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Shrines in Africa: History, Politics, and Society: Extended Description for figure 4.3

Shrines in Africa: History, Politics, and Society
Extended Description for figure 4.3
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Half Title Page
  3. Africa: Missing Voices Series
  4. Title Page
  5. Copyright Page
  6. Table of Contents
  7. Introduction
  8. 1. Pots, Stones, and Potsherds: Shrines in the Mandara Mountains (North Cameroon and Northeastern Nigeria)
  9. 2. The Archaeology of Shrines among the Tallensi of Northern Ghana: Materiality and Interpretive Relevance
  10. 3. Earth Shrines and Autochthony among the Konkomba of Northern Ghana
  11. 4. Shrines and Compound Abandonment: Ethnoarchaeological Observations in Northern Ghana
  12. 5. Constructing Ritual Protection on an Expanding Settlement Frontier: Earth Shrines in the Black Volta Region
  13. 6. Moroccan Saints’ Shrines as Systems of Distributed Knowledge
  14. Index

Extended Description for figure 4.3

Rooms located on the circumference of a circular compound starting from the north are as follows: Zong, Compound head's room, Wife's room, Kitchen, Son's room, and Granary. The bathing area is located outside the Wife's room. The Kitchen contains a grinding stone, rubber bag, and ceramic sherds. Cooking walls are located in the Wife's room and Kitchen and also in the area between them. The Animal pen lies between the Son's room and Zong. On the west of the compound lies a Granary, Trash heap, and grave.

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Shrines in Africa
© 2009 Allan Charles Dawson
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