John Roscoe (1861 1932) was an ordained Christian missionary who was elected a Fellow of the Royal Anthropological Society in 1912 for his contributions to the ethnographic record of Uganda. John Roscoe joined the Uganda mission in 1891 and upon returning to England in 1909 he began to publish the results of his investigations into the lives of the indigenous people in Uganda. This edition contains an ethnographic survey of six different indigenous Bantu speaking groups living near Lake Victoria, and was first published as part of the Cambridge Archaeological and Ethnological Series in 1912....
John Roscoe (1861 1932) was an ordained Christian missionary who was elected a Fellow of the Royal Anthropological Society in 1912 for his contributio...
Missionary and amateur anthropologist John Roscoe (1861 1932) published this account of the Baganda tribe of Buganda in 1911, to preserve a record of a sophisticated people before their cultural traditions were undermined as their territory became part of the British Protectorate of Uganda. He had spent twenty-five years in Africa, during which he interviewed the people in their own languages about their customs and religious beliefs. The Baganda is a straightforward survey of a traditionally organised way of life. Birth, upbringing, marriage, death and burial, clans, kings, government,...
Missionary and amateur anthropologist John Roscoe (1861 1932) published this account of the Baganda tribe of Buganda in 1911, to preserve a record of ...