Traditional Architecture in Vanuatu.
Transcription
Traditional Architecture in Vanuatu.
ARCHITECTURE IN VANUATU RSr** A MSMm VaCZ',' / :,.' 9rF' J'Âà Traditional Architecture in Vanuatu Traditional Architecture in Vanuatu Christian Coiffier University of the South Pacific 1988 Copyright s Christian Coiffier 1988 ISBN 982-02-0047-4 Published by the Institute of Pacific Studies and the Vanuatu Extension Centre of the University of the South Pacific No royalties are paid on this book. Translation by Veronica Arjun, Pat Hereniko Graphics by the author Photographs by courtesy of the Museum fur Volkerkunde, Basel, Switzerland Typeset by City Typesetters, Suva Text set in Megaron 10/1 Vk Printed by Star Printery Ltd., Suva. Map of Vanuatu vii Acknowledgements viii Introduction ix 1 ISLANDS OF THE EXTREME NORTH Torres archipelago Banks archipelago Ureparapara Vanua-Lava Ravena and Mota Motlav Gaua Merlav 1 1 5 7 9 14 14 19 23 2 25 25 28 33 44 47 ISLANDS OF THE NORTH Maewo Ambae Santo Malo Pentecost 3. ISLANDS OF THE CENTRE Ambrym The drums of Ambrym Malakula The great slit drums of Malakula (Big Nambas region) Vao The drum orchestra of Vao Atchin, Wala, Rano and Uripiv The mall Nambas of southern Malakula South West Bay region Tomman 63 63 74 78 89 97 103 103 104 110 116 Paama, Lopevi and Epi Shepherd archipelago Emae, Makira and Mataso Tongariki Buninga and Ewose Tongoa Efate 121 124 124 126 129 129 135 4 ISLANDS OF THE SOUTH The Tafea Group Erromango Tanna Aniwa and Futuna Anatom 141 141 141 142 149 151 5. CONCLUSION 152 Appendix A 156 Appendix B 158 Appendix C 159 Notes 161 Bibliography 167 Table of illustrations 173 Index 181 l66' its" T orres i;o" arci -IIPELAGO \ % ♦ BAt IKS ARCHIPELAGO » SantoBfc ^ Maewo Aoba * w Malo Malakula^^^ ^ Ef ^ J Pentecost Ambrym Paama » * Lopevi i y. ’* SHEPHERD ARC'H! PEL AGO » , Efate Erromango . Ar Fw Tanna Anatom V Futuna I express my sincere thanks to the many people who facilitated my research at the time of my stay in Vanuatu during November and December 1979; first and foremost to the Ni-Vanuatu residents of various villages on Santo, Malakula, Vao, Efate and Tanna who kindly gave their time to answering my questions, as did also R. Elziére, the Michoutouchkine-Pilioko Foundation staff, P. Gardissat, R. Gely, H. Goron, K. Huffman, T. Kalsrap and H. Tailhade. My thanks go equally to K. Henker for translating the text into the German language, and to V. Arjun for the translation into the English language. Introduction This introduction to the traditional architecture of Vanuatu is aimed particularly at young people — at those of the younger generation who will have to take the responsibility for choosing between different ways of development in the different regions of the archipelago. We hope that the text, photographs and drawings will help them to have a better understanding of the diversity of the technological aspects chosen by their forefathers. As in the majority of cultures in the world, these men, throughout the centuries, have evolved new techniques and tried out different materials in order to improve their standard of living. They knew how to create a social environment more or less in accord with the natural environment but the modernism imported during recent decades has often disrupted this equilibrium. The innovations which have come from the West are often now used as a model, without having been sufficiently adapted to each local situation. And it is rare that account is taken of errors committed previously in or by the West. It is common in the Pacific to compare tradition (custom) with modern ways. But what does custom in Vanuatu represent? A building is said to be ‘traditional’ when its design reflects knowledge exclusive to a local culture and when the economic relationships formed by the need for materials remain within one area. As in other Pacific islands, village architecture in Vanuatu has undergone great changes in the last century, both in the spatial organisation of the different buildings and in the designs, techniques of construction and use of materials. This study does not cover the urban areas of Luganville on the island of Espiritu Santo, or Port-Vila on the island of Efaté. The variety in the types of dwellings, which used to reflect the different origins of the inhabitants of the numerous islands of the country, is disappearing with the growth of a general standardisation. Colonisation and the introduction of Christianity have brought new types of design which reflect a different style of life. In Vanuatu, as in the majority of Melanesian islands, the social organisation used to revolve around small autonomous family groups, who had different relationships with their neighbours near and far. Some of these groups specialised in different aspects of construction. So each hamlet displayed local variations which reflected either the geographical location of the site, or the past history of the group concerned. Occasionally, to fix important historical moments in the peoples’ memories, the elders marked out their territory with durable objects — carved stones, different plants, etc. This remains the evidence of a past which we still have to discover by studying both myths and archaeology. 1 Because local tradition was not written down before the 19th century, we are left, while waiting for the findings of archaeological research, with only the writings and drawings of the first European navigators to tell us more about the old styles of architecture. The study of the artefacts held in museums in the West could assist the historical research into dwellings, but this study must be undertaken in conjunction with the collection of information at the site, as soon as possible, before the demise of those who have that information. We now know that certain drawings and sculptures, which were thought to be decorative and ornamental, had, in fact, a significant function in matters of hierarchy and family. Analysis of architectural styles and old tools used for con struction should allow a better understanding of construction tech niques. But the wide dispersal of the collections and the confusion of classification increase the problems of research. Among the thousands of varied objects of uncertain origin scattered in museums in big cities throughout the world, many of the descriptions are whimsical. The ‘hut poles’ (bird-like roof timber), 'carved poles’, ‘slit drums standing or lying’, ‘grade sculptures', ‘megaliths’, etc. are part of one and the same architectural entity which it is now difficult to piece together. Too often, sale to travellers and collectors has divided objects from the same ceremonial house between the four corners of the world, which makes a detailed study of the ancient cultural sites of the country very difficult. The earliest information we have about the style of living in Vanuatu comes from the journals of the first European sailors, but these are often very fragmented. You have to wait until the beginning of the 20th century before finding relatively precise descriptions and photographs. James Cook wrote about his landing at Port Sandwich, south west Malakula on 21st July 1774: “At the edge of the wood there were several houses and plantations.... These houses resembled those of other islands, they were rather low, and covered with palm-thatch. Some were walled round by boards and the entrance to these was by it a square hole at one end, which at this time was shut up, and they were unwillingly to open it to let us look inside. There were about six houses and some small plantations of root-crops, protected by reed fences as on the Friendly Islands A good many fine yams were piled up upon sticks or a kind of raised platform ” 2 Bougainville notes in his diary, on 23rd May 1768, a landing on Leper island: 3 "One comes across many tracks cut through the bush and open spaces enclosed by stakes 3 feet high. Are these entrench ments, or simply the limits of different territories? We have not seen any dwellings apart from 5 or 6 little huts which could only be entered by sliding on one’s belly.... On many occasions we heard the harsh noise of a type of drum coming from the depths of the bush near the top of the mountain."' 1 These two accounts must be looked at in the context of the time when they were written, but they nevertheless give us a description of village life which is not too different from that which was known in many regions of the country at the beginning of the 19th century. Contact with European travellers greatly affected the traditional dwellings with the introduction of new materials (nails, iron), new tools (metal axes) and new techniques (carpentry, influenced by boat builders). But the diseases imported by these travellers caused serious epidemics which considerably reduced the population in the 19th century. In Vanuatu, there are two distinct types of social structure, which means that the organisation of the villages is very different. In the south, there is a system of hereditary titles and chiefdoms, and in the north grade hierarchies. From the geographical point of view, there is no great difference between the islands of the north and south, even though they are spread over 700 km. The climate variations are slight, but there are noticeable differences in the botanical heritage of each island. Only Malakula and Santo are sufficiently large and mountainous to have varied climatic zones. Here, there is a noticeable difference between the coastal villages, whose economy is based on coconuts and those of the mountain bush whose economy is based exclusively on clearing and cultivating the land. 5 Vanuatu is situated along an active volcanic line which causes frequent earthquakes, and, in addition, the country lies in the path of tropical cyclones which regularly devastate certain islands. These two phenomena become dominant factors when one looks at the problems of architecture in the country. There are two main urban centres in Vanuatu: Port-Vila (the capital) on the island of Efaté, and Luganville on the island of Espiritu Santo. In the majority of the large islands, there are some big villages which have grown, as people have moved from previously dispersed hamlets. The word ‘village' is hardly appropriate to describe the few houses grouped around the two most important places: the dance area — nasara — often filled with drums: ating ating and the large men’s meeting-house — the nakamat. This general arrangement can have numerous different variations, for instance, the most important building in a hamlet may be the house of a man of high rank. In fact, the spatial organisation reflects the separation of the sexes and the local social hierarchy. The population of hamlets is usually quite low, that is, about a few dozen people. Groups of houses sometimes stand on stone platforms amid sacred plants (crotons, cordylines and dracaenas). Hamlets are surrounded by gardens and fenced in to keep out the pigs and prevent them from destroying the plantations. Most buildings in Vanuatu are built at ground level 6 and are quite low which means a considerable reduction in interior vertical space. The interior is sometimes subdivided by wooden partitions to separate the sexes (West Santo, Vao, Aoba) 7 or the family from outsiders. When there are no partitions, hearths demarcate the different areas for each person. Ground floors are usually rectangular in shape (at least twice as long as they are wide) sometimes with circular gables (Santo, Malekula, Shepherd). From three to five rows of lengthwise posts usually make up the framework. The roofing has two parts sloping down to the ground. The gables are often closed, having only one or two doors. Building Materials Speiser maintains 8 that caves did not serve as permanent housing but only as a refuge in time of war or for travellers in search of shelter. On the other hand, in Vao there were dwellings built in the shelter of rocks. But coral or volcanic stone was often used to enclose family (Vao, Atchin) or funeral areas (Aoba) or to build platforms where wooden structures were erected. On Vanua-Lava certain houses had proper sub-foundation walls of stone. On numerous islands monoliths, menhirs and stone tables mark former cultural and funeral sites. Thus the place is dotted with lithic remains of ancient or recent settlements — leaving a bright future for archaeological research in this country. 9 Vegetable fibres make up the most commonly used building materials in Vanuatu which is not surprising in this land of great forests. A great deal of vegetable matter is used; various woods for making framework posts, bamboo being the preferred material for roofs — the most important part of a house in the tropics — for the first function of roofing is that of a very large umbrella! Leaves from the sago palm (especially in the northern part of the archipelago), coconut palm, pandanus and sugar-cane, fashioned into compact tiles are placed one over the other to give an even surface over which rainwater can easily flow. Smoke from permanently burning fires inside these buildings permeates the roofing and dries it out. It coats the loft and hardens the wood so preventing vermin from getting into the thatch. The role of smoke is therefore of primary importance to the efficient weather ing of the house. On the other hand, the smoke-filled atmosphere that characterises some houses is not very healthy for the respiratory tracts of their occupants, except where adequate and permanent ventilation exists. Hence the importance of the positioning of buildings and the location of villages, having regard to the prevailing winds, the sea, or the altitude of a site (on a mountain or in a valley). From a scientific analysis of each type of habitation, conclusions can be drawn about their strengths and weaknesses. Comparison of the various designs of the different types of dwellings in neigh bouring communities will pinpoint the diverse solutions that have been found by each community to overcome identical problems. Taking into account various guidelines, it is sometimes possible to remedy certain defects without entirely destroying the general effect. Building In Vanuatu, the building of a house, whether for family or community, is a communal effort requiring the agreement of the whole or part of the village community. Work is divided up according to sex, age, and social standing. Each type of building corresponds to particular skills and a new building means a particularly big effort on the part of the community. In conclusion, we would say that there are four distinct types of habitation in the Vanuatu Archipelago. The Northern Islands type (Torres, Banks, Aoba, Vao) The Central " ” (Santo, Malakula, Ambrym, Pentecost) The Southern ” " (Polynesian influence) Combination types (combinations of the three previous types, often with various influences during the last 50 years). 10 We shall study them one by one, island by island, without however being in a position to deal with the different dwellings of the Archipelago in their entirety. That would be a considerable task quite outside the scope of this document. We shall however quote long passages and extracts from articles or from old books. We have chosen to reproduce them in their entirety rather than summarize them, for the interest of these texts lies mainly in the wealth of significant detail they give about a way of life in a now almost bygone era. In quotations from various authors, we have retained their way of spelling indigenous words. Islands of the Extreme North The Torres Islands (after Luis Vaez de Torres, a companion of Quieros) This group is made up of five islands (Hiu, Metorna, Tehua, Lo Toga), one of which is uninhabited (Metorna). Their 325 inhabitants live on 98 sq. km. of the settled volcanic terrain. Over 500 km. from the capital, this archipelago still remains isolated because of lack of communications. Christianity, which deeply affected family life, also changed the traditional organisation of the villages. Father W J Durand who lived on Torres Island at the beginning of this century, had this to say' 1: Villages were formerly triangular in shape, the gemel or men's club house making up the apex, the women’s and children's house, the n'ema, being along the base, the space between being the dancing area. Family homes were placed closely side by side and overlooked the dance area. The Torres houses were fairly similar to those of the Banks Islands, the latter being of a rather superior design. The pillars were made up of two main posts at either end, which supported the roofing beam, with one or two intermediary posts inside the house. Shorter posts on the sides supported the stringpiece beams on which the base of the rafters rested. The ridge-pole and the string-pieces were made of long narrow banyan roots, and the rafters from tree trunks — the narrow part making up the roof edging. Trunks used for posts were placed upright. Four or five bamboos were placed horizontally over the rafters on either side of the ridge-pole. Overhead, small rafters of very solid wood were tied to the ridge-pole at their thinnest end. Each part of the roofing frames was tied together with strips of bark prepared by the women. Thatch was made from the leaves of the smallest of the sago-palms, their foliage being folded on a reed and pinned together to form tiles. These tiles were prepared and left to dry in piles. Scaffolding was erected inside the house. HIOU Gavigamana TEGOUA 9 Lounaragi LINOUA LO Kourouretapo TOGA Map of the Torres Archipelago (from map I.G.N. 1976 1/500 000). The men would bind the tiles to the rafters from the base upwards. The ridge was the weakest point in the Torres Island dwellings because it was covered only with sheafs