The So-Called 'Galla Graves' of Northern Somaliland
The So-Called 'Galla Graves' of Northern Somaliland
The So-Called 'Galla Graves' of Northern Somaliland
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide
range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and
facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at
http://about.jstor.org/terms
Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland is collaborating with JSTOR
to digitize, preserve and extend access to Man
This content downloaded from 140.147.183.86 on Thu, 28 Sep 2017 21:10:55 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
THE SO-CALLED 'GALLA GRAVES' OF NORTHERN
SOMALILAND *
by
DR. I. M. LEWIS
Lectuirer in Social Anthropology, The University, Glasgow
This content downloaded from 140.147.183.86 on Thu, 28 Sep 2017 21:10:55 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
No. I32 MAN JUNE, I96I
~~1 -
This content downloaded from 140.147.183.86 on Thu, 28 Sep 2017 21:10:55 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
JUNE, I96I MAN No. 132
TABLE I. MEASUREMENTS OF SKELETAL REMAINS FROM SOMALILAND GRAVES COMPARED WITH THOSE OF SOMALI AND GALLA
SKELETONS
Graves Somali Galla
CRANIA Mean No. S.D. Mean No. Mean No.
Maximum length i8o07 6 77 i86.2* 5 177.4* I3
Maximum breadth I3IUI 7 4.3 I37.8 4 I34-2 I3
Frontal arc I24-I 7 6-o
Parietal arc I25-2 6 IO'2
Occipital arc II6-2 5 7.8
Frontal chord Io6'3 7 6-2
Parietal chord III.O 6 6-5
Occipital chord 95 8 5 31I
Minimumfrontal breadth 94'4 5 3.6 92-8 5 95'4 I3
Basi-bregmatic height I29-5 4 54 I35-8 5 I29-4 IO
Basi-alveolar length 98 o I 97-6 5 94'0 6
Basi-nasal length 99 5 4 5.I 99'2 5 97'3 10
Foraminal length 36 5 4 2-9 37'2 5 35'5 IO
Foraminal breadth 29-I 4 3 3 3P0* 28.7* 10
Upper facial height 72 5 2 I6-3
Nasal height 55 5 2 I7'7 48-2 5 48-2 7
Nasal breadth 25 7 2 I-5 24.8 5 25-2 7
Palatal length 43'5 2 0-7 48 5 4
Palatal breadth 36.o I 3 338 4
Cephalic index 73.I 6 2'I 73'0 I7 74.3 23
Frontal index 7I.6 5 3.6 7IP0 i6 70'5 i6
Nasal index 47 8 2 IIJ4 5019 I7 50?9 20
MANDIBLES
LONG BONES
This content downloaded from 140.147.183.86 on Thu, 28 Sep 2017 21:10:55 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms
No. I32 MAN JUNE, I96I
graves are shown in the table where they are comparedI936, pp. I2I-7.
4 Jousseaume, loc cit.
with Somali and Galla skeletal characters. Unfortunately 5 P. Azais and R. Chambard, Cinq anne'es de recherch
the information on both Somali and Galla skeletal charac- en Ethiopie, Paris, I93I.
ters is very limited2i and not even entirely satisfactory 6 Cerulli, loc. cit.
since in some cases Somali and Galla skeletons may have 7 N. Puccioni, op. cit., and personal information from Dr. G.
Benardelli.
been confused. However, on the basis of the available 8 A. T. Curle, 'Prehistoric graves in the Northern Frontier
material in only two of the measurements obtainable on Province of Kenya Colony,' MAN, 1933, 102; also personal
the remains (cranial length and foraminal breadth) do thecommunication from Dr. P. T. W. Baxter.
Galla differ significantly from the Somali. In both of these 9 Cerulli, loc. cit., p. i6i.
IO The Madanle (or Madinle) are a group traditionally allied to
the means of the graves series occupy an intermediate
the Somali Ajuuraan who occupied the area between the Shebelle
position, so that it is not possible from the available and Isha Baidoa in southern Somalia in the fifteenth century. See
evidence to decide with which of these two peoples the M. Colucci, Principi di diritto consuetudinario della Somalia Italiana
affinities of the graves series lie (see Table I). meridionale, Florence, 1924, pp. I58-6i.
