Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dlnhk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T04:20:29.070Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Kinship Organization of the Banyankole

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 August 2012

Extract

An outstanding feature of the kinship organization of the Baniyankole is its lack of uniformity. Here we have an African tribe composed of pastoralists and agriculturalists, whose respective kinship organizations reveal marked differences, despite the fact that they have for a long time inhabited a common territory, spoken a common language, and practised many similar customs. Besides these two, so to speak, original forms there are the more recent variations due to European influences. If we are to study the family, for instance, we shall have to consider several types. There is the family of the Muhima herdsman, the family of the agricultural Mwiru of the old type, the family of the peasant who owns cattle and grows coffee, and the family of the government clerk or school teacher. Similarly, if we were to study the political organization, we should have to consider the old form of Banyankole kingship as it existed when the British took over the administration of Ankole, the outlines of which we are able to construct not only from the present form of government but also from official documents and the memories of missionaries and natives who lived at the time, and the series of changes that have taken place in this form of government. It at once becomes apparent that we are here dealing with variations and change. Differences in time and space are as much facts of the case as are the peculiarities and general features of a given item of culture. Any realistic approach to the variations and changes in the kinship organization of the Banyankole, therefore, calls not only for description but for comparison and interpretation.

Résumé

L'ORGANISATION FAMILIALE DES BANYANKOLE

Les Banyankolé de l'Ouganda sont constitués par deux groupes ethniques: les pasteurs Bahima et les agriculteurs Bairu. Les premiers sont des nègres mélangés de hamites, on les suppose venus de l'Afrique nord-orientale. Avant la domination anglaise ils formaient un groupe politique supérieur et traitaient les Bairu comme leurs serfs.

Bien que ces deux peuples aient vécu ensemble depuis longtemps, leur organisation familiale montre cependant un certain nombre de différences en ce qui touche l'étendue, la solidarité, le statut et la terminologie. De plus, les deux systèmes ont réagi différemment au contact avec les Européens.

Pour les analyser, ainsi que les changements récents qu'elles ont éprouves, on a adopté une méthode génétique qui a permis d'examiner ces relations sociales. Celles-ci sont prises en tant que modèle d'action, et envisagées comme des systèmes coopératifs ayant des fonctions définies; un tel procédé implique l'étude des conditions dans lesquelles chaque type de coopération se développe. Spécifiquement on considère que la forme de relation sociale est fonction de la situation d'où elle tire son origine.

En comparant l'organisation familiale des Bahima et des Bairu, on signale que toute relation donnée est un accommodement à un ensemble de conditions capable de tenir compte des variations. Lorsque l'intervention européenne modifie ces conditions, des changements se produisent dans l'aspect des relations envisagées.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 1938

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 I refer here to the concept of function as developed in the works of Professor Malinowski.