of wide grass placed on a bamboo frame horizontally cut and kept in place by heavy branches. Once the roof was complete the walls would be made. These were of split bamboo fixed crosswise on to slim stakes. A low, narrow door was to be found at each end of the house and in front of the house there would often be an enclosure of rough pillars to prevent pigs from entering. The owner would provide two feasts during construction. On completion of the thatching he would give the workmen yams in coconut milk. Before putting up the walls the future tenants would bring young coconuts and eat them inside the unfinished building. The most important festivities, however, were held when the house was finished. The hearths were surrounded by stones and the men of the family would sleep in the new house. The following day yam pounded into a paste called togov was prepared; that day was known as kwon togtogov. The whole family, both men and women, could then sleep in their new home. A week after kwon togtogov fish would be caught, brought to the village and eaten. Compared with dwelling houses the gemel was the most important place in the village. If there was a large male population in the village there could be two gemels built side by side. A gemel was very similar in appearance to a home, but much longer and open only in front. In Loh a gemel would have two doors, with a raised threshold to keep out the pigs, and sometimes a low fence similar to those in front of family homes. The left-hand door was made for entering and leaving by, whereas the one on the right was reserved for ceremonies — such as a body being brought in to its final resting place. Water for making kava was also brought in through this door. In the village of Hiu the gemel had only one door and the men were most careful not to sit on the doorstep for it was here that a corpse would be placed during funeral rites. The walls of the gemel were made of undressed planks, and the gables of split bamboo, some of which were cut into various patterns, pointed or crescent-shaped, each of these shapes having a meaning linked to the spirits and were therefore sacred. Inside the gemel the earth was dug out below the level of the ground. The trenches thus made proved very useful when the village was attacked. The interior set-up was connected with the organis ation of Hukwa society, similar to that of the Suoue people of the Banks Islands and comprised the whole of the adult male population. The floor was divided into several compartments by bamboos (pitlit) placed horizontally along the ground. Each compartment belonged area for men of normal entrance inferior rank area for men of high rank skulls of the ancestors lower enclosure (see Fig. 101) ceremonial entrance fireplaces bamboo containing water for the Kava Fig. 2 Plan of the interior of a Torres Islands gemel Fig. 3 Family dwellings in the village of Vipaka, Torres, 1906 (from a photo by Beattie, in Vanuatu, 1980, Institute of Pacific Studies, pp. 38-9). to one of the social strata. The one belonging to the lowest rank was near the outside. If a man was too poor to buy himself even the lowest rank he was given a place beside the door. At the other end of the gemel, after the place reserved for those of high rank, were placed the skulls of those men who, during their lifetime, had attained the highest grade and who, by their death, had attained the ultimate degree. As well as these crosswise divisions in the gemel, there was an alley going from one end to the other, made by the two parallel lines of the great bamboo reservoirs containing water to be used for making kava. Each one rested on a fork-shaped base, the side with the opening leading towards the interior (towards the ancestors). Each compartment had one or two hearths (holes surrounded by stones) on which the men cooked their food. There were also bamboo shelves suspended two metres above the ground on which the occupants put their arms or tools. Other objects were hung on the framework of the building, or placed inside the thatch. Above the sleeping places could be seen a stripped stick of over a metre long, notched at regular intervals. Every tenth notch was longer than the others which allowed the dates of funeral feasts to be worked out. On the small rafters just below the ridge-pole there were usually a few sticks, two or three metres long, burnt and blackened by smoke: these were the records of the longest yams which were kept in this way for friendly rivalry. In front of the door of the gemel there was a drum called chinchin which was beaten with the fists. It was sounded at the times of festivities connected with the Hugwa society. F. Speiser gives us only a little information about the Torres Islands. He cites Coote: 12 The houses are simply semicircular arches, built upon the ground. Speiser also cites Coombe13 on the subject of both a photograph of a house on the island of Tegua and a description very similar to that by W.J. Durrad.’ 4 The Banks Islands (named after Joseph Banks) These are made up of six main islands and a dozen smaller islands and islets covering 722 sq. km. (Ureparapara, Motlav, Vanualava, Mota, Santa-Maria and Merlav). With the exception of the coral reefs of Rowa, these elevated islands are volcanic. They have a scattered population of about 5000 (1979) deriving their living from the cultivation of taro, yams, Lehali Leqaranle PARAPARA Lealrop ■st, t MOT LA V Tog lag Qeremadgei<>5^vai,.w;, GnerenigmenvVar Ra Qanlap “RAVEN A Lotawan VereraoTuqetap s ° la Tasmate^^.Navqoe ^ Vatrata Levetiboso Wasaka - losina MOTA ______ Uwotqe PAKE A erepeta VANUALAVA Masol Limbot Tarasag Pitikabilendrome ^ Onétar Tolab ?SANTA MARIA Lēvolvo1 ' MERIG Makéon Deuriv Lekwel Tasmat^^ Auta MERLAV Fig. 4 Map of the Banks Archipelago (from map I.G.N. 1976 1/500 000). bananas, and breadfruit, together with the rearing of pigs and fishing. The economy of the remainder of the country depends on the sale of copra, but each island has a special reputation for the production of certain things'5 . Housing has greatly changed since the beginning of the century but unfortunately there are only a few old photographs in existence to allow a more detailed study. However, the architecture of this part of Vanuatu was by far the most interesting in the region, combining mineral and vegetable matter in their building materials. Stone was used to build proper walls, 16 using very varied methods of con struction and, within the local ecosystem, very ingenious in concept. This contradicts Codrington’s statement: "The typical Melanesian house requires very little description: a roof of bamboo bent over a ridge-pole, which is supported by two main posts, very low side walls, and the ends filled in with bamboo screens." 17 We shall therefore study the housing of each of these islands and identify the characteristics of each one. The Island of Ureparapara The most northerly of the Banks Islands is formed by cone with a subsided and partly sunken crater, and is full Covering an area of 36 sq. km. it has a population of 236 the three villages of Lehali, Leqaranle and Lehalrop. The has decreased since the arrival of the Europeans: a volcanic of ravines. comprising population Originally the men’s club-houses were scattered along the whole length of the coast and on higher ground than today A popu lation of about 500 people, spread over a dozen gemel would appear to be a realistic estimate and an acceptable picture of the traditional situation. Today people live mainly on the coast, villages are to be found on the coastal hillsides at an altitude of between two and fifteen metres.'8 Codrington has it that custom dictated that three or four families would occupy a single house. A few years later Speiser clearly states: “In Ureparapara there are curved houses on stone bases as in VanuaLava. They are at least 10 metres by 4 metres and 3 metres high. They rest on three rows of posts, one in the middle and two on either side. A rounded door of plaited bamboo opens out on the gable end. The homes of men of rank are smaller and built on lower bases than the ordinary houses. But these different buildings may be found on sites very close together.” On one of Speiser’s plans one can make out two gemels side by side facing the dance square which is surrounded by family homes Fig. 5. Family houses at Ureparapara. Fig. 6. Diagrammatic representation of roof construction of a sleeping house. ^ Fig. 7 Another type of dwelling at Ureparapara. m&3B> a T&V* is * ■I - y■ L1 Fig. 8. Plan of a village on Ureparapara. gamal facing two ‘privileged’ directions — either in the same direction as the gemels (for eight of them) or straight opposite (for the other nine). These family homes had either a cradle-shaped or a half barrelled shaped roof, sometimes similar to certain types of Polynesian houses.19 The Island of Vanua-Lava The establishment of traditional habitations was for the most part closely linked to the contours of the land and the quality of the soil. Spread right around the island the preferred sites for the villages were the plateaux and the low slopes. Because of the heavy rainfall and poor soil of the higher altitudes, the people who left the low-lying coastal marshes had to settle on slopes or terraces at an altitude of between 50 and 400 metres. All traditions, related by word of mouth about the origin of Banks Island culture, are centred in the island of Vanua-Lava. It is the largest island in the Banks Archipelago (342 sq. km.) with a population of over 900 (1979) divided up into six large villages: Vatrata, Levetiboso, Wasaga, Mosina, Quanlap and Kerepeta, a great number of whose inhabitants have emigrated to the island of Santo and who now live in the Mango quarter of Luganville. Formerly houses were built on stone terraces. Ravenga in VanuaLava is situated on a ten metre high embarkment.20 "Huts, of a low and mean appearance, are thatched with wild sugar-cane and banana leaves and have extremely small entrances... large building, the club house, 73 ft. in length by ten ft. in width, divided into seven compartments.21 Speiser’s photographs show us two of the men’s meeting-houses with posts carved in very different ways but showing the same concept of framework. If we compare Speiser’s plans with those of Vienne we see that the family homes on the old plan appear relatively close together around the two gamals situated in the centre of stone platforms. Most of these houses are parallel with the gamal. In a recent plan, the middle of the village is taken up by a gamal, a church (placed at the perpendicular to this gamal) and the cooperative. As in Speiser’s plan, the family houses are spread all around. They are more numerous and farther away but have the same layout, with most of the buildings placed parallel to the gamal. Each dwelling now has its kitchen situated at the back towards the bush and on the women’s side. Fig. 9 View of Mota (from R.H. Codrington, 1972, p. 15). Fig. 10 Cross-section and plan of a house with stone foundation. Fig. 11 Statue or post indicating rank, Vanua Lava (from F. Speiser, 1923, pi. 100) (3). Fig. 12 House of a man of high rank (from F. Speiser, 1923, pi. 17 (4)). I Fig. 13 Men’s house with stone wall (from F. Speiser, 1923, pi. 104 (5)). Fig. 14 House built on a lava-block foundation, Vanua-Lava (from E. Aubert de la Rue) 2" Fig. 15 Interior of a men's house, Vanua-Lava, showing area reserved for men of high rank (from F. Speiser, 1923, pi. 18 (5)). lf% a. old men's houses b house of man of high rank &$> Fig. 16 Plan of a village, Vanua-Lava (from F. Speiser, 1923, pl. II (2)). I is 11 1 1 1 E3 sa Ē3 0 m cooperative EE3 EH % EE m S game/ jjjS church m EE EH @ sl E.w'd can ££3 ^ % 01 iKvÜij family house ffli kitchen Fig. 17 Simplified plan of a present-day village, Vanua-Lava (from B. Vienne, 1984, p. 141). The islet of Ravena This islet is situated on the east coast of Vanua-Lava opposite Qanlap. “Formerly, Ravena was populated and had close relations with the Motlav district.” 25 The Island of Mota (Sugarloaf Island) This circular island has the appearance of a hat. It is formed from a volcanic cone surrounded by raised coral reefs. Coconut plantations and subsistence crops are of great importance on Mota. The population lives on the elevated reef platform and the villages and hamlets are distributed all around the island. It is interesting to note that housing on Mota has kept to its original pre-European locality which becomes apparent when one compares the map of the district of Mota drawn by Codrington in 1891 with one giving the present day positions of the villages. However, the survey has established that main village sites change approximately every 30-40 years because of the subsidence of the land and allied phenomena caused by prolonged inhabitation. At present the island has a population of over 400 inhabitants (1979) in a total area of 9.5 sq. km. Housing is very similar to that of the neighbouring islands of Vanua-Lava and Motlav. There are three villages on Mota — St Andrew, St Mathew and St Paul. The Island of Motlav (Motalava) (formerly known as Valu or Ile de la Salle) The island covers 35.1 sq. km. with over 1000 inhabitants (1979). “On Motlav, land occupation was directly affected by its contours and the fertility of the soil, and evidence of the return of inhabitants to their former dwelling places bears out this theory. Originally, villages were scattered right around the island and on its coastline as well as on the islet of Rah. Nowadays the position is very different and the whole of the Motlav population, with the exception of the small village of Valuwa, is concentrated in five large villages surrounded by a few satellite hamlets," 25 Gerenigmen, Var, Taglag, Qeremagda and Rah. In 1924 Speiser wrote: Vanua Lava, Mota lava and Mota form a cultural region. Different villages are fairly similar and established on the coasts as in Gaua. Walls surround villages and fields. At the side of the small dance square stand the men's houses which always appear to be in use. Opposite, on the other side of the dance square, is the chief's house and at its side and behind it houses spread out in a haphazard fashion^6 On Mota and Motalava dwellings were the same size as those of Vanua Lava.27 Description of a village (vanua) The layout of houses (ima or neum in Motlav) in relationship to the gamal (negamelon Motlav) and its dance square (tine sava or napmo lak/ak) is fairly loose, forming a compact village or a central nucleus surrounded by satellite hamlets. Villages are often establish ed on gentle slopes, allowing water to run away and avoiding too much subsidence. The gamal is always situated on top of a slope. Villages were sometimes surrounded by a small wall or fence — the enclosure is still visible on the Telmitig site. If the village {vanua) surrounded by gardens is opposite the forest (mat) the gamal, the men’s public club house and seat of the suqe, (hierarchy of ranks) erect a small construction in a cleared part of the forest, the salagoro. Like the gamal, this is forbidden to women and the uninitiated, and serves as a meeting place and for the ceremonial preparation of the initiated for the tamate rites. Certain plants denote what is forbidden, magic protection or tabu (crotons, cordylines, cycads, banyans, etc). The Banks Island house, ima, is rectangular in shape —measuring approximately eight to ten metres long, five to six metres wide and two to three metres high, with a floor of beaten earth. Nowadays construction on a cement base or coral bed is becoming commonplace. The casing of the house, its framework and its roofing ridge are made of hard forest timber reputed to be imperishable. The walls are made of split and plaited bamboo. Another technique is also currently widespread, the walls being made of small reeds planted in the floor and bound together. The roof has two sides inclined at an angle of about 30 or 40 degrees. It is made of sago-palm leaf 'tiles’ partially overlapping each other. They are supported by a bamboo casing fixed to the hardwood rafters. There are twenty to thirty lateral bamboos each side, at intervals of 30-40 cms. for four or five, arranged lengthwise. The ‘tiles' are placed from the base upwards, the space between being on an average of 15-25 cms. which, for the covering, gives a thickness of two to three double leaves. To ensure that it is watertight and sufficiently durable — its life span is five or six years on an average — the ideal spacing is the distance between the intersection of the thumb and the hand and the fingertips. On the inside the tiles are bound to be bamboos and on the outside are held in place by three parallel reeds running from the base of the slope with one at the top, close to the ridge pole. The central ^ein of the lamina is taken out and then bent two thirds of its length around two small reeds; it is kept tight by the vein which is stuck into each lamina forming a ‘seam'. A tile measures about 1.20m. * 0.70m. The roofing is made watertight by a set of tiles plaited two by two and kept in place by binding onto the upper rafter. The bindings used are made from different varieties of forest creepers which are also used in basketmaking, or from strings of plaited coconut fibre. At the front of the house, and sometimes at the back as well, the overhang of the roof formed a kind of porch. Traditionally, the roof almost touched the ground, the height of the walls rarely being more than 50-60cm. Today the walls are decidedly higher and, even along traditional lines, houses tend to imitate the proportions of European models. 