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Pitt Rivers Museum

1903.39.15.2

Waist girdle of multiple strings. [El.B 'DCF 2004-2006 What's Upstairs?' 10/2/2006]


1903.39.15.2

Digital asset copyright: Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford

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Collection type
Object
Description
Waist girdle of multiple strings. [El.B 'DCF 2004-2006 What's Upstairs?' 10/2/2006]
Long description
Waist girdle of multiple strings. From conservation card by Emma Hook 07.10.1996: Strings made from twisted plant fibre. Pigmented with loose pigment of red colour - haematite? Bundle of strings are tied in two points, with the same string and hair. [FC 31/03/2009]
Geographical reference
Northern Territory Gulf of Carpentaria Mcarthur River Borroloola
Cultural groups
Yanyuwa
Marra
Person
Field collector Francis James Gillen
Field collector Walter Baldwin Spencer
PRM source Walter Baldwin Spencer
Date / Period
Date made: Before 1902
Date collected
1901 - 1902
Acquisition information
Donated: 1903
Materials and processes
Material Plant Fibre, Material Pigment, Material Hair, Process Twisted, Process Stained
Dimensions
Length: max 300 mm doubled
Object numbers
Accession number: 1903.39.15.2 Other numbers: Spencer number 12
Research and responses

Borroloola is where the Spencer and Gillen expedition was 'marooned' during the 'Wet'. Originally the expedition had planned either to go overland to Queensland or to Darwin but a decision was taken to go to Borroloola but the expected boat to take them to Darwin did not arrive and Spencer and Gillen stayed there for some time before they were 'rescued' by a boat sent at the request of Mrs Spencer. see Mulvaney 'So much that is New' 1985: 212-213. During their stay in Borroloola they carried out some fieldwork (and collecting). See also 'Camp Jottings .. ' by FJ Gillen 1968 South Australian Libraries Board [AP]

This object was collected during an expedition of Central Australia led by Walter Baldwin Spencer and Francis Gillen between 1901 and 1902. However, it should be noted that accompanying them was an Aboriginal man called Erlikilyika. He was 'hired' (receiving no monetary payment) to run their campsites, but actually undertook some of the ethnographic work himself. He could speak Arrernte (his native language), Kaytej (another Aboriginal language), and English. In their personal field-diaries, Spencer and Gillen note that they took days off work, leaving Erlikilyika with "entire charge of the ethnological branch", where he spoke with and recorded the complex beliefs and customs of Aboriginal communities that were not his own (the Kaytetye group in particular). Unfortunately, there is no way of knowing if Erlikilyika collected any of these objects himself but we know that he played a vital role in documenting their meaning and significance, and should therefore be credited for his valuable contributions to the expedition. This information was provided by Fionnuala Bradbury, a Master's student in Archaeology at Newcastle University, as part of her thesis entitled "Erlikilyika and Walter Baldwin Spencer: Indigenous Informants, Ethnographic Analogy, and Archaeological Interpretation". There is an abridged version of the thesis in RDF.

Associated publications
S&G 1904: 685 - 6 'Every man wears a waist-girdle. ... In the Warramunga, northern and coastal tribes human hair string girdles are frequently met with, but they also employ vegetable fibre for the purpose. [AP 13/1/2000]

Search terms: Clothing, Ornament, Belt, Waist Ornament