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Pitt Rivers Museum

2004.130.13267.1

View of people gathered with a large number of camels, with hills in the distance.


2004.130.13267.1

Digital asset copyright: Pitt Rivers Museum, University of Oxford

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Collection type
Photograph
Description
View of people gathered with a large number of camels, with hills in the distance.
Geographical reference
Goulimine
Cultural groups
Sahrawi
Tuareg Berber
Date / Period
Date of photograph: 1955
Acquisition information
Acceptance in Lieu: 03/2004
Dimensions
Image dimension 35 mm
Object numbers
Accession number: 2004.130.13267.1 Previous PRM number: WT.1955.29.27 Previous other number: 1955/29.27
Research and responses

Research Notes - It has been noted by Erik Jensen that Goulimine is the site a famous camel market: 'The [Western Sahara] region encompasses a vast area covering all Western Sahara (formerly Spanish Sahara), much of northern Mauritinia, a significant part of southern Morocco and a corner of south-western Algeria. The inhabitants, traditionally nomadic, moved around the largely rocky desert in search of grazing for flocks of camels and goats. In past centuries they also profited from the caravan trade carrying goods between black Africa and Moroccan centres of trade and ports. The tribes are known collectively as Sahrawi (most famous the Erguibat and Oulad Delim). They are proud of their Arab origins, some claiming descent from the prophet, and speak a form of Arabic known as Hassaniya. Both men and women wear distinctive dress. In the case of men this includes a cloak-like garment classically coloured blue. The Sahrawis are therefore widely known as 'hommes bleu'; an early independence movement took that for its name. Goulemine was, and from what I know still is, the site of a famous camel market which lies well within Sahrawi territory./ The Tuareg I know much less about. I believe they inhabit a vast area well to the east of the Sahrawis. They do not appear, from what I heard, to interact. The Tuareg are a Berber people with quite different mores and language, who only coincidentally also like blue.' (Information provided by Dr. Erik Jensen, former head of a UN peace-keeping mission in Western Sahara, June 2010.) [PG 22/06/2010]

Search terms: Animal Husbandry