28 The front and back gable ends of the house have a door the height of a man and placed in the middle, whereas traditionally they were not in the centre. The interior space, divided into two, is more functional. Lengthwise, the house is separated into a ‘dormitory area’ and 'kitchen area’. The occupants sleep at right angles on the widest part of a line between the two doors. Supplies are stored and cooking is done on the other side. Corresponding to this lengthwise separation, there is a horizontal 'boundary' dividing the 'masculine' and the ‘feminine’ part of the house, each having its own door. The men’s door faces the gamal and the dance square, the women’s faces the bush. After death the body of the deceased will repose lengthwise — in the opposite direction to the sleeping position. At the intersection of these lines demarcating the interior of the house is the qaranis, the hearth used for ceremonial cooking, the centre stone of which (the nevet rono), -constitutes an essential symbolic element of the home. The domestic house, insofar as individual private and feminine space is concerned, is different from the gamal which is communal, public and masculine. As far as the building goes the gamal, the communal house for the men of the village, is built along the same lines as the domestic house. It differs from it in length When a member of the community acquires a higher rank in the suqe, a corresponding space is added to the gamal. When the holder of the highest rank dies the corresponding end of the gamal is left to rot to irrigated land to the gardens, x interior dry stone wal pigs' grazing area tano tapu (cycas sp.) smooth stone \ paving . <$x S houses ĒUsU ■ E23 WME ga^eh rockycliff ® ® ' •. wona ^ ffin. /mT\ vTrrrm /TmTrtV i coastline // ^female place of ' male place of relaxation " 'relaxation y Fig. 18 Simplified plan of the old village of Gamelvava (from B. Vienne, 1984, p. 139). *V * X xVi. salagoro f' np taboo signs banyan magic protection : soloi fano rono v , fano rono , * houses \ , * X «tone enclosure *' ^ \yX I J tine sara g“od>^ j" kitchen ■ sacred plants f wona gardens bush fano fapu Fig. 19 Plan of a village, Motlav (from B. Vienne, 1984, p. 137). (cycas sp.) intersection of the thumb and the hand and the fingertips. On the inside the tiles are bound to be bamboos and on the outside are held in place by three parallel reeds running from the base of the slope with one at the top, close to the ridge pole. The central vein of the lamina is taken out and then bent two thirds of its length around two small reeds; it is kept tight by the vein which is stuck into each lamina forming a 'seam’. A tile measures about 1.20m. x 0.70m. The roofing is made watertight by a set of tiles plaited two by two and kept in place by binding onto the upper rafter. The bindings used are made from different varieties of forest creepers which are also used in basketmaking, or from strings of plaited coconut fibre. At the front of the house, and sometimes at the back as well, the overhang of the roof formed a kind of porch. Traditionally, the roof almost touched the ground, the height of the walls rarely being more than 50-60cm. Today the walls are decidedly higher and, even along traditional lines, houses tend to imitate the proportions of European models. 28 The front and back gable ends of the house have a door the height of a man and placed in the middle, whereas traditionally they were not in the centre. The interior space, divided into two, is more functional. Lengthwise, the house is separated into a ‘dormitory area’ and ‘kitchen area'. The occupants sleep at right angles on the widest part of a line between the two doors. Supplies are stored and cooking is done on the other side. Corresponding to this lengthwise separation, there is a horizontal 'boundary' dividing the 'masculine' and the 'feminine' part of the house, each having its own door. The men’s door faces the gamal and the dance square, the women’s faces the bush. After death the body of the deceased will repose lengthwise — in the opposite direction to the sleeping position. At the intersection of these lines demarcating the interior of the house is the qaranis, the hearth used for ceremonial cooking, the centre stone of which (the nevet rono),-constitutes an essential symbolic element of the home. The domestic house, insofar as individual private and feminine space is concerned, is different from the gamal which is communal, public and masculine. As far as the building goes the gamal, the communal house for the men of the village, is built along the same lines as the domestic house. It differs from it in length When a member of the community acquires a higher rank in the suqe, a corresponding space is added to the gamal. When the holder of the highest rank dies the corresponding end of the gamal is left to rot to irrigated land to the gardens , —^ x interior dry stone wal z pigs' grazing area tano tapu (cycas sp.) smooth stone ■S paving ■:v houses ■ lîÉi . ' tyh rockycliff SUSügamel ^ i' M 13 S3 -,v^ ■ • . : • !JTn /TTÏÏN vTrrrm mrrnXV. A coastline female place of _male place of rejaxation^^^^relaxation J Fig. 18 Simplified plan of the old village of Gamelvava (from B. Vienne, 1984, p. 139). \\ < * /- ^ x ^ X x\\ sa/annrn ^ l\ v ta^00 s '9ns ! banyan magic protection : soloi ^ tano rono X fano rono houses - .. \ * y "X stone enclosure * ^ gamal tine sara e* kitchen -■<* 1 sacred plants wona ] gardens (cycas sp.) fano tapu xv ^ . *- • x Fig. 19 Plan of a village, Motlav (from B. Vienne, 1984, p. 137). v Fig. 20 Gamal of the village of Ara (from a photo by H. Nevermann, 1933, p. 149). Fig. 21 Ancestral sculpture near a men s house (from a photo by Beattie, in Dr Hans Nevermann Masken und Geheimbunde in Melanesian, 1933, p. 158). until someone eventually acquires the rank again. Thus the gamal is divided up into crosswise compartments according to the actual hierarchy of the village and the interior arrangement reflects the hierarchy of ranks. Each compartment, separated by semi-partitions of reeds, tintinav, lengths of wood or upright stones, includes its own qaranis, thus constituting a ‘small house'. It is customary in the Banks Islands to commemorate a meal that celebrated a certain event by placing mammal bones, fishbones, or the shells of crustaceans in the tiles and roof joists — In certain parts of the Banks Islands it was customary to build a special gamal for the holder of a very high rank in the hierarchy, particularly in Gaua and for the ranks beyond nemel.29 The Island of Gaua or Santa-Maria (sometimes called Lakon) This island, which is a volcano of about 800 metres in height (Mt Garet), with an area of 338 sq. km., is the largest of the Banks Islands. Lake Létas lies within the crater. It was formerly the most populated island (3000 people at the end of the last century). Now, the majority of its 766 inhabitants (1979) live in the two main villages of Losolava and Lemanna. The small island of Merig, situated to the east towards Merlav, is known as 'Gaua's small child’, and also as the island of Saint Clarel. In the frontispiece of his work The Melanesians’ 30 Codrington has left us an interesting engraving called ‘Stone building at Gaua’, in which can be seen the different types of roofing with two straight wedge-shaped pieces (to the left) or in cradle form (to the.right). No door can be discerned which leads us to the conclusion that the building is viewed from the back of the men’s house (family homes having an entrance at each end) and is a sacred area since one can make out a stone platform on which is a plant, a stone table, and a row of monoliths standing between coconut palms. (This engraving should be compared with the layout of the dance square drawn by F. Speiser who collected a great deal of information and interesting etchings.)31 On Gaua near to the sea we find Losalava; a few huts stand alone, others are hidden by trees.32 Plate 89 shows us three types of Gaua architecture. In the first photograph we can make out through the fronds a gamal on a stone platform and a fence, also in stone. The shape of this gamal is very close to the outline of a family house. 33 This is confirmed by Speiser: ■I Fig. 23 Plan of a dance area, Gaua (from F. Speiser,1923, pi. 91 (12)). Fig, 24 Tattoo designs, similar to those found at the entrance of men’s houses (from F. Speiser, 1923, pi. 42). 1 Ai- /A "V /'. O'! >/-UC(kr? ■/ /< I// '■!///!tf. jflBSSji Fig. 25 House gable, Gaua (from F. Speiser, 1923, pl. 12*(4)). Fig. 26 Ancestral house, Gaua (from F. Speiser, 1923, pi. 89 (3)). Fig. 27 House of a man of high rank in theSuqe heirarchy (from F. Speiser, 1923, pi. 89 (4)). The ordinary people’s homes are the same as those of the tribal chiefs; they are also built on stone ledges and have gable walls of bamboo.34 In the third photograph we see the house of a high-ranking ancestor, with anthropomorphous pillars carved in trunks of tree-ferns. Two small sections are decorated with paintings in geometrical patterns. On the front of the ornamental facade are carvings of tree roots in the shape of birds. This kind of building can be compared with those in Vao. Photograph No 4 show a family home of a high-ranking man of the Suqe hierarchy; he could not, in fact, stay in homes of men of lesser rank. The building was quite large (over 4 metres high) and with a highly decorated front. The carved posts and paintings, and the scale of the roof, evoke the various pigs that the occupant must have donated to obtain this rank. Thus a whole hierarchy of buildings existed which represented the social diversity of the village: gamal, ancestors’ house, house of a man of rank, family home, cooking house, etc. Family homes did not have doors that closed. Speiser tells of having seen, in front of a house, two mollusc shells hanging side by side above the entrance which acted as bells when somebody entered. The roof jutted out from the gable end, allowing firewood to be stored underneath or providing shelter for people to sit under and chat. There were kilometres of small stone walls all over the island and the men’s meeting houses were situated on stone platforms, a metre in height. The men did not live in them for they had other houses on lower bases. The Island Of Merlav (Mere-lava in the language of Mota, meaning ‘big child') This is the most populated island in the archipelago. Situated to the south-east, it constitutes the limit of culture and civilization. Merlav also has connections with Maewo, where part of its population hails from. Various records also show links with the north-east of Santo and east of Aoba.35 Speiser says that he did not set foot on this island and refers to Coome to provide us with information about it. The houses were built on terraces fairly close to the fields. Villages and fields were quite large and enclosed by stone walls, the height of a man. Beside the dance square were several men's houses, only one of which seemed to be used. Opposite this dance square was the chief’s house with the family homes on either side. They were often scattered in small groups but they were also villages —36 But since the beginning of this century the Merlav population, like that of Merig, has become Christian and architecture has changed. In Merlav one can still see today a remarkable lay-out of villages, arranged on mid-slope. The houses are supported by piles.37 Fig. 28 House and gamal, Merlav (from a photo by H. Nevermann32). The Islands of the North The island of Mae wo (called Ile Aurore (Dawn Island) by Bougainville) The island stretched some fifty kilometres in length but, on an average, is only five kilometres wide. The first contact with Europeans proved fatal for its people, its coastal population being practically exterminated by disease. At present it has over a thousand in habitants speaking three different dialects. However, on the west coast of Maewo, remains and place names indicate numerous villages that have disappeared. Abandoned sites where homes once stood, old banyans planted around the dance square (nassarah) and heaps of stones arranged in lines, and former fences for defence or for collective piggeries can still be seen through the vegetation,39 The island of Maewo today has really only three real 'bushman' villages — Ngota, Saramawata and Qwotiavogoli.40 At the beginning of this century Speiser 41 noted two regions — a mountainous part in the south and northern part formed by a coral plateau. In this northern part houses were built directly on the ground as in Vao, and the walls were made of bamboo fencing. In the south of the island, the houses were built on coral block terraces. The men’s houses were very similar indeed to those of certain regions of Santo Island, with a double-sloping roof and no walls at the side. The gables were well made of bamboo slats and pandanus leaves. A tall wide door was the only opening to the house and always opened out at the gable ends. A number of decorative plants could be seen around these houses. Women could not enter the man’s house. It also appeared to have a loft. It is still possible to find these kinds of dwellings in certain a men’s house d house of man of high rank Fig. 29 Plan of a village in north Maewo (from F. Speiser, 1923, pl. II (3&4)). Fig. 30 Maewo. Plan of a village in south Fig. 31 Use of land in a traditional village, Sarata mawata, central Maewo (from J. Bonnemaison, 1974, p. 179). 1 - living area 2 - area for raising pigs 3 - bush and main gardens fence enclosing pig grazing area 4r (hana) small enclosed gardens i i-t- irrigated areas protective wall (litou) .' i'vitv unenclosed areas of dry cultivation ■fttH'Jr) fjtvU/tjt Fig. 32 Family house with stone foundation, Maewo (from F. Speiser, 1923, pl. 17 (2)). Fig. 33 Monolith on a grave at Maewo (from Speiser, pl. 80 (6)). villages. "The nakamal corresponds to a small hamlet of about thirty to forty people living in a clearly defined area. In the true sense of the word the nakamal merely means 'the house of men’ and is a fairly long building whose different compartments symbolize the main divisions in rank or status. Its size and the beauty of its ornamentation reflect the political importance of the group or, more exactly, the prestige and the extent of the powers of its main chief. 42 In the plan drawn up by J. Bonnemaison we find that the layout is the same as that described and drawn up by Speiser fifty years previously.43 In the plan of a village in north Maewo, a central square with two access paths can be seen. The nakamal and the various family homes are surrounded by fences. In most of these enclosures there are two buildings, the family house and the kitchen, placed at right angles to or parallel with the nakamal. The plan of the layout of a hamlet in southern Maewo reminds us that this is a mountainous region. Buildings are constructed on earth and stone platforms and kept in place on the sloping side by a wall of coral blocks. The nakamal is situated in the same direction but separated from the other buildings (family houses) —the latter being grouped together in threes on each of the four platforms. An enclosure or hillock of round stones has a stake or a drum within it and is situated between the nakamal and the other habitations. The house in south Maewo shown in photographs 2, plate 17, is astonishing similar to a nakamal on the island of Vao that we visited in 1979, both in its shape and use of various materials (see Fig. 115). The Island of Ambae or Aoba (Bougainville dubbed it 'Island of Lepers’) The island is dominated by two crater lakes (Manaro Kessa and Manaro Voui). Most of the 7800 inhabitants live in the villages on the west coast, the others scattered round the periphery of this 420 sq. km. island. Bougainville has left us this description of the island of Ambae: Its north-west coast is of sheer highland at least 12 leagues long and completely wooded. No huts at all could be seen, only a great deal of smoke rising from the middle of the woods from the seashore to the summit of the mountains. It would appear, however, that he noticed only one particular kind of house when he wrote: We did not see any other houses except for five or six small huts that Fig. 34 Plan of a hamlet, Ambae (from F. Speiser, 1923, pl. 10 (7)). a men’s house Fig. 35 Plan of a hamlet, (trom Speiser, pl. 10 (8)). Ambae d house of man of high rank ^ coconut plantations ^ cocoa plantations traditional food gardens i taro -ZÛ area of pig grazing ^ breeding pens : dense bush ■Ct Villages ,***** large enclosed areas (hara) now abandoned Fig. 36 Use of land in Lolossari region, Ambae (from J. Bonnemaison,1974, p. 262). Fig. 37 House with stone platform (from Speiser, pl. 17 (1)) Fig. 38 House in south-west Ambae (from Speiser, pl. 13 (5)). Fig. 39 House of a man of very high rank, Ambae (from Speiser, pl. 14 (4)). Fig. 40 House in west Ambae (from a photo by E. Aubert de la Rue, 1945 pi XVII). could only be entered by dragging oneself along on the stomach.4'' Speiser specifies: “Apparently Bougainville saw only small shelter huts on the beach.45 At the beginning of this century, in the south-western region of the island, houses were built two by two on terraces of volcanic stone. Enclosures were separated by stone walls or sometimes by wooden fences. There were also outhouses serving as kitchens or store rooms. All village buildings were close to the dance square. The men’s clubhouses were open to women, and these, too, were built beside the dance square and were mostly used for cooking purposes. They were 15 metres long, 10 metres wide and 5 metres high, with a roof of two different sized sides, the wider one touching the ground and the other forming a porch at shoulder height. Young men could sleep there as well as the newly initiated. The latter were separated by a partition of palm leaves. Drums (boga) were also kept on the men’s house. High ranking men lived in houses cut off from the village which were more carefully constructed and more ornate. They had a single very low opening at the gable end and on either side were stakes hung with pig jaws and large shells which were in an enclosure made of blocks of volcanic rock, where tombs, altars and various plants (crotons) were also to be found. Family homes were 10m. x 5m. * 3 metres high with a two sided roof, a fairly high door and a bamboo threshold of about half a metre. Each family group had a menstruation hut for the women. These were miniature houses 2.50m. * 1.50m. * 1.50m. in height, with a very low opening. In the north-east of the island were the real men’s houses, forbidden to women. These buildings were close to the dance squares outside the village. More recently, J. Bonnemaison made a study of Ambae society. He tells us that the population was divided into taoule (bush-man) occupying the centre of the island and the elao (salt waterman) established beside the sea who were sailors and in control of interisland contacts. There must also have been a third category assuring contact between the two previously named groups. However in these two worlds with a frequently antagonistic outlook, the organisation of village space followed a practically identical pattern. The long, low dwellings with bamboo walls and a roof covering of Nantogora (sago palm) leaves are scattered in small groups around the nakamal. The dance square (nassarah) the ground flattened by the feet of dancers, is situated in an extension of the nakamal close by a banyan tree with its thick branches providing shade conducive to the debates and gossip of the day. This space was formerly encircled by high, protective fences (litou) made of wooden posts and bamboo over two metres high, embedded in a row of raised stones.46 There is an interesting article by P. O’Reilly on the tomb of Taremulimuli. 