And Peoples (IM)
    Although indigenous beliefs remain, many Ifugao have adopted Christianity are a smallgroup of huntergatherer peoples of the The Call of the Wild and White fang
    http://www.ii.uj.edu.pl/~artur/enc/C3.htm
    People and Peoples (I-M)
    Iban
    Iban is a replacement term for Dyak.
    Ibo
    The Ibo are a west African culture group occupying south east Nigeria and numbering about 18,000,000. Primarily cultivators, they inhabit the richly forested tableland, bounded by the river Niger to the west and the river Cross to the east. They are divided into five main groups, and their languages belong to the Kwa branch of the Niger-Congo family.
    Ibsen
    Henrik Ibsen was a Norwegian dramatist. He was born in 1828 at Skien and died in 1906.
    Ifugao
    The Ifugao are an indigenous people of north Luzon in the Philippines , numbering approximately 70,000. In addition to practising shifting cultivation on highland slopes, they build elaborate terraced rice fields. Their language belongs to the Austronesian family. The Ifugao live in scattered hamlets and traditionally recognise a class of nobles, kadangya, who are obliged to provide expensive feasts on particular social occasions. Although indigenous beliefs remain, many Ifugao have adopted Christianity.
    Ina
    Ina was King of the West Saxons. He ascended to the throne in 689. In 728 he resigned his

    75. UQ Graduate School - GSRTA: Sem 2, 2001
    of the catholic church in Australia towards indigenous peoples since Vatican To interviewchurch officials and indigenous Catholics. Yu, Yuan fang, Education,
    http://www.uq.edu.au/grad-school/scholarships/gsrta-2001-2.html
    World Class: Be Part of It Search: All UQ for:
    my.UQ

    mySI-net

    International Students

    Student Support Services
    ... GSRTA GSRTA-2001: Sem 2 Graduate School Research Travel Awards (GSRTA)
    Recipients in 2001, Semester 2
    The UQ Graduate School Research Travel Awards are designed specifically for those students who discover, during their candidature, that there is a piece of equipment, an archive, and/or a special collection of research materials that will solve a particular research problem and speed up progress towards submission of their PhD. Details on how to apply for these Awards are on the Scholarships pages. View recipients with surnames starting with: B C F G ... Z NAME School Thesis topic, travel destination(s),
    Baker, Claire Life Sciences Australian Glow-worms (Diptera: Keroplatidae: Arachnocampa spp.): Identity, Diversity and Management.
    Alabama USA, San Francisco USA

    76. Uganda Fact Files
    French (0fficial), fang, Myene, Bateke, Bapounou/Eschira creation of French EquatorialAfrica in 1910 production with forced labour for the indigenous peoples.
    http://www.iss.co.za/AF/profiles/Gabon/gabon1.html
    GABON FACT FILE
    Geographic Map
    General Information
    Geography
    Natural resources
    Economy ...
    Security Information
    Sources
    GENERAL INFORMATION
    Official Name
    Gabon
    Capital:
    Libreville - population: 436,000 (1994 est)
    Head of State
    President Omar Bongo
    National Currencies and current exchange rate:
    National Day and other important days
    January 1, March 5, March 12, May 1 (Labour Day), August 17, December 4; Christmas and Easter
    System Of Government
    Unitary republic
    Ethnic group:
    Languages
    French (0fficial), Fang, Myene, Bateke, Bapounou/Eschira, Bandjabi
    Religion:
    About two-thirds of Gabonese are Christian (predominantly Roman Catholic) Muslim 1% (including the president). Most Gabonese practice some form of traditional religion.
    GEOGRAPHY
    Area
    Total area:
    267,670sq km;
    Land area:
    257,670sq km;
    Coastline:
    Climate
    Tropical; always hot, humid
    Physical description
    Narrow coastal plain; hilly interior; savanna in east and south
    Physical Infrastructure
    Communication: per 1,000 inhabitants (1997)
    Daily newspapers Radio receivers Television receivers Main telephone lines
    Transportation
    The road network is poor, in part because of the difficult tropical terrain, and in part limited government support. Links with neighbouring countries are very poor. The Transgabonais railway which links the mineral-rich Franceville area and Congo (Brazzaville) has brought important economic benefits.

