posted on 2023-11-30, 18:55authored byJoseph Ekidor Nami
Loura walks into the Morusipo hill range accompanied by two colleagues (one being Ewar Kulany, who is seeking wood to make an ekichielong stool/headrest) to find an elim tree in order to cut off a straight branch to make a spear. After finding appropriate pieces of wood, Loura burns them on a fire to dry them out, bends them to make them straighter and begins removing their bark.
Funding
Endangered Material Knowledge Programme
History
Session
C004
Rights owner
Samuel Frederick Derbyshire
Cultural group
Turkana
Participants
Loura Echuman Ekaale
Country
Kenya
Place
Morusipo, Turkana
Item/object
Spear (akwara)
Techniques of production
Burned, Bent, Cut-cut
Materials
Wood-persimmon (Diospyros scabra)
Materials alt
Elim
Cultural context/event
General production
Social group setting
Craftsperson at work alone
Location
Bush
Temporality
The construction of spears has long been an integral component of daily life in Turkana, and a skill that most adult men possess. In the deeper past, spears would have been constructed on a far more regular basis, up until the 1960s-70s most men would carry two spears on their person when moving about the landscape. In more recent years, the construction of spears has become less common in line with their declining ubiquity in everyday mundane activities (and the proliferation of semi-automatic weapons). Nevertheless, they remain integral to asapan, and a variety of other important rituals and ceremonies. The metal spear components utilised on this occasion were purchased from Lodwar and probably initially came from Samburu communities in Maralal. Far from reflecting any recent transformation in the production of spears in Turkana, this articulates a long history of trade and exchange with external, metal producing communities. Throughout history, Turkana communities have never produced metal locally, relying instead on variety of neighbouring populations for this commodity. Moreover, the purchase of spear heads and bases from Lodwar has long been a common activity, most probably dating back to Lodwar’s emergence as a regional administrative centre during the early colonial era.