47 Funerary buildings are part of architecture and we should not ignore them. On a cliff facing the sea, near Nagire, there is an enclosure: It was an almost perfect rectangle demarcated by fairly flat raised stones of different thicknesses, most of them barely 40-50 cms. from the ground. Other higher ones were as tall, if not taller, than a man. They were roughly aligned and placed a short distance from each other (about 1m.-0.25m.). The sides of the rectangle were 21 and 36 metres respectively. In the middle of this rectangle was a second enclosure 17 metres long by 2.80m. wide (max) in the shape of a boat without an end turned towards the sea, a “stone cut in the shape of an extremely tilted trihedral pyramid.” 48 A cycad (na mele), the classic flora for sepulchres and places of sacrifice, backed on to this enclosure. The Island of Santo This is the largest of the Vanuatu Islands and is very mountainous in the west and little developed. Numerous plantations and stockfarming areas were created on the east coast during the colonial period. With an area of 3965 sq. km., it has on average only one inhabitant per square kilometre, making it one of the least populated islands of Vanuatu. Speiser gave us this information at the beginning of the century 49 : Above 600m. there was no village, habitation being between the heights of 150m. and 300m. The layout of villages was quite con-, fused, they were divided up into different groupings of family dwellings, with poor roads linking various hamlets. At the edge of the different villages were hermit homes. The dead were buried in their own house which was subsequently abandoned. In the centre of Santo, villages were neater. The village of Bele was laid out around a rectangular dancing-green, with the gable-ended openings of the dwellings facing it. Both women's and men's houses were in a row fairly close together but without any particular order, alongside a long road from which smaller tracks lead into the forest. i/*. t11 •<: Vn \ .• j • .ri Fig. 41 Longitudinal view and cross-section of a house in north-west Santo (from Speiser, pi. 12 (1&6)). Fig. 42 Storehouse in north-west Santo (from Speiser, pi. 12 (9)). Fig 43 Sculpted columns of a men’s house in north-west Santo (from Speiser, pi. 12 (9a)). Fig. 44 Village plan, north-west Santo (from Speiser, 1923, pi. 10 (2)). Fig. 45 Village plan, north-east Santo (from Speiser, pi. 10 (1)). Fig. 46 Cross-section of a dwelling in north-east Santo (from Speiser, pi. 12 (5)). Fig. 47 Men’s Port-Orly (from house, Speiser, pi. 12 (10)|. Fig. 48 Diagram of construction of fence in north-east Santo (from Speiser pi. 12 (11 &12 ». nmmmm Fig. 49 The construction of a roof (from Speiser, pi. 14 (6)). Fig. 50 Village plan, central Santo (from Speiser, pi. 10(5)). women’s entrance women stone men strangers simple fireplace men's entrance Fig. 51 Schematic representation of a family house in Tsrapae, central Santo (personal communication from H. Goron). woodstore Fig. 52 Plan and cross-section of a village house at Butmas (from J. Guiart, 1959, p. 27). Tïptt 1 f/fU/Ayîfi if, iy.ii .1 wi\ MUi i/flii JM ll T|l«W‘r(lAk^vV IXVII fkVHM «U W\AUL|U-i-ti| g; sī 3; AWpXiywTf^m ^ s.yAuXti.‘.I -, "--rA/5ei ' if 4 I/.^VCWlV1iv< v, i_ ^ Fig. 53 Plan of a house in south-west Santo (from Speiser, pi. 12 (1)). Fig. 54 Dwellings in south west Santo (from Speiser, pi. 13 (D). V •■ TJ Fig. 55 House at Vuinavanga, south-east Santo (from photo by C. Coiffier). Fig. 56 Men’s house north west Santo (see Fig. 43) (from Speiser, pi. 13 (2)). Fig. 57 Men's house, west Santo (from a photo by Thilenius). Fig. 58 Interior Speiser, pi. 13 (6)). of a men’s house, west Santo (from drums large banyan Nagamal cycas and other 'magical' plants dance area Fig. 59 Ceremonial area of a village in south-east Santo (from C. Coiffier, 1982, p. 170). Fig 60 Men's house, south-east Santo (from a photo by C. Coiffier) Fig. 61 Dwelling in south-east Santo (from a photo by C. Coiffier). C ji■1 v-|l yfpi I 'M').IVwav 'U11 ki ,vV,« Uv«.-• Vi Fig. 62 Longitudinal view and plan of house in central Santo (from Speiser, pi. 12 (14). >cvvu Uvii IWr'M l\ I - - ' V r M 1, I 11111/\ \ i xv L’!-v fj - ? Fig. 63 Dwelling at Fwimatal (from a photo by J. Guiart, 1953, p. 129). Fig. 64 Dwelling at Vuinavanga (from a photo by C. Coiffier). Numerous fences could be seen but when the population was much larger, the houses were built even closer together within enclosures. Some villages were divided into two parts because of problems within the clans. On their return from Australia where they had been employed on Queensland plantations, certain high ranking men influenced the construction of new villages. In the northern part of the islands there were special buildings for storing vegetables and fruit. There were small houses in the gardens for conjugal encounters. In this region houses were often built on a stone base and in the mountainous districts the men’s houses were sometimes built on piles. But in other places, men and women slept in the same building which was divided in two by a wooden beam. There were neither tree houses nor troglodytes, although certain cliffs were used for habitation in time of war. Curiously enough, in the south of the island, T-shaped houses were found. In Sakaos, in the village of Nejets (Port-Orly), the men’s meeting house, Robo, is a building with two sloping roofs down to the ground — the walls cannot therefore be seen from the outside. The posts were embedded with root-ends upwards, with some of these roots being kept to be occasionally used as hooks. Some posts were made up of several spliced bamboos. The importance of a house was judged by the number of posts used in its construction. According to the men, the central pillars of the house were phallic symbols. The length of the men's house denoted its owner’s rank, it could therefore be lengthened but not widened. The largest house in Nejets was 56m. long, i.e. eight posts with a seven metre space between each. A man of rank made it his business to have his own house different from the men’s house and several of his wives, with their children, could live there together, the most senior wife supervising the younger ones' behaviour. The owner was not obliged to take on the responsibility for outsiders, even though his house was bigger than the others and also included a storehouse. These buildings were sometimes within an enclosure. Speiser has also left us three plans of different regions of the island.50 These villages looked larger than those in other islands. The north-west site included a long square, parallel to the sea or to the river, but the village itself was between two rivers. A large house was situated beside it with six drums (status symbols?) in front of the two buildings. There were 29 houses mostly parallel with the nagamal, nine only being situated at right angles. At the centre of the island is a site on which a village is built on two right angled axes (sic) with the nagamal and enclosed dancesquare in the centre, 31 dwellings at the garden end parallel to the dance-square (a certain number of which were inside an enclosure and, on the other side, at right angles to the nagamal, 26 houses in groups of three: these are more scattered and, for the most part, fenced in. The third site, in the north-east (Island of Sakao) shows a more scattered village, with various roads linking the habitations with the small dance-square, and the nagamal placed parallel with the chief's house (both next to an enclosed area and opposite a former nagamal). Twenty-four family dwellings were situated all around with 13 en closures of different sizes. Although we are not in possession of sufficient details to draw conclusions about the spatial arrangement of villages on the island of Santo, it is however possible to find similarities there with other islands of the archipelago. Today two distinct regions must be recognised in the human geography. Without exception, European and Christian indigenous homes are confined to the shallow, coastal strip (Nalovi, Narango).... An uninhabited area, overrun by tropical rain forest and with coralline sub-soil in the north and to the south and east, separates the coastal groups from those of the interior. These latter are scattered in sparsely populated hamlets along or on the brow of the ridges or midway up the summits, thus ranging their inhabitants at an altitude of between 400 and 122 metres. A census in central Santo showed a total of 158 groups and out of this figure only 32... have a population of over twenty inhabitants. A Christian village, predominantly Presbyterian in Espiritu Santo, is made up of a grassy square surrounded by huts, often elevated, with floor and partition walls of prefabricated bamboo which is split and then plaited into wide strips, with a roof covered in nalangora (sago) (metroxylon) leaves, often complete with verandah on one of the sides.51 Bush hamlets have a few huts, squeezed close together for lack of space, with just enough room in the centre or in front of one of them — but more to one side — for dancing in a tightly packed group. Often the site for the hut, and even the dance square, have had to be cut out of the mountain-side. H. Goron has supplied us with plans of mountain houses which he had occasion to visit. The latter were divided into three parts with two entrances: one entrance for the men and outsiders opening on to a hall separated from the rest of the house by a wooden partition; another at the opposite gable end for the women. The private family area was itself separated through the middle, not clearly defined, between the men and the women, with a hearth or fire place for each of the sexes. These villages (like that of Tsrapae) are difficult of access; they experience only three or four days of sunshine a year and the nights there are very cold. The inhabitants usually sleep around hearths of white-hot stones.52 J. Guiart also gives us a plan and two descriptions of a house in the village of Butmas where leaning roof-supporting posts can be seen, as in Speiser’s photograph.53 The traditional hut, rectangular in shape is essentially made up of a double-sided roof placed on two very low walls. At each end, two vertical partitions, each with an opening about the height of a man, one at the front for the men, the other facing the bush and gardens, for the women. These doors are either blocked up at night with a large amount of ferns or closed with a door made from a single block of wood____ The main characteristic of the framework of the hut is the sloping of each side of the roof, which ensures the solidity of the whole during violent cyclonic winds. Both roof and walls are covered with material obtained from the sago palm (natangora) lined, where necessary in places most exposed to the cold night breezes coming down from the summits, with a thick outer layer of reed leaves. In some cases this precaution may go so far as to mean that there is a second roof, independent of the first. The hut is large in size; one can easily stand up in it, except in those built on the hillcrests dominating La Ora, where shortage of space has resulted in smaller dwellings. In Upper Waylapa and Upper Navaka, the front of the house, i.e. the men's side, is embellished with a small verandah used for storing dry tree trunks later to be cut up for firewood. In 1979, we were able to see various buildings, similar to those described by Speiser and J. Guiart, in the villages of Vuinavaga and Vanafo. In the latter village, grouping together inhabitants from different places in the mountains, there were various constructions representative of their regions of origin. A very interesting nagamal was also there together with a cook-house, a square for the sacrific ing of pigs (planted with cycads, namele) and a dance-square with a set of drums beside an enormous banyan tree. The Island of Malo Lying to the extreme south of the island of Santo, Malo formerly assured a link of cultural transition between the west of the island of Ambae, the south of Santo, and the north of Malakula, through the islands of Atchin and Vao.54 Fig. 65 Village plan, north Malo (from Speiser, pi. 10 (3)). a. men's house d. house of man of high rank Fig. 66 Dwelling in north Malo (froma photo by Speiser, pi. 16 (5). Fig. 67 Reed fence, north Malo (from a photo by Speiser, pi. 14 (2)). 50 400 kms, Maewo Aoba Santo Malo Pentecost Malakula Ambrym Fig. 68 Cultural areas and patterns of interaction in north-east Vanuatu (from J. Bonnemaison, 1974, p. 188). As in the southern part of the island of Santo, large villages no longer exist, but Speiser writes about his having found a number of walls (in the north of the island) which surrounded family enclosures The number of women in a family was related to the number of houses in a hamlet. The great size of the dance squares would lead us to suppose that formerly villages must have been much bigger. 55 On Malo houses were made only of a roof with two pitches. The men’s houses were built beside the dance squares, the gable ends turned towards the square. They were 10m. * 3m. * 2m. (in height) but some could be as much as 50 feet in length. Bamboo was the basic material for framework and fencing. F. Speiser gives the plan56 of a site in the north of the island that is reminiscent of certain sites in Malakula. The nakamal is beside the house of a man of rank and is connected with an enclosed area in the middle of the dance square. Family homes are spread around this nakamal in no particular order and a group of three buildings is completely surrounded by a wall as is an isolated house. Homes were often surrounded by a cane fence, 2m. high, to protect them from pigs. Outsiders did not have the right to enter the enclosures and had to remain outside to sleep, like dogs and pigs, in sheds outside the hamlet. On certain occasions (death, etc), an entire house could be moved to another site, this is why village paths were so wide.57 Pentecost Island (its original name was Hat Ragha) This is a very long and mountainous island (over 60 sq. km.) rising to over 947m. At the beginning of the century, at the time of the arrival of the first missionaries, the people of the centre of the island, i.e. a regional assembly of 4000-5000 inhabitants, had only about five or six men of very high ranking" status having reached the ultimate degree of lélébutane (a name given locally to the system of ranks). These chiefs held the title of Tanmonok (the end of the earth) and Mariak (that which is beyond). Although the political and cultural context has considerably changed, the number of high ranks has remained at present essentially the same as during traditional times Their entire life was spent continually wandering about,... this perpetual mobility was a privilege of their rank, at the same time affirming and verifying their p o w e r . . t h e y "no longer had a house of their own In their original village".58 Villages cling to the steep slopes of the interior chain... at the southern tip of the island, the village of Bunlap today represents a true “customary enclave". To their neighbours, the people of Bunlap are not only the custodians of custom but also the ‘boss bilong custom', the masters of custom. The village stretches on both sides from a central road running along a steep slope dominated by the main nakamal and two levelled dance squares, surrounded by a stone wall. The traditional huts are low, with walls of bamboo or split reeds and covered with leaves, going down almost to the ground. They cling along the length of the fault-line on minute man-made terraces. In Bunlap, the social set-up of the village is founded on a rank hierarchy, namangui in Bichelamar. There is no hereditary chief, but throughout their whole life men pass from rank to rank. Those reaching the highest levels in the system hold power and political prestige.59 When the boys are between three and five years old they are circumcised with bamboo knives. The boys then go to live in the men’s huts and return to the women’s place only after the healing of their penis, about two months later. On this occasion a great feast is organised with dancing and the offering of taro and yams.60 The three nakamal huts in the village are on ground raised and supported by a low stone wall. In former times, after having killed a man and brought him back to a nakamal, the weapons used to kill him had to be left in front of the nakamal, the spirit of the dead, being in those parts, might have attacked if the weapons were not present. In certain villages in the south of the island there is a special rite called the Go! jump which demands the building of a wooden tower of complicated design. This rite is carried out at the time of the maturing of yams in April or May and the men perform this jump to ensure that the next harvest will be a good one. In the village of Bunlap the meaning of this jump is explained by a legend. A young girl had had enough of being abused by her companion, Tamalie, and would not give herself to him. Several times she tried to flee, but without success. One day she thought up a device to get rid of him once and for all. Once again she fled, pursued by Tamalie and she climbed high into a banyan tree. When she was about to be caught by her pursuer, she threw herself into the void and landed unhurt, for she had taken the precaution of tying two strong creepers around her ankles. In his blind haste the unfortunate Tamalie threw himself after her but was crushed into the ground and died. From that day, every five years — and nowadays every year — youths from different villages in the south commemorate the tragic death of their ancestor. It is also an initiation ceremony, since newly a = nakamal Fig. 69 Partial schematic representation ofthe village of Bunlap, Pentecost (from a photo by K. Muller, 1971, p. 72). Fig. 70 Mén working at the construction of a house-frame at Bunlap (from a photo by Muller, p. 74). Fig.71 Men securing the roof beams with pandanus leaves, Bunlap (from a photo by Muller, p. 74). L Fig. 72 30 metre high wooden tower used for the Gol land-dive, Bunlap (from a photo in Les Iles du Pacifique, Paris, 1980, p. 170). Fig. 73 Men working on the base of the tower.