Walking stick; Thobane
Item
Title
Walking stick; Thobane
Creator
Unrecorded
Description
Physical Description: Wooden walking stick decorated with broad burn spiral bands covering length of the stick. This design is relatively simple to make, indicating that the stick may have belonged to a lower status individual.
Contextual Description: shepherds stick (longer for poking animals) & adolescent boys stick used in initation when graduating from herding small stock to herding cattle, 'for mock fights to proove you can handle it correctly moving from a boy to man association. Notes from Tshepo Skwambane and Neil Parsons initial visit to view objects, 2017
Publisher
Making African Connections
Date
Pre 1899
Type
PhysicalObject
Format
Whole: 1270 mm x 26 mm x 26 mm
Wood
Identifier
R4007/116
Source
Collected by Reverend William Charles Willoughby, a Christian missionary, in what was then the Bechuanaland Protectorate (1885-1966). It is now the Republic of Botswana, having gained independence from Britain in 1966.
From 1889-92 Willoughby was pastor at Union Street Church, Brighton (now The Font pub). From 1893 to 1898 he worked for the London Missionary Society in Bechuanaland. He assembled this collection of objects during this period. This was a period of social and technological changes and these objects represent traditional lifestyles and skills, rather than the contemporary lives of the people Willoughby met.
Willoughby's collection was loaned to Brighton Museum in 1899 when he returned to the UK. The loan was converted into a donation in 1936, and accessioned as acquisition R4007.
Some objects were re-numbered with the WA (World Art) numbering system in the 2000s. These numbers have been reverted to the original R4007/... numbers where possible for consistency in 2019.
From 1889-92 Willoughby was pastor at Union Street Church, Brighton (now The Font pub). From 1893 to 1898 he worked for the London Missionary Society in Bechuanaland. He assembled this collection of objects during this period. This was a period of social and technological changes and these objects represent traditional lifestyles and skills, rather than the contemporary lives of the people Willoughby met.
Willoughby's collection was loaned to Brighton Museum in 1899 when he returned to the UK. The loan was converted into a donation in 1936, and accessioned as acquisition R4007.
Some objects were re-numbered with the WA (World Art) numbering system in the 2000s. These numbers have been reverted to the original R4007/... numbers where possible for consistency in 2019.
William Charles Willoughby
Botswana, Southern Africa, Africa
1893-1898
Space/Place
Botswana, Southern Africa, Africa
Cultural Group: Tswana
Rights
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International