Bongo rain and hunting medicine posts
 
   103 x 75 mm | Print gelatin silver 
     
   
 
 There are records relating to alternative images that we do not have scans for in the database: 
1998.343.32.1 - Negative film nitrate , (103 x 75 mm)
1998.343.32.1 - Negative film nitrate , (103 x 75 mm)
Date of Print: 
Unknown 
Previous PRM Number: 
EP.B.36 
Previous Other Number: 
29 [frame 3] 
 
Accession Number: 
1998.343.32.2 
Description: 
A long wooden rain-post (riyak) stuck into the ground with a shorter notched post (lingi) for hunting-magic offerings, usually fowl sacrifice. 
During drought the rain-post was the focus for rain-making rituals involving the sprinkling of durra (Sorghum bicolor) over an assembled crowd by a rain-maker (biriak). 
Photographer: 
Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard 
Date of Photo: 
1929 March 
Region: 
[Southern Sudan]  Warab/El Buheyrat  Tonj-Rumbek Road 
Group: 
Bongo 
Publication History: 
Contemporary Publication - A heavily cropped version is reproduced as Plate II (facing page 26) in E. 
E. 
Evans-Pritchard's "The Bongo" (Sudan Notes and Records Vol.XII Part I 1929) with the caption 'Riyak rain-post with Lingi notched stake at its base.' [Chris Morton 16/1/2004] 
PRM Source: 
Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard 
Acquired: 
Donated 1966 
Other Owners: 
E. E. Evans-Pritchard Collection 
Class: 
Ritual , Ritual Object 
Keyword: 
Public Space , Shrine 
Primary Documentation: 
PRM Accession Records - Accession Book Entry [p. 
98] 1966.27 [1 - 24] G[ift] PROFESSOR E. 
E. 
EVANS-PRITCHARD; INST. 
OF SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY, 51 BANBURY RD. 
OXFORD - 1966.27.19 - S. 
SUDAN, DARFUNG. 
VARIOUS TRIBES. 
Box of negatives in envelopes, [1 - 242] & 1966.27.20  - Box of prints of these negatives [refers to object 1966.27.19] [1 - 242], in envelopes.
Notes on print/mount - "29"
Notes on print/mount - "29"
Other Information: 
Ethnographic context - In "The Bongo" (Sudan Notes and Records Vol.XII Part I 1929 page 27) E. 
E. 
Evans-Pritchard notes that 'there is another of these posts, with a medicine post, called lingi, placed under it, on the Tonj-Rumbek road.' On page 43 he also notes that 'the traditional hunting medicine of the Bongo is lingi. 
This consists of two or three little carved posts about a foot or eighteen inches high, which are driven into the earth near the entrance to a hut... 
The hunter takes a hen and cuts its throat over these posts, and willspeak to the spirits as he does so, saying: "Give me animals, let my crops succeed," and so on. 
He throws the head of the hen into the bush and eats its body.' [Chris Morton 16/1/2004] 
Recorder: 
Christopher Morton 16/1/2004 [Southern Sudan Project] 
  