*1® Fig. 74 platform.50 Detail of the divi Fig. 75 Various stages of the land-dive (from photos by Muller, p. 68&71 and J.J. Syllebranque ‘Saut du Gol : la fete des Nambas’, reported in 30 Jours no 6, July 1982, pp. 31,33,35,37,38,39). Fig. 76 House on a hillside, Bunlap (from a photo by Muller, 1970, p. 802). Fig. 77 House of a man of high rank, Pentecost (from a photo by H. Nevermann, 1933). circumcised youths are admitted to the men’s community after having carried out this jump. Gol means human body in the language of South Pentecost. Formerly, the men used to leap from the highest branches of a banyan tree; then they built the towers that we know today. In the beginning their construction was very demanding for a great deal of time was needed to cut the trees with stone axes. Now, with modern equipment, it takes two weeks. Firstly, a construction site has to be chosen, it should not be too far from the village and material should be available there. The most important factor is to find a slope that is neither too steep nor too slight. Too steep a slope would make construction work difficult; too slight would increase the risk at the time of the jump. A flat place, near the'tower, is needed for the dancers. As a central support, the tower has a standing tree (koro) with its top cut off which will -serve as a foundation for a dozen tree trunks (12-25m.) arranged and planted around it. Sometimes more than fifteen men are needed to drag just one of these trunks. The man who fells the koro is called the Tower Master and he will later have the privilege of jumping last from the highest platform. The framework of the tower is therefore a square mass 3.50 metres wide and 25 metres high. The trunks are hoisted'with the help of creepers and this is a communal effort. Several taboos have to be respected: women may not go near the building site and the men engaged in the building must abstain from all sexual relations from the start of the building until the end of the ceremony.63 Other tree trunks are attached to the end of the foundation props, acting as vertical supports... up to a height of sixteen metres from the ground the tower is rectangular in shape; higher up it curves backwards. When a very heavy trunk has to be lifted up the men help each other by singing with great gusto. When the framework of the tower is complete an armat or spirit comes to make its abode in it — it is the spirit of Tamalie, the man who was killed, according to the legend. The tower is divided into twelve levels, each one corresponding to a part of the body.. ,53 from the ankle to the head via the thighs, stomach, breast, etc... the top of the tower is called the top of the skull. Platforms from which the men will jump are attached to these different levels — fifty-three platforms in all.64 Once the scaffolding is complete the platform is built qn the ground, then it is put in place at the desired height so that it juts out by a metre from the tower. It is supported underneath by three slender branches which, by breaking at the end of the jump, will serve to lessen the impact.65 Each man who is to jump makes his own platform and chooses the creepers that he will tie to his ankles; at this time of the year the creepers have just enough sap to be sufficiently elastic. The wood and creepers used in the building are often wrapped in banana leaves to carefully conserve their elasticity. Not a single nail is used, only a network of creepers over 7 km. in length and hundreds of tree trunks and branches. The towers can be as high as 15-30 metres. If the Parisians have their Eiffel Tower, the inhabitants of Pentecost have their Gol tower. Having knotted the ends of the creepers to their ankles, “each man who is to jump chooses the level from which he will jump and, if he wishes, he may jump several times over. The final preparations for the ceremony consist of clearing the ground where they will land. All stumps are removed and the earth softened to a depth of 20 cm.”66 At the time of the jump, a difference of a few centimetres out of every 30 metres of the longest creepers is most important. Having first thrown down a few croton leaves, the men who jump will throw themselves into the void from the knees, stomach or shoulders of the tower (the different levels of the tower being named after parts of the body) to the accompaniment of encouragement from all the men and women of the village. If it should happen that the tower leans over it will be carefully fixed to surrounding trees and stumps. In living memory only one fatal accident is recorded. In 1974, John Tabi was fatally injured in the presence of Queen Elizabeth of England and Prince Philip. The subsequent yam harvest was affected and the people of Bunlap naturally put it down to cause and effect. On the east coast of the island of Malakula, in Onua, the same dive was one of the elements in the taking of rank ritual. 67 ritual67 Interior of men's house, Vanua Lava, Banks Group. Stones separate the eating areas of men of different social ranks. Living houses, Ureparapara Island, Banks Group. Women’s sacred house, Gaua island, Banks Group. Ancestral house, Gaua Island, Banks Group. Village house, Maewo. Family and cooking houses, Ambae. Men's house (note horizontal wooden slit drums on right inside), Nabuturiki, north Ambae. Bwatnabne village, north Pentecost. Family house, Talamako, Big Bay Santo. 60 THE ISLANDS OF THE CENTRE Men’s sacred house on dancing ground, west Ambrym Sleeping house under construction, Ambrym. Village houses (one on right under construction), south Malakula. Men’s houses, Bushman's Bay, east coast central Malakula. -U- >■. Women's and children's living houses, north Malakula. The Islands of the Centre The Island of Ambrym (The Black Island) With a population of 6000 inhabitants in an area of 665 sq. km., the island of Ambrym is dominated by two still active volcanoes, Marum and Ben bow. The main villages are Port Vila, Graig Cove, Ranon, Olal, Tavék, Lonworo, NopiJ and Fanbeur. Its forest is less dense than on other islands such as Mallicolo. F. Speiser gives us a plan of a site where two nagamals are situated at the ends of a village square and at right angles to one another. There are seventeen houses on one side of the square, eleven of them at right angles, three parallel to it and two on the slant. In the middle of the square are two homes of men of rank, completely surrounded by stone and vegetable fibre fences. On the opposite side are dwellings facing these homes, with an enclosed area planted with vegetation. But there is no provision for a drumbeating site. The island of Ambrym is famous throughout the world for its drums with vertical slits and for its tree-fern carvings. There is no shortage of old photographs (F. Speiser 1904, J. Guiart 1949) enabling us to imagine the various artefacts, seen in museums, transposed into their local context amidst various tropical plants. We should compare two of Speiser’s photograph63: in one of them we see a men’s meeting house and in the other the house of a man of rank — both of them are surrounded by an enclosure with raised stones, wooden fences and ritual plants, dracaenas (nangani). Other shots show us huge drums, over five metres high, and an ancient carving depicting the jaws of sacrificed pigs and stone altars for the sacrifice, burial grounds surrounded by fences, an important man’s house situated under breadfruit trees in an enclosure of wooden stares, and sheds of sheltering certain tree-fern carvings.69 Fig. 78 Village plan, Ambrym (from Speiser, pi. 10 (10)). a. men's house b. house of man of high rank Fig. 79 Men's house, Ambrym (from Speiser, pi. 16 (1)). ,X.r The Islands of the Centre 65 Fig. 80 Men's house, Ambrym (from Speiser, pi. 17 (3)). Fig. 81 Men’s house with drums,tree fern statue and sculpture representing stylised pig's jaws (from Speiser, pi. 97 (3)). Fig. 82 Drums and statue at Bounlou village, 1871 (from N.N. MikloukhoMaclay, in S.A. Tokarev and S.R. Tolstov, Narody Avstralii i Okeanii, Moscow, 1956, p. 491). Fig. 83 Men’s house, Ambrym (from a photo by Aubert de la Rue, Musee de l'Homme). Fig. 84 Drum beside a naghamal at Neha, north Ambrym (from J. Guiart, Nouvelles - Hebrides, p. 17). Fig. 85 Mel in Neha village, north Ambrym (from J. Guiart, Dec. 1951, pi. I (2)). Fig. 06 House with bamboo walls, Ambrym (from Aubert de la Rue, 1945, pl. XVIII (A)). Fig. 87 Family house, S.P. Tolstov, 1956, p. 415). Ambrym (from S.A. Tokarev and F i g . 8 8 F a m i l y h o u s e , Ambrym (from Ph. Diole, 1976, p. 20654). J. Guiart brought back a great deal of information from the northern part of the island. “Northern Ambrym includes about forty villages scattered beside the sea and in the interior. Whatever religion a village may belong to, nothing can regulate the arrangement of homes. Generally they are scattered more or less around a square of bare earth, their entrances facing the centre. Two rows of huts are sometimes seen, the inhabited ones and those used for storing yams behind them; huts are not arranged in a complete circle but simply in a very wide semi-circle, opening onto a slope. As a general rule, pagan villages are built more or less along these lines, varying according to the amount of land available to them. Very close to groups of ordinary homes are one or more dance-squares, each having drums standing on the ground, one of which has a monumental carved head. There is also a communal hut for the men. In Christian villages houses are arranged on either side of the intersection made by the coastal road from Rannon to Olal, or along the way leading up towards the interior. These hamlets are grouped around an influential person. The village is a political unit under the sole authority of the Mage dignitaries. The means of administration is the council of elders, or rather of the leading citizens — people having already passed the first ranks of Mage70 . The Men’s House: On Ambrym this house is called mel, and rises in a corner of the dance square; its design is similar to that of personal homes but better cared for and more symmetrical, with great use being made of the ornamental possibilities offered by the material with which it is constructed. A few old men can almost always be seen sleeping there. Entry is forbidden to women and, in theory, to uncircumcised boys The back of the men’s house, always turfed, is sacred, mokon, and strictly respected. Except when councils are in progress the mél is frequented only by people of middle or'lower rank who, if there are a sufficient number, will iise one of the inside fireplaces for cooking purposes. The interior of the mél has neither a ritual lay-out nor priority of place.71 "In the less numerous higher ranks, dignitaries are obliged to live more apart’’ and if “the village square is open to all its inhabitants... the mel is always located on private property despite its being a men’s communal house. The dance square belongs to a dignitary who has had it made or who has inherited it from his father. The upright drums are also his own property for he himself has paid the carver to make them, but they resound as much for the glory of the village as for his own". Fig. 89 Sculptures of rank, carved from tree-fern stumps A. from Speiser, pi. 100 (1) B. Rank Mage ne gulgul, Neha village (from Guiart, 1951, pl. II (4)). C. from M. Garanger, Encyclopédie Universalis, Vol. pl. II (3). D. from a photo by C. Coiffier E. Rank Mage Lon Bui, Fanla, north Ambrym (from Guiert, 1970, p. 41) F. from a photo by C. Coiffier Table of the heirarchy of North Ambrym TITLE RANK 57 MONUMENT 1. Fangtasum Neanl Naming of a particular fireplace. 2. Mwel Mwel A cycas palm (mwel) planted at the edge of the dance area. 3. Wer, Bwerang Wer Smooth stone erected and painted in black. 4. Sagran, Tangor Sagran Low tree-fern sculpture, with human face, placed under a platform. 5. Liun Liun Smooth stone erected and painted in red encircled by black. Gulgul Smooth stone painted red and black and placed on a mound Gulgul Small sculpture with human face, without platform. 7. Wurwur Wurwur Tall treefern sculpture, with human face and animal body, beneath a platform. 0. Simok Naim Smooth stone erected and painted half white. 9. Hiwir Naim Large male sculpture with folded arms, set on a platform. 6. Gulgul a) Gulgul wer b) Gulgul bwerang 10. Wei ne mweleun Mweleun 11 .Mage Ion bul Mweleun Pit covered by a roof with a single slope, containing two sculptures, one male, one female. A2.Loghbaro Loghbaro Rectangular stone platform with a smooth stone at one end. 13. Mai Mai The same platform with model of a large house with root supported by curved treefern posts and the roof ridge terminating in the image of a falcon. Smooth erect stone, half black, half red. coconut shoot symbolising the value of the pigs to be sacrificed coconut Fig. 90 Vertical view and cross-section of a platform built around a statue of rank m a g e n e urur (wurwur). single or — * ■* • ^,____ barrier round double reeds rHH fir a Luan with Iheir leaves, ’ " U4.1U • enclosure forming a screen * * * ) \ \v '!', I , , Fig. 91. Man on platform with axe in one hand and pig-club in the other. The Islands o f the Centre 7 3 -------- V ----- : ------- —r—— — — Fig. 92 Rank-taking ceremony in an Ambrym village (from a photo by Ch. Gourguechon, L'Archipel des Tabous, Paris, 1974, p. 224). In addition to the division of the sexes there is a highly hierarchical organisation which is defined by a certain number of ranks that a man must successively acquire throughout his life, paid for with pigs and various gifts. Monuments represent the different ranks of status: the planting of a cycad (mél) or the erection of a flat stone painted black (wer luverau ) etc. In the division of labour men will fell trees, make fern carvings, build houses and bamboo partitions, while the women will plait coconut leaves for interior walls or roots for houses. There are rituals, most of which are concealed from women and children and are therefore called by the generic term luan (forbidden, secret). For each ritual a men’s house is built, this time called melkôn (kon = sacred), surrounded by a high fence and to which no one uninitiated to this particular ritual has access.72 These rituals can be compared to those of the Banks Islands Tamate society. During funeral rites: The deceased was buried in the ranhar, with leaf-decorated reeds planted on his tomb. Similarly, the now closed up and abandoned hut was decorated with reeds, lilenlen, limlar, mweleun, mwel, leaves and shells mounted on hard wood (libalbal). There is no double grave and the deceased’s skull has never been subjected to any particular treatment. Formerly, the bodies of important dignitaries were left to rot inside the hut.73 Tree-fern carvings These are thought to be a shelter into which an ancestor will come to make his abode. They are made at the time of ceremonies marking the taking of rank and are marked by the sacrifice of pigs and very important exchanges. They are erected at the entrance to villages on the square where the ceremonies take place. They may also be set up in pairs in gardens to ensure the fertility of the plantation. These tree-fern carvings were often coloured: “The red, called weyang, used to embellish patterns painted on the face... is not made on the spot but imported from the island of Epi The green mineral dye called