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Bantu Folk Lore

Hewat, Matthew L.

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OBZ: African Anthropology (Anthropology)

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An edited abstract: It deals chiefly with the ideas of the South African Ka*ir tribes on the subject of magic, medicine, diseases, and initiation ceremonies. Incidentally it gives a great insight into superstition, some maladies are thought to be caused by the supernatural influence of snakes or of water monsters, half man and half animal, or by the strange bird called impundulu, which by some is thought to be the origin of lightning. Other diseases are attributed to direct poisoningthe word for poison, ubuti, being a very old Bantu root that means the essence of the tree. This is a word that in many Bantu languages means medicine quite as much as poison, all the medicines of primitive man having been derived from the bark, sap, fruit, Or leaves of trees. Some of the snakes alluded to by the author as the cause of intestinal diseases (in the native mind) are evidently distorted accounts of guinea-worm or tape-worm. Hardcover. English. T. Maskew Miller. ca 1906. ISBN: 0. 112 pp. Spine has been repaired, light foxing at front over the first few pages. Book No: 2505828