In an effort to gain some idea of the age of the Gaan "I Curle, loc. cit.
12 Baxter, personal communication.
Libah burials samples of wood from the internal supports of
I3 See N. Puccioni, op. cit., p. 121; G. W. B. Huntingford, The
the two cairns were sent to the Research Laboratory at the Galla of Ethiopia, London, 955, p. 19.
British Museum for radio-carbon analysis. Only one I4 See Cerulli, loc. cit.; M. Pirone, 'Leggende e tradizioni storiche
dei
sample was tested, and for this an age of ioo+ I5o years Somali Ogaden' and 'Le popolazioni dell' Ogaden'; Archivio
per l'Antropologia e la Etnologia, Vol. LXXXIV, 1954, pp. 119-43;
was obtained. This result means that if the wooden
I. M. Lewis, 'The Galla in Northern Somaliland,' Rassegna di Studi
supports and burials are contemporaneous the Gaan Liban Etiopici, Vol. XV (I959), pp. 21-38.
graves cannot be older than 250 years. Since, moreover, I5 Puccioni, loc. cit., p. 127. See also J. D. Clark, The Prehistoric
there is no reason to suppose that there were Galla in this Cultures of the Horn of Africa, Cambridge, 1954, p. 252.
area at so late a date it seems legitimate to assume that theI6 See Lewis, loc. cit.
'7 The word talo is also applied to small piles of stones which are
skeletons are those of Somali.2Z not graves but cairns commemorating a legendary queen called
These results taken with what has been said above of Arawailo who is said to have ruled the Somali country at some
former Somali burial customs suggest that some, if not time in the unspecified past and is chiefly remembered for her
maniy, of the Series A cairns in Northern Somaliland are efforts to exterminate the male population by ordering the castration
of all male infants. Such Arawailo cairns are sometimes seen at the
comparatively recent and contain Somali remains. If this
side of a road or track, especially in the east of the Protectorate, but
is generally the case the term 'Galla graves' is a misnomer. this belief and the custom of erecting cairns in memory of Arawailo
This is not of course to suggest that all the small tumuli seems to be dying out today. Cf. R. E. Drake-Brockman, British
are of precisely the same period, or that those of other Somaliland, London, 1912, pp. I69-72.
I8 This belief may be connected with the common view in
Somali areas will yield similar results. What is now re-
Northern Somaliland, that Friday is the day of repetition. A gift
quired is a more extensive examination of these burials and received on a Friday indicates that more may be received: but a loss
a systematic investigation of the larger Series B mounds, suffered on a Friday is likely to lead to further losses.
which may well be considerably older. I9 Cf. Drake-Brockman, op. cit., pp. 172-4.
20 G. M. Morant, 'A Biometric Study of the Human Mandible,'
Biometrika, Vol. XXVIII, 1936, p. 84; A. H. Munter, 'A Study of
Notes the Lengths of the Long Bones,' Biometrika, Vol. XXVIII, 1936,
p. 258; J. C. Trevor, 'Anthropometry,' in Chambers's Encyclopcedia,
I See Speke's diary in R. F. Burton, First Footsteps in East Africa, 1950 edition.
Everyman edition, London, 1943, p. 3 15; F.Jousseaume, 'Reflexions 21 P. Lester, 'Etude anthropologique des populations de
anthropologiques 'a propos des tumules et silex tailles des ,omalis l'Fthiopie,' L'Anthropologie, Vol. XXXVIII, 1928, pp. 289ff.;
et des Danakils,' L'Anthropologie, Vol. VI, 1895, pp. 393-413. 'Contribution 'a l'anthropologie des Somalis,' Bull. Me'm. Soc. Anth.
2This paper is based on research carried out in the Somalilands Paris, Vol. VIII, 1927, pp. 175ff.
between 1955 and 1957 under the auspices of the Colonial Social 22 See Lewis, loc. cit.
io6
This content downloaded from 140.147.183.86 on Thu, 28 Sep 2017 21:10:55 UTC
All use subject to http://about.jstor.org/terms