ye, or the blue, called ling, was imported from Pentecost on the other side of the strait separating northern Ambrym from the neighbouring island.74 Ambrym Drums In this catalogue of the architecture of Vanuatu, a place must be given to the description and making of its great drums. By reason of their imposing size and position beside the dancing squares, they are Fig. 93 Head of a large slit-drum on Ambrym (from a photo by Coios, in Marcelle Crepy, Revelations sur I’Oceanie, Planete, no 5, June/Aug. 1980, p. 125). Fig. 94 Ambrym slit-drum (from a photo in ‘Beautes du y Monde’, Larousse, 18 Aug. 1980, p. 125). \ Fig. 95 Two views of the detail on the head of an Ambrym drum at the Musee de l'Homme, Paris (from a museum photo, in J. Guiart, Dec. 1956, pi. XIII). inseparable region. from the architectural design of the villages of Wooden drums standing upright in the ground have similar names in north Malakula (nambul tingling) and north Ambrym (atingting). In north Ambrym where both the dance-square and the drum are personal property, there is no ritual for marking its erection except that of paying the carver with pigs and the interminable game of sounding it for more than a day and a night so as to remove the drum’s over-new resonance. In former times a hen would have been sacrificed and its blood would have been poured into the slit in the instrument.75 The patterns: A complete face surmounted the arms with a triple row of notches (watur) on the side, extended backwards by spirals joined edge to edge, a second face, called nana carved on the nape of the neck. Process of its making and erection, according to John Manu: A suitable breadfruit tree (autocarpus altitus) must be chosen, felled, the bark stripped and brought to the dance-square. Songs in the local language are sung while this work is in progress. The tree trunk is surrounded by a curtain of coconut palm trees and protected by a rustic roof. Now the carver enters the scene. With a rarar leaf he traces a greenish mark to delineate the space for eyes; then he carves the face: two lozenge- or almond-shaped eyes, a nose bulging at the base and split down the side of narrow nostrils — an ample naso labial area at the bottom of which is a simple groove for a mouth. Then a hen is killed in the carver's honour. He covers the completed carving with coconut leaves, then marks the place of the slit running lengthwise which everyone will come to hollow out with adzes — no use is made of fire. All drums of the same kind have the same length of slit (tute) which takes its size from an older drum. First they hollow out the right side, then the left, but not too deeply or else the sound will be impaired. A day for its erection is fixed. The drum (atingting) is erected, a young boy climbs onto the shoulders of the drummer and bathes the face with the milk of a green coconut to which has been added the juice of a leaf crushed between the hands. A man recognised as being a good drummer then beats the drum (emtu'e), always to the right, with a mallet of young wood. Each time he stops the assistants shout yu.yu in chorus. In the evening a fire is lit at the foot of the new drum; they take it in turns to beat it and so it goes on for a day and the following night and for a week, if necessary, until the players feel the wood offers them no more resistance. this The owner then assembles all the participants for a meal. He kills a valuable pig (called burmao) for them The carver is paid with a ‘tusked’ pig (lewur). Beside the large carved drums there usually stands a smaller drum, a simple hollowed-out cylinder.76 P. Diolé gives us a more recent picture of these famous drums' They are particularly numerous and impressive in Ambrym. Some of them looked really old to me, in beautiful shining wood. Although they are all alike and made to a traditional design, a number of variations can be discovered. Sometimes, underneath the face, tiny hands are carved at the end of very short arms.77 Island of Malakula This is the second largest island of the archipelago, with a population of 1600 in an area of 2043 sq. km. On the north-east it is surrounded by various small islands which are important in inter island trading — Vao, Atchin, Wala and Rano. On the south-east must be added the Meskelynes Islands and the small island of Tomman to the south-west. The main island is very mountainous (Mt Penot 879m.) broken across with narrow valleys. The centre is practically uninhabited. Let us first take a look at the northern part of this large island. Here again we refer to information published by J. Guiart: The human geography of the region proves to be strangely independent of water sources. On the dry plateau, villages are often more than two hours’ walking distance from the nearest spring. Each village is situated at the head of a valley. A succession of habitations along the same valley is never encountered. The topographical arrangement of the region is extremely con fusing. A muddy path follows fences of plaited reeds the height of a man. On the other side individual yards can be seen where one or two huts are surrounded by a similar fence with a single, narrow, low opening. Each village is made up of one of several groups of homes interconnected by paths used mostly by women. These hamlets are usually laid out in a semi-circle within which there is an area exclusively reserved for the men: two independent parts can be made out — the dance-square (vet/amel) with its raised wooden drums and rows of upright stones embedded in the bush, and another square encircled by a high fence and surrounded by great clan huts {name!) arranged more or less in a circle.78 There are scarcely more than half a dozen of these great huts (name!) to a village. They have a name, that of the tribe — or they Fig. 96 Family house, Amok village (from photo by K. Muller, 1972, p. 00). Fig. 97 Part of Amok village (from a photo by Muller, 'Taboos and Magic rule Namba lives', National Geographic, Vol. 141, no. 1, Jan. 1972, p. 80). may even have two with the same name belonging to one tribe, when the latter is in the process of sharing. It has a roof with two sections resting on the ground, the gables blocked by a leaf wall, but the upper part under the ridge carving, Ponarat (see below) is open to let smoke escape from the fireplaces. The interior is divided in different places with bamboo beds surrounded by thick staves, near the door is a place for preparing and drinking kava, fireplaces and, at the back of the hut, fiat stones on which the skulls of the most recent dead are placed. The building of a namal is an important matter and related clans are called upon to collaborate. The work is organised two days at a time. The main elements needed for the framework have to be gathered . together under the supervision of an elder who gives directions as to the number and size. The transport to the village of the bamboo, cut by the people of the village of the clan responsible for the building, is assured by the men of another village in exchange for a yam cake (lap-lap) served without meat, and a kava session. Then there remains the provision of creepers to be used for ties. To define the proportions of the building, two small walls are first erected on the side; these are made of a few bamboos overlapped and fixed against short posts. Next comes the placing of the strong centre posts with the main joists running up to meet at the top of the former, supported on the ground and guided by the small bamboo wall. Eight or ten bamboos, previously carved at one end, each with a different pattern, are fixed lengthwise onto the joists, a tree-fern carving (the ponarat) will be put on the tip of the ridgepiece beam above the entrance.79 The ponarat: ridgepiece carving from a tree-fern root80: The ridge piece timbers of the naghamal finish at their back extremity in a carving cut in wood or the stumps of the tree-fern. Their main motif is always a human face, but on the other side there is the represent ation of an animal which might be a dog, lizard or a fish. On completion the ponarat is installed without any particular ritual, its carver having made it in exchange for a pig of moderate value; the only restriction being that it cannot be taken to the site of the hut by men other than those having attended more than one circumcision. The carver is in fact an obligatory member of one of the clans providing both circumcision surgeons (namél a mayak) and human victims offered to the conqueror in the unfortunate case of hostilities and whose members may not take part in any of the dances or rites connected with the rank-taking hierarchy.81 The installation over, and before eating, they take part in a double kava session; after everyone has drunk, part of the first brew — which v Fig. 98 Various Ponarats from the photographs of: a. L. Joubert, Ozeanische Totenbeschworung, Frank furt am Main, 1965, p. 27 h. Photographic collection of C. Coiffier c. The reverse of b. d. L. Joubert, op.cit., p. 26. e. Art of Oceania, Africa, and and the Americas from the Museum of Primitive Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1969, p. 41. f. L. Joubert, in Sculpture monumentale de NouveileGuinee et des Nouvelles Hebrides, 1961, p. 17. g. ibid, p. 19. h. ibid, p. 24. i. Arts primitifs dans les ateliers d'artistes, Paris, 1967, p. 155. j. F. Drilhon, Le peuple inconnu, Paris, 1955, p. 169, k. L. Joubert, op. cit. 1961, p. 28. J. ibid, p. 25. m. L'art et les sociétés primi tives a travers le monde, Paris, 1963, p. 177. n. M. Vaux, ‘Sculpture de faîtage, en racine de fougere, de Mallicolo', Journal de la Société des Oceanistes, Vol. VIII, no. 8, Dec. 1952, pl. IX. o. S. Fukumoto, Melanesian Art, Tokyo, 1976, p. 68. p. Ph. Diole, Les oublies du Pacifique, Flammarion, 1976, p. 176. l\ & * k Fig. 99 Ponarat positioned at the roof ridge of a men's house (from a photo by J. Bucher, Sculpture monumentale d’Oceanie, Paris, 1961, p. 45. Fig.100 House frame under construction in north Malakula (from a photo by E. Guidoni, Primitive Architecture, New York, 1978, p. 133). Fig. 101 Interior of a nameI at Amok, north Malakula (from a photo by F. Drilhon, Le peuple inconnu, Paris, 1955, p. 85). was prepared in a limited quantity — is poured as a libation to the dead at the foot of the first post close to where the entrance is to be After the meal, clan members provided pigs of different value according to the prestige they wish to acquire or which it is necessary to maintain; the slaughtered animals are distributed to the people of the other clans who came to help The lower jaws of these pigs will be kept, together with their tusks, and put up outside, one on each horizontal bamboo. Next, bamboos are placed, the number of which mark the rows of covering materials to be prepared One man works outside, perched on the framework, three others on the inside pass him the coverings and sew them with flexible rattan. The covering of palmleaves, bent and pinned onto a reed, is placed very closely together. This covering, which is over 50 cms. thick, is said to be bullet-proof. As usual, the people of the clan provide the workers with food and kava. The clan owners reserve to themselves the covering of the top and that of the back part of the hut which is without any opening. The top is covered with wide leaves held in place by logs. After the lighting of the first fire for drying out the floor of the interior, a witch-doctor (pêla/varat) comes to chase away any germs liable to be in the hut. Holding in his hand a bunch of nir grass and strong-smelling leaves (crotons?) (ro ne/tama) and striking the interior partitions, he sings under his breath and then casts the leaves into the fire where they crackle and produce thick smoke; he will then hang up wild kava leaves on the inside, and, for five days, only the two men who feed the fire may enter the still open hut. At the end of this time, the witch-doctor takes a leaf of native cabbage and gives some of it to all present, who chew it and spit it out. This lifts the prohibition — at least for all those who have eaten cabbage or sugarcane. Five more days will have to pass before men, having eaten food containing salted water, will be allowed to enter. To lift the latter prohibition, the witch-doctor will take a handful of leaves from a bamboo containing salt water, and each person will receive a piece to chew and spit out. Once the floor is well dried out they prepare the fireplace for the oven, lap-lap, the wash-basin, and the fireproof stones which will be brought from afar. The inauguration of the oven is done by roasting a long yam on the stones; the yam is brought along whole without having been detached from its vine which has been carefully unravelled. Served on a dish of coconut leaves, this yam will be eaten at an informal gathering of the elders, without its having been peeled or grated. The vine will be hooked onto the joists on the inside of the hut and the Fig.102 Village plan, central Malakula (from Speiser, pi. 10 (9)). an abandoned village, closed off a NameI -t— gate in the fence to Tenmaru Fig. 103 y^9e plan of Lexan, north Malakula (from J. Guiart, Dec. 1952, p. Fig. 104 Front view of a nameI at Lexan (namel eya), north Malakula. Fig. 105 Namel, central Malakula. Nuvuffl'but Fig. 106 Schematic perspective view of a house frame, north-west Malakula (from A.B. Deacon, Malekula: a vanishing people in the New Hebrides, G. Routledge and Sons Ltd., London, 1934, p. 34. -Nuguīnbgumb Fig. 107 Garden fence at Lexan, north-west Malakula (from J. Guiart, Dec. 1952, pl. VI). plaited dish hung from one of the centre posts. After the consumption! of kava, the inauguration of the oven gives rise to a first great feast of lap-lap garnished with a pig. In the course of the following thirty days a lap-lap will be prepared every evening, to which everyone is welcome. Only after this period will the clan members worry about closing the front of the hut. All that is left for them to do is to thank those who thatched the house with a present of a few pigs of little value and ‘currency’ mats, until such time as they themselves will have occasion to offer the same service. The namel will become truly sacred, in a manner of speaking, only in the process of its being used as a place of burial; the dried skulls placed at the back will supply the occasion for prayers and libations to the dead. By its construction and ornamentations, the namel proclaims the clan’s prestige. It is the men’s meeting-house for drinking kava, feasting or chatting about one thing or another; or for more important talks. It is a place of cultural value where the dead are buried towards the back and the skulls, stripped of flesh, are placed on flat stones. Strangely enough ritual is individual, even for prayer meetings inside the namel, each one addressing himself to the most recent of his dead. Finally, to a certain extent by the strength of its construction, it offers the necessary protection to sleep in relative safety. A clan without a namel is unthinkable.62 Politically, the village hardly takes shape except through its chiefly system. This is not defined by habitation grouped around the area, but by virtue of the “square" surrounded by the great huts (a/vèr, ndë/ndale): this square is a communal one for a certain number of clans. In the north and east it is the dance-square that determines the local group. On the 'Big-Nambas’ plateau this square or vetlamel corresponds to a great chiefly system; there is only one for several villages. Chiefly fences are made from reeds broken off at the base but not cut; in the process of plaiting the tip can be bent towards the top part of the fence, the loops symbolising in a general way the pigs already killed by the chief and those to come.83 “The fences of intertwined reeds surrounding the homes and demarcating property, form kinds of alley-ways offering protection from wild pigs and concealing the insides of enclosures from the view of passers-by. Their lay-out has been studied in terms of the relation ship between different members of a family. Food-safes are made of intertwined reeds in the same way as the fences.This food storehouse is made in 48 hours.”84 If one compares Speiser's plan No 4, Plate 10, with that of Fig. 108 Two men of the Big Nambas beating drums on the occasion of the killing of a pig, Amok (from K. Muller, Jan. 1972, p. 79). Fig. 109 Dance area with large slit-drums, Batarmul, north Malakula (from J. Guiart, 1970, p. 15). Toghvanu (Tolamp) Pete-Hul r Peter-lhi l Venu Singon Norohure east coast of ___ ■_. Malakula xX„|U//|j% Atchin "~f Emil-Lep Emil-Marur Emil-Parav Senhar Pweter-Tsuts Olep Rurvar r Ama (Awul) .L . [Mel-Nator (Tungenewit) w fPwelut I Lohwor (Sanaliw) Rano 'x—/ ^ / TV* '4 « f f\/r.v 4 s. vyÿy\i$- • .J, w Nor sup Uripiv Emil Periv Bwot N’bauru \ Lauwi X Uri ^ Fig. 110 Map of the islands of north-east Malakula (from Speiser, p. 28). Tevuri Ngaim-Ngalu Bwot Nambwe Wilawi J. Guiart, certain similarities are to be found: houses laid out in a star formation around a dance square. In Speiser’s map we can see a man’s house backing onto an enclosure surrounded by fences and three women's houses facing this enclosure. Behind the men’s house, seven family houses facing the same way as the former and two other family homes at right angles. On Guiart’s plan, five nagama/surround the dance square, three of these are enclosed and two other family homes, also fenced in, make up three hamlets visible from the village of Léxan. The plan of the site (No 9, Plate 10) given by Speiser is one of the only ones, among all the other plans of the northern islands, which does not present a layout in which various buildings are centred in one spot. On the other hand we find semi-detached nagamal in pairs with their backs to an enclosure, two pairs of women’s houses,85 the house of a man of rank, five family dwellings placed parallel side by side and a beating site for three drums surrounded by stones. The Great Slit Drums of Malakula (Big Nambas Region) Among the Big Nambas there are also drums with human faces. I saw only two of them on the Amok square.66 Among the Big Nambas the Namengi festivities are connected with the erection of a drum on the dance square. J Guiart writes, “The drum is called Khèmao after the wood from which it is made, its hollow, nélénekhmai (the stomach of the drum) and its slit mbwenekhmao (the mouth of the drum). First of all the base of the chosen tree trunk is burned, the tree not being felled until it has dried out on the spot for about a year. The felling is done by a chief, assisted by men who must be his elders in rank, after having again burned the base of the tree to facilitate the work of the adze. Once the tree is felled, they remove the branches, then it is rolled along until it rests on thick logs, lastly it is hidden under a heap of leaves and grass. Next they go to see the carver, a member of one of the clans called nensbalian of lower rank — the one who knows how to carve the trunk since he knows the spell ensuring its success. The chief’s role ends there. The carver and his helpers come to see the trunk, turning it this way and that to find the side most suited to the hollowing out of the opening. The ghamal was the central house in the village and was built in connection with the Maki system. It was the largest house in the place. The village of Peter-ihi had two dance-squares by the name of Etine and Norolu. These squares were called vanu. The drum-beating sites on these squares were in front of a small stone wall under an enormous banyan tree. The general name for drum throughout the island was na-mbe and the band was made up of drums placed horizontally in the ground; the largest was called tinan or more simply ‘the mother'. The slimmest and smallest one was called tarine and another quite small one was called gheluvghe. If a sufficient number of men was available and enough pigs killed, a fourth type of drum was erected, called petur. The horizontal drums, placed directly on the ground are of two kinds; the larger one called ru-rurghen and a set of smaller, portable ones called sarune. The drumsticks used for beating all these drums are called masan. The construction of a ghamal (after J.W. Layard): Each village has only one ghamal; the one erected in Pete-hul was called Ber hangawul with reference to the ten central pillars which supported this building, 25 metres long by seven metres wide and about five metres high. It was built on the raised side of the dance square and did not seem to be facing any particular direction insofar as the former ghamal's position was concerned. The central pillars were called na-mber(u) (post) or more precisely ber tur (upright post). The ridgepole was called wombat and was extended at each side by the carving of a falcon, with spread wings (Naba). The rear pediment of the house was called bughute and the closed front part no-ghon ne-him, the side of the house on which the bird carving rested — on an extra post — simbe na-mbal (the seat of the falcon) in alignment with the centre posts. Placed parallel on either side of these lines were a similar number of lateral posts (bermele) also made from very hard wood and supporting the wall-plate70 beams [wobu) which were clad in cycad leaves (ro met). From the ridgepole to the ground a certain number of bamboo rafters (na-ras) were held in place by other bamboos parallel to the wall-plate (kara-kara). The thatch was made with a quantity of palm-leaf tiles (ni-at) which were made by the women, and fixed on canes called ne-limbe rarah. A bamboo wall, her-ghor, was fixed on the sides of the building against the lateral posts. In front of the house was a triangular space with a bamboo fence, called hu rti-ar (the birth enclosure) since this place was reserved for confinements. It also contained a large dolmen reserved for sacrifices at high and low Maki ceremonies. Another dolmen, vet simbesimbe (sitting stone) was in front of the rear side of the building. A Maki for the building of a ghamal is called maki ne-him; it is divided into two parts: the building and consecration of the building Fig. 112 A ceremonial site (after J. Layard, 1942), at the village of Pete-hul, with drums and stone monuments. falcon sculpture (nambai) roof beam central post (wombat) bamboo rafters (na-ras) (na-mber or ber-tur) palm-thatch bamboo panels (kara-kara) (ni-at) wooden panel (wobu) lower walls of bamboo small side post ( ber-mete) ' posterior section of the ghamal (bughute or bughto ne-him) ' raised ground' open front of the building (ne-ghen, ne-him) bamboo partition (huni-ar) k bamboo wall (her-ghor) (vet simbe-simbe) curved section of bamboo wall (embere) post supporting the falcon (simbe na-mbal) dolmen (vet simbe-simbe) Fig, 113 Vertical section and plan of a ghamal of Pete-hul called Ber hangawul (lit. ten central posts’) (from J. Layard, 1942, p. 441). Fig. 115 Gable-end of a ghamal,Mao, 1979 (from a photo by C.Coiffier, 1979). Fig. 116 Cérémonial site at Port-Sandwich at the beginning of the twentieth century (from a photo collection of J. Fivel, in C. Maurel, L’exotisme colonial, R. Laffont, 1980, p. 33). special pigs’ tusks laid upon a stone table 3 circles 3 circles of pigs’ tusks of pigs’tusks 100 tusks on the upper side 100 pigs' tusks on the lower side platform 3 figures 3 figures with birds' heads with birds’ heads shell of a canoe balance Fig. 117 Multi-coloured carved support post for a bird figure, forming one end of a roof beam, Vao. (from a photo by P. O'Reilly, Dec. 1949, pi. V). © © E a ghamal Fig. 118 Village plan of Pete-hul, with part of the villages of Togh-vanu and Peter-lhi, Vao (from Speiser, pi. 10 (6)). • \ Peter - Ihi mens path TOGH - VANÜ La-mbot-na-ninge TO LAMP idrums i_^ dance area of Togh-vanu .. -"'r Z:'VCC'*'"i " h?:;:: :-. . ; dance area ofr Talamp a men’s path -----women's path La-mbet-ra PETE - HUL I /|:« a - ghamal road divided, in two sections house of ?: '\v dance area of initiation ? • -.7 .L - Pete-Hui :: 300 pieds a ghamal Fig, 119 Plan of the twin villages of Pete-hul and Togh-vanu, Vao (from J.Layard, 1942, map IV, p. 69). Fig. 111 Bird figurehead for canoe prow (from a photo by Coiffier, 1979). Fig. 120 Upper section of a vertical drum from Venu, Vao. Two pig jaws are hung on the drum (from J. Layard, p. 347). and the erection and consecration of the two dolmens placed at the ends. The place to be hollowed out is marked calculated on the length of a large-sized man. The correct measurement is taken with a creeper fixed in the axis of the trunk tapping it at each end to mark the tip of what will be the slit; in the meantime the bark of the tree is scraped off with a shell, thus leaving a mark upon the wood. Work can then begin on the hollowing out of the trunk, which is roughed-out here and there. But before proceeding the trunk must again be covered with leaves and the carvers must go to the chief to get from him a hen, a yam'and a kava root (malëkh). The day the hollowing-out is finished, they carve the eyes, metokhmao, with their inter-communicating cavities. The drum is pulled along to its site beside the dance-square where it is erected in the hole prepared for it by pushing it up from behind.87 "During the wars in ancient times the enemy dead were denied the rites which were their due; they were hung by the foot by a creeper or plaited rope put through the eyes of the drum; corpses were left to rot before the bones were thrown away in the bush.’’86 The Island of Vao This is several leagues off the north-east coast of the island of Malakula. Compared with its area it is very densely populated (with many hundreds of inhabitants) many of whom, keep gardens on the large island opposite. J.W. Layard has left an excellent study of the lay-out of this island. He depicted two main divisions, the upper part facing Malakula comprising two villages, Pete-hul and Togh-vanu and the lower part, facing the ocean, comprising two pairs of villages, Peterihi and Venu, Singon and Norohure.89 The different dance-squares of the villages are aligned in a north west, south-east direction in the centre of the island. All around could be seen a whole network of small stone walls demarcating family plots of land and sometimes made higher with bamboo fences or plaited cane. The island of Vao's rank-taking hierarchy was called na Maki. “The Maki cycle is divided into three stages. The first is marked by erecting a drum; the second by a sacrificial stone altar leaning on an upright stone, flanked in front by a human-shaped wooden pole, each of which supports the bird-shaped ridgepole; and the third stage by the building of the same monument added to a stone platform, the Fig. 121 Drum orchestra, Vao (from a photo in Nouvelle-Caledonie, Nouvenes-neDnaes, Wallis and Futuna, L'Agence de la France d’Outre Mer, Paris, 1953, p. 65). Fig.122 Drum orchestra, Vao (from a photo in Nouvelle-Caledonie, Nouvelles-Hebrides, Wallis and Futuna, l’Agence de la France d’Outre Mer, Paris, 1953, p. 65). U c/iA/v / . ' 'I ' V/ Fig. 124 Graveyard with wooden sculpture and stone platforms, Atchin). r— Fig. 125 Grave-sites and drum orchestra, Atchin. Fig. 126 Framework for a funeral monument (from a sketch by H. Tailhade, 1979. latter thus being the concrete symbol of the highest order, although it is less ornate. It is there that the most precious pigs will be sacri ficed.” 9” Across the island one could make out men's paths crossing the dance-squares and women's roads studiously avoiding them. The dance squares were edged with quantities of stone monuments and planted with great trees which afforded shade. The ghamal was the central house in the village and its con struction was connected with the institution of the Maki. It was by far the largest building. The village of Peter-ihi had two dance areas (vanu): Etine and Norulu. The rows of drums stood below an enormous banyan tree, in front of a low stone wall. J. Layard offers a satisfying explanation of the symbolism of the stone table. It was intended to represent a grotto on the road to the land of death, home of the bisexual spirit, Lehevhev, guardian of the way, who would devour the dead person en route to the volcano of Ambrym if he could not offer the compensation of a pig, whose loin must be buried with the dead person’s corpse. Through the sacrifice of a pig of great valve, whose hind feet had been placed upon the stone table, the incumbent of a new rank identifies himself with the guardian of the road of death, thus placing himself above the communities of the dead and the living alike. The construction of a ghamal (from U. Layard): Each village has one ghamal. That erected a Pete-hul was called Ber hangawul, in reference to the ten central posts (na-mberu). Supporting its 25m length, 7m width and 5m height. It was constructed upon the raised side of the dance area. The roofbeam (worn bat) was extended at each end by the model of a falcon with wings extended (nabal). The anterior of the building was called bughute and the closed anterior naghon ne-hina; the front of the building, where the bird sailpture rests upon a secondary post, simbe na-mbal (the falcon’s seat) is in alignment with the central posts. On either side of this line are planted a similar number of parallel secondary posts (ber mele), also made of very hard wood. From the roof the ground, bamboo rafters are held in place (kara-kara). The thatched roof is of palm tree (ni-at), made by the women, and fixed upon a base of reeds (ne-limbe rardh). At the sides of the building, against the lateral posts, a bamboo wall is fixed (her-ghor). In front of the building is a triangular area, formed by a bamboo fence (hu ni-ar) and called the birth area, far this enclosed area is reserved for child-birth (see Fig. 113). A maki, consecrated upon construction of the ghamal is known as maki ne-him. It has two parts: the construction and consecration of the building; and the erection of consecration of two dolmens placed at each end. At the felling and transporting of the central posts there is dancing (velal), accompanied by the distribution of food (masean). The type of tree used is called na-tor. Sacrifices and feasting takes place upon the felling of the first of these trees. Each post has an ‘owner’, who is responsible for the sacrifices and food distribution at the erection of that post. Similar rituals attend the construction of the dolmens and large stones associated with high and law maki. When all the posts are in place, they are consecrated en masse and the drums are used to call the community together to the dance area where an orator says a few words to honour the new building. After an interval of several years, during which food, pigs, yams, etc. are stored up, the erection of the central front post can take place, followed by different rites. Finally, a male pig (meltek) is sacrificed or the ghamal by one or two men of rank {na-humbe se). The ghamal then acquires a rank comparable to that of these men, thus becoming taboo to women. 92 Many museums have examples of small posts, around Zm high, from small stone altars associated with great manoliths, usually having an anthropomorphic carved wooden post supporting a large bird sculpture. Father O’Reilly grant the following description of such a post, kept at the Museum of African and Oceanic Art in Paris: "the sculpted part of the post measured Zm 15 from head to foot. The breadth of the shoulders was 35cms. It was carved in hardwood and represented a standing man, arms folded across his body. The figure supported, in a hollow in the wood above his head, a bird in flight with a wingspan of around 3m 40.” 93 The bird was made from two roots of a stump of metalbal wood, enough for the farming of the two wings and the head, gathered at Pete-hul, on the upper side of the dance area. The body of the bird served to shelterthe figure below, which rested on a stone table. 94 The two plans of Speiser and Layard, though drawn at different periods, correspond in the main details: the general organisation of the village, the dance area, placement of the drums and of the ghamal. However, Speiser represented only one section of the villages of Vao, 28 houses in one direction and 23 in the other 95 on the two main axes. Both authors have left a legacy of photos: the men’s house, the dance area with its different drums, paths bordered by low stone walls and bamboo enclosures, altars of sacrifice, rows of monoliths, etc. In 1979, in spite of the installation of the mission and the school, the sites described by Speiser and Layard have not radically changed, although O’Reilly says 96 : "Vao still cleans its pathways, but there are scarcely any drums remaining other than half-rotted old specimens.” I found many aspects of village organisation, however, much the same as they were 50 years ago (see fig. 123). The drum orchestra of Vao The erecting and consecration of the big drums (ba-mbe) is an essential part of the institution of maki. Composition of a Vao drum orchestra includes: Verticle drums, with a human face carved about the slit, which are beaten with a single baton — the mother drum (tunoin) is the largest; a thinner, smaller drum is called tarine-, another smaller drum is the gheluvghe; if there are sufficient men available for the work and for killing the pigs, there will be yet another ‘baby’ drum of the 'mother' (petur). Horizontal drums, not carved and used with two batons — a large horizontal drum on the ground (ru-rurghen)-, and a certain number of small portable drums (solrune). All batons are called masan. The solid part of the drum between the end of the slit and the top of the drum is called the pet vatu (the head of the stone), and is carved with a human face representing an ancestor97 . The Island of Atchin On this island we find a fairly similar distribution of population in a double exogamous village, Ruruar, the two twin sides of which are named Pweter-tsuts and Olep on the higher side. On the lower side there are two double villages each making up an exogamous 76 unit, Emil-lep and Emil-marur, Emil-parav and Senhar. ‘‘The men’s houses of Atchin differed from those of Vao in that they had a few side walls and a few front-sloping roofs, while the front gable end walls were reduced to as low as 1.50 metres. There stood the statues of ancestors and were areas for use in bad weather.” 