Elephant shot in Nuerland
 
   35 mm | Negative film Kodak Panatonic 
     
   
 
 
Same Image As: 
2004.131.71.237 
Previous PRM Number: 
WT.Southern Sudan.11.7 
 
Accession Number: 
2004.130.36099.1 
Description: 
Some of Thesiger's Nuer porters sitting on an elephant shot by Thesiger. 
Several are sitting on top of the animal's body. 
Big game hunting formed a significant element of Thesiger's activities in Western Nuerland, and he later acknowledged that it facilitated his acceptance by the Nuer, and provided nutrition for his porters, who called themselves 'Kwechuor's men' after his ox-name. 
Photographer: 
Wilfred Patrick Thesiger 
Date of Photo: 
1938 - 1939 
Region: 
[Southern Sudan]  Wahda 
Group: 
Nuer 
PRM Source: 
Wilfred Patrick Thesiger 
Acquired: 
Accepted as Art in Lieu of Inheritance Tax by H.M. Government and allocated to the Pitt Rivers Museum, March 2004 
Other Owners: 
n/a 
Class: 
Fauna , Weapon , Hunting 
Keyword: 
Animal Elephant , Spear 
Primary Documentation: 
Manual Catalogue (Thesiger album card) -  'VOL E p. 
28/Elephant shot by me.' [Elin Bornemann, 24/5/2004
 
Other Information: 
In The Life of My Choice (Harper Collins 1987) Thesiger notes (page 275) that 'Although I never succeeded in shooting an elephant in the swamps, I was more successful when they moved into open country during the rains...Each time I shot an elephant the Nuer- men, women and children - appeared in large numbers and in a few hours the enormous mass of meat was cut up and carried away...It was extraordinary to see these naked men swarming all over the carcass and even inside it, most of them covered with blood, partly from the elephant and partly from cuts on their own bodies, as they hacked and slashed with their spearheads.' Chris Morton [15/9/2004] 
Recorder: 
Elin Bornemann [11/12/2003] Christopher Morton [21/9/2004] [Southern Sudan Project] 
  