    77. CIB TG29: Membership (F-J)
    Assoc. Prof. Dr. fang Dong Ping. 1, Tsinghua Yuan, 1000084 Beijing, peoplesÂ’ REPUBLICOF CHINA. Fax, Email, Research Areas, Development of indigenous contracting.
    http://www.sce.ait.ac.th/cib/CIBF_J.html
    Home Introduction What's New Membership ... Home Membership F-J Assoc. Prof. Dr. Fang Dong Ping Function Member Country China PR Address Department of Civil Engineering, Tshinghua University, No. 1, Tsinghua Yuan, 1000084 Beijing, PEOPLESÂ’ REPUBLIC OF CHINA Fax E-mail fangdp@mail.tsinghua.edu.cn Research Areas Feyani Chikosa Function Member Country Malawi Address National Construction Council, Private Bag A146, Lilongwe, Malawi Fax E-mail Research Areas Development of indigenous contracting Professor Fred Hugo Function Member Country South Africa Address Department of Civil Engineering, University of Stellenbosch, Private Bag X1, Matieland 7602, SOUTH AFRICA Fax E-mail fhugo@sunvax.sun.ac.za Research Areas Prof. G. Ofori Function Coordinator Country Singapore Address Faculty of Architecture and Building, National University of Singapore Fax E-mail bemofori@nus.edu.sg Research Areas Mr Gerard de Valence Function Member Country Australia Address Faculty of Design, Architecture and Building, University of technology, Sydney, P.O. Box 123, Broadway, NSW 2007, AUSTRALIA

    78. ASIAN & TRIBAL ART LOS ANGELES (ATALA) - EVENTS PAGE
    Islands and Ancestors, indigenous Styles of The Nagas, Hill peoples of Northeast Philippines,Polynesia, New Guinea, Congo, Kuba, Zaire, fang, Chokwe, Ivory
    http://www.ata-la.com/references.htm
    ATALA - REFERENCES REFERENCE LIST Important Publications Note: This is not a complete list, but a guideline for basic research and information on the primary cultures of Asia, Africa, the Americas and Oceania. This list will be added to frequently and any suggestions of important or newly released publications not mentioned would be greatly appreciated. Following this list are several resources for finding most if not all of these publications. China, Japan, and East Asia "Shang Ritual Bronzes, in the Arthur M. Sackler Collections". Robert W. Bagley, 1987. "Western Zhou Ritual Bronzes, from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections". Jessica Rawson, 1990. "Eastern Zhou Ritual Bronzes, from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections". Jenny So, 1995. "Ancient Bronzes of the Eastern Steppes, from the Arthur M. Sackler Collections". Emma C. Bunker, 1997. "Early Wares: Prehistoric to Tenth Century (A Survey of Chinese Ceramics)". Liu Liang-yu, 1991.

    79. The Global Village
    Today Mr Low uses Dr fang's methods and has healed thousands of adults and childrenwith the scalp terchnique indigenous is used to describe Native peoples.
    http://www.mystream.com/drtomorrow/asiapacific/

    80. Weapons In Context: Extract
    of this kind had on the development of indigenous weaponry. are produced by the linguisticallyrelated peoples living in there is no evidence that fang or Kota
    http://www.era.anthropology.ac.uk/Era_Resources/Era/Pitt_Rivers/shieweap/weaobj2
    Weapons in Context
    Extract from Spring's African Weapons
    Weapons and Society
    Weapons and Warfare

    History and the 'Ethnographic Present'

    Earth and Fire: Iron Technology and the Blacksmith
    ...
    Main 'thinking about objects' page
    Introduction
    (pp 9-19; references given by Spring are fully cited in the bibliography This book is primarily intended as a celebration of African artistry and ingenuity. It also attempts to show the way in which arms and armour are incorporated into the complex material systems which express the structure of non-industrialised societies. The book takes as its subject a particular category of artefact which may not conform to Western preconceptions of what constitutes African art, but this should not be allowed to detract from our appreciation. Furthermore, the creativity which has gone into the production of African arms and armour must not be obscured by the fact that these artefacts are often used in a context which attests to man's most negative and destructive cultural proclivity. At the risk of playing devil's advocate, I believe that to underrate the significance of these artefacts within the societies which produced them would be to overlook a whole range of human endeavour and activity. Weapons and Society
    It is difficult both to detect and to analyse the concept of aesthetic appreciation in societies which do not appear to have a perception of 'art' as we in the West understand it. However, there is some evidence to suggest that there is a considerable difference between the type of object which might be considered of aesthetic significance in an African as opposed to a Western context. As Vaughan (1973) has pointed out, the Marghi of Northern Nigeria 'do not consider rock paintings or calabash decorations fitting topics for artistic activity, while they do view weapons as products which are worthy of an aesthetic appreciation'.

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