98 Various photographs taken by the same author show us a dance place with stone platforms, standing wooden drums, porches, ceremonial poles, and designs of sacrificial altars made of carved posts supporting a ridgepole extended by a carving of a bird with outspread wings, with slender rafters criss-crossing overhead and supporting small-leaf roofing. This type of altar design must have been exported to Vao". The Island of Wala The population was divided into simple exogamous units, with two separate villages on the upper side, Pwetlut and Lohwor. There were four villages in the lower one, Ama and Awul, Tungenewit and Mel-nator. The Isle of Rano It is possible that there was a good deal of contact between this island and Wala: "Wala men marry Rano women and Rano men marry Wala women.”76 Speiser’s photographs show us a statue, over three metres high, with a face taking up over half of it and a drum such as those of Vao but with the carving of a human form above the head (see Fig: 127). The Isle of Uripiv There were three villages on one side, Emil periv, Bwot n’bauru and Lauwi, and four on the other side, Tevuri, Ngaim-ngala, Bwot nambwe and Wilawi, the first two making an exogamous pair.100 The Small Nambas of Southern Malakula They are even more isolated than the Big Nambas villages previously studied and it is very difficult to gain access to them without a guide. “They are cut off by flooding from the coastal regions during the wet season from December to May The Mbotgote 101 numbering approximately 150 are spread over three villages and a few hamlets in the south of the central region of the island. Each village includes a men's hut and family habitations very reminiscent of buildings in other regions of the central archipelago of the New Hebrides. A sloping roof of palm leaves over a wooden framework is reinforced with material made from fern stalks and, during the hurricane season, by the pulpy stalks of banana plants and palm fronds. The huts are distinguished by their rounded front and rear side, the rear part often being reserved for pigs " "The Small Nambas villages are composed of a ceremonial square, bunsar, a men's meeting house complex, amel, and a few family huts. These houses are 25 to 30 feet long by 15 to 18 feet wide. They are thatched with natangora leaves plaited over reeds so as to form plaques which are placed on the roof like tiles. The inside has only one section, a single entrance, 4 feet high, 3 feet wide on the front side. There are two fireplaces, one for the women’s cooking and one for the men’s. The amel or men’s house is inside an enclosure on the ceremonial square; at the entrance two long stems of forest cane show that it is an area forbidden to the uninitiated."102 “All gardens have solid wooden fences to keep out the greedy pigs, domestic or wild_____ The Nimangi is a hierarchical society within which, through certain rites, a man never ceases to rise, thereby gaining prestige and importance. The size and grandeur of funeral rites are dependent upon the rank held during life in the Nimangi hierarchy by every man or woman ’’ "The body of the deceased is carried on mats and covers and placed in one of the family huts, with the head turned towards the wall and the feet towards the centre. The body is next put on the funeral stretcher covered with leaves, then placed on the rafters under the roof. It spends a month overhead in the community hut.” The deceased will ‘re-appear’ at the last funeral ceremony in the form of a vegetable fibre effigy (in his likeness), the rambaramb,63 "Having been borne along, by a man of equivalent status to the deceased, to the matanhal, where the path reaches the limit of the village, the rambaramb leaves the naghamal where it was made, to remain there by the drums, hanging vertically under a wooden Fig. 129 Men's houses, south Malakula (from Speiser, pi. 15 (2&3)) Fig. 130 Interior of the house of the former chief Tambwebalimbank, Mbotgote de Lendombwey village, south Malakula (from photo by Muller, 1973, p. 12). b) d) Fig. 131 Tree-fern roof sculptures, Dirak village, south Malakula (from photos by L. Joubert). Dimensions are: a. 1 m 56 b. 1 m 93 c. 1 m 55 d. 1 m 20 e. (front) and ’f. (back), 1m 75 (a.b.d.e/f from Sculpture monumentale de Nouvelle-Guinee et des NouvellosHebrides, Ed. Jeanne Bucher, Paris, 1961, pp. 32-35; c. from G. Schlocker, Ozeanische Totenbeschworung, 1965, p. 28). Fig. 132 Lendombwey villager carrying Tambweba11mbank’s rhambaramb. Construction of the effigy: its base, as for other items of local art, is a wooden frame covered by a reddish clay and secured with vines. The arms and legs are of bamboo, the body of tree-fern. The skull of the deceased forms the head. In moulding the shape, the various parts are stuffed so that they resemble the deceased as closely as possible. Specially treated cloth is pasted on the skull for "hair” and smeared with clay. Pigs' tusks are placed around the forearms, recalling the number of pigs killed by the deceased during the course of his progress to a position of high status. A rhambaramb of very high rank, such as this example, has secondary heads, small faces positioned on each side of the neck. (K. Muller, 1976, p. 120). Fig. 1 3 3 Men's house, south Malakula iÆ2# taidng^f very Speiser, ranKerem' high re'atin9 to the °f S^soThTailrr 1 9 2 3 , pi. 1 0 0 (2)) ( ™ framework decorated with leaves and flowers. The men, in mourning and covered with ashes, then exchange pigs of low value with the son of the deceased, marking the end of their mourning. After that the effigy will be placed in the naghamal. No rite will be attached to this, nor will it occasion excessive respect.”103 South West Bay Region J.W. Layard singles out three districts speaking different dialects: Mewun, Seniang and Wilemp (Ewut). Each village has its na-amel, men’s house, in which the skulls of the high ranking dead are kept. In front of this house is a circular space, liw-an-ant, with a group of split drums in the middle. In this area numerous circles of stones are to be found — sometimes with cycads planted in the centres of the circles.104 The Seniang region, whose inhabitants are today Christian, are concentrated on the coast of the Bay of Suroit. They were formerly spread over a number of hamlets linked by systems of related local groups, each claiming the same hamlet of origin where the main altar, if not the only altar, was situated — the altar of the clan to which the inhabitants belonged. Each of these clans was linked to an animal or vegetable species, most often an edible one and they avoided touching, wounding or eating it as the case might be. 106 Deacon gives us a plan of the village of Seniang (with a few photographs) situated in the south of South West Bay.106 He contrasts the two terms, igah (profane) and ileo (sacred). This is the reason the village is divided into two; on the one hand the location for homes occupied especially by the women and children, and on the other, fhe amel, the men's house containing certain sacred objects, and the dance square, in the middle of which stand the split drums. A reed fence naai seve (the wooden fence) separates this sacred part reserved for the initiated men from the profane part reserved for women. The amel itself is divided up into as many compartments, called Nimangki, as there are ranks in the graded status society. Deacon compares it with the villages of Sarembal more to the north of the island. Two long avenues flanked by upright stones (109 pairs on one side, 60 pairs on the other) open into a circular space, 60' in diameter, surrounded by 34 monoliths. In the middle of this square stand three large split drums, the largest one of which is called the mother drum. In the middle of these drums is a rectangular stone platform (loghola) used by the drummers. On the edge of this square is the na’amel separated from it by 17 upright stones inter linked by other stones which are lying on the ground. This sort of wall Fig. 136 A drum orchestra at Mendu, south-west Malakula, 1950 (from J Guiart, Oceanie, 1963, p. 115). Fig. 139 A child of Mbogote beating the drum (from a photo by S. Abell and E.R. Sorenson, 1973, p. 36). '|S *ë Oiiti C)cj,<£> 1 'mils Fig. 140 Village plan, south Malakula (from Speiser, 1923, pi. 10 (4)). a. men's house Fig. 141 Young folk in front of a house in South West Bay (from B. Deacon 1934, pl. II (B)). Fig. 142 Men's house and drums at Meriver, 1891 (from a photo of Archives CCPV from 'Niu Hebridis Art Festivol’, Nius Leta, Dec. 1979, no. 3). Fig. 143 Village plan, Seniang a. men's house Fl a :-: — b. family houses 'W c. reed fence d. surrounding bush *• JT" e. the drums Fig. 144 Drum orchestra near a reed fence (naai seve), Seniang, south-west Malakula. * Nangurangurv* Nevat j T'. , Z. avenue of 109 pairs of stones /. I■ '/' . - ® Logholar . ‘ avenue of •' • ,‘ ' ' /. , V 60pairs ofstones \ V. ' -, *■ . . ' •" giant ban y an Fig. 145 Dance area of Sarembal village, with stone sculpture a. naamal d. Newereh nen nambwilahai b. S'nen nambwi laghai (main drum) • sculpted monoliths c. Nitugun nen nambwi laghai Fig. 146 Geometrical sand drawing, Senian Fig. 147 Geometrical sand drawing, Mewun, South West Bay (Figs. 146, 147 from Deacon, Vol. 64, pp. 1676 171). is reminiscent of the wooden fence (naaV seve) of the village of Seniang. It is here called nangurangu nev'at. Opposite, on the other side of the square, is an enormous banyan tree and round about are the dwellings built in rectangular formation where the women and children sleep. They have a two-piece roofing of sago-palm leaves. On one of its fronts there is a semi-circular porch where pigs are enclosed and where people sometimes sit. Occasionally the back of the house is apsidal instead of rectangular but this projection is an integral part of the wall — not a porch or verandah. The entrance to the house is through a rectangular door at the front. To build a house, the men place three forked pillars aligned in the ground with the ridgepole on the top. Measurements are taken with the help of creepers. As for rafter making, B. Deacon relates an interesting technique. Bamboos are cut at twice their useful length, they are then placed on the ridge of the roof and a fire is lit underneath. The heat causes the bamboos to split lengthways on account of the moisture they contain. The split bamboos are placed on the ground and a stick placed crosswise through them. Both lengths of each bamboo are then bent until they are more or less parallel and the whole thing is lifted up to the top of the house with a stick. Once the framework of the house is thus in place, the thatching can be put on. The construction of the amel is similar to that of the house except for the additions of straight poles nsai huhu which crisscross at the tip each side of the roofing above the thatch. A long piece of wood parallel to the roof-ridge beam is placed on the uppermost part of the poles: this is called navan temes (fruit). The amel has all the appearance of a head; thus the front is known as no on amel (the face of the amel), the door is the mouth, nimbongon amel, the lower part of the roof on either side of the amel is the hair, nindilghin na amel. There are two central posts placed at the front and at the back of the amel, one, the one beside the door, is called numbou morot (man post) and has a carved side at the top called ne on numbou (the front of the post), the other one at the back is called numbou milamo (woman post). Deacon also relates that Mewun and the north-west region houses are generally very similar to those of Seniang, though not as tall. In hierarchical societies the passing of one rank to another very often entails the building of a fairly large monument — a dolmen, an arrangement of upright stones, the planting of certain plants or trees, the erection of posts carved out of wood or tree-ferns, various shelters such as the Nitemes amel, a large building (amel) or the decoration of a building already in existence (cf J. Guiart’s pictures of the rank or status hierarchy in Bwenekhay, p. 57, and also of the North Ambrym hierarchy, p.38). Sand drawings In this region a whole range of symbolic sand drawings were to be found, such as on the island on Ambrym where this practice continues to this day. The old men would practice this art, the meaning of which still remains something of a mystery. Success in this graphic exercise was a matter of great prestige to the artist who would often give a commentary on his work. Certain pictures could not be seen by the uninitiated.107 The artist would squat at his work, he would flatten the sand in front of him with the back of his hand, and would then draw up a network of parallel and perpendicular lines. He would next run his finger between the different intersections of the lines until he had a geometrical graphic. The Island of Tomman J. Guiart published various plates of the nagamal of this island in the south of Malakula. They differed little from those of the South West Bay region.108 Table of Bwenekhay Hierarchy (south-east Malakula)109 Grade Title Monument A red flower, tarbon, planted in the ground. A mannequin modelled over a vegetable-fibre framework, with red arms and spread legs. Complete human effigy, carved out of tree-fern. Idem (This time the participants are covered with red body paintings). Three parallel, different sized carvings; the largest including face and hands, the others with face only. Human reclining effigy. Erect statue of hard wood. Idem Tree-fern statue placed under a roof. 1. Khomvelip Terlerbruas 2. Sapdral Varlau 3. Lobwis Rabon 4. Balro Khalung 5. Nangov Khabang 6. 7. 8. 9. Taromb Nater Abwil Mail Khamar Longlamb Khamal-navur yar Balias Fig. 148 Gable end olanaghamal atTomman, south Malakula (from a photo in E. Guidoni, 1978, p. 134). Fig. 149 Wooden sculpture sumburan), with small phallic figure, Tomman (from J. Guiart, 1963, p. 128). (mwelBun Fig. 150 Naghamàl in the dance area, Tomman (from Guiart, 1970, p. Fig. 151 Large men's house at Tomman (from Guiart, 1963, p. 121) Fig. 152 Carved ancestral figures used as posts for a small house at Tomman (from a photo in G. Schlocker, 1965, p. 21). Fig. 153 Men's house at Bwinembar, South West Bay, Malakula, and detail (from C. Van den Broek D'Obrenan, 1939). Diagram of the framework of an amel. a. the head of the post (noon n mbu) b. the male post (numbu morot) c. the entrance of the amel d. naai huhu e. the female post (numbu milamp) f. navan femes Fig. 155 Diagram of the gable of an amel, decorated for the rituals of Nalawan Amel Sesmandur, Southwest Bay (from Deacon, 1934, p. 409). • a. door b. sesmandur c. skulls over the sesmandur d. carved faces e. niselev, the eel f. face representing the eel in the niselev's mouth g. the niselev’s tongue h. the leaf, mbwingmbwingamb k. wooden posts, nitortor Fig. 156 Outhouse (amel nitemes) construc ted tor a ceremony of the taking of rank Nevelvel of Nimangki (from Deacon, 1934, p. 303). a. femes b. naai tewlang e. havan mbatia f. malandr plant g. stones forming the nonggob Fig. 157 Three figures of Tar-henunggor stand before a tree encircled by stones, South West Bay (from Layard, 1928, pi. XIV (3)). Fig. 156 A cycas pa/m (nimweil), encircled by stones (from Layard, 1928, pi. XV (4)). 10. Nangov na rpweleum 11. Lakhbau Mweleum Khamat 12. Var Tibarap Maur 13. LePotspots Maur 14. Nitits madrur Khamat Modelled skull fixed at the end of a pole with a circle of flowers at the base. Carved wooden pole with 20 human effigies, placed diagonally and painted red, over the mens’ great house. Standing stone — an effigy of a man placed beside a drum erected at the same time. Two hard wood statues placed inside the house and surrounded by flowers. Wooden statue placed inside the hut; outside, the erection of a drum. (Table after J. Guiart, page 129. Primitive Art & Society Paris 1963). The Island of Paama The island is of volcanic origin and has an area of 33 sq. km. It is a few kilometres from the island of Ambrym and has no river. Its 3000 inhabitants are spread over five villages, Liro, Tahi, Taal Netan, Wailep and Loulep, all of which are situated on the coast. The Island of Lopevi This is a volcano with a circumference of 1413 metres, sometimes given to violent eruptions. Villages once established there have had to be evacuated and the island is now uninhabited. The Island of Epi This is one of the largest islands in the archipelago with an area of 445 sq. km., but one of the least populated. In Lamen, family enclosures were separated by reed fences. The dance squares were outside the villages, whereas the men’s houses were built on the inside, as in Vao. Family homes in the northern region resemble those of the Port Sandwich region on the island of Malakula.110 As on the islands of Ambrym and Malakula, the drum-beating areas were part of the dance square. But the faces represented on these drums were smaller. As on Ambrym, there were also stone tables and tree-fern carvings.1” A few details concerning the numerous names and transcriptions for the men’s house in the northern islands of the Vanuatu archi pelago (after J.W. Layard — “Stone Men of Malakula”, London, 1942, P- 60). Very often words are combined with the indefinite article, na. But Ambrym south of the island of Malakula Paama Lovepi Epi I Tongoa c^> Tongariki Fig. 159 Map of part of the isles of central Vanuatu Fig. 160 Stone table for pig sacrifices, with two tree-fern Sculptures, at Lamen, Epi (from Speiser, pi. 104 (4)). Fig. 161 Drum orchestra, Lamen (from Speiser, pi. 104 ( 6)). V - vx^,1 VjftPjffilj; it would seem that the transcription of various names by different travellers, missionaries and ethnologists was very varied and that the same word was also spread over the islands, in a corrupted form, through Bichelamar. In the Torres Islands In the Banks Islands But in Motlav On Aoba Island On Santo Island (St. Philip’s & St James’ Bay) (Nogugu) they use the term: gamel (Rivers) or gemel (Durrad) : gamal (Codrington, Rivers) : nagmel (Vienne) : gamali (Rivers) : gamali (Rivers) : na-gamal, na-gomali (Deacon) : Komal, Komali, Komel (Rivers) : mal (Tattevin) (Nogugu & Epi) fn the south of Raga (Pornowol) On Pentecost On Ambrym : nakamai (Muller) : himel (Rivers) imel (Deacon) mel (Guiart) On Malakula (Seniang) (Lamhimbu) Big Nambas) : na-ame! (Deacon) : (g) amal (Deacon) : ghamal (Deacon) naghamel (Guiart) : ami! (Rivers) : n’amal, n'amel (Rivers) : amel (Muller) : hamal (Deacon) : gamali (Deacon) (Port Sandwich) (Aulua) Small Nambas) (Lagalag) In the west of Epi (Burumba) The same term is also used to designate the dance-squarç (Malakula, Ambrym). On Malakula Atchin (Wala) (Lambumbu ” ”•” " ’’ " ” : amal, and lol-hamal (initiation house (Layard) : n’amil (Layard) " : na-amel (Deacon) (Lagalag) On Ambrym (Susol) ” ” " :hamit, i.e. the sacred place of the clan (Deacon) " : hemel, when himel means men’s house (Rivers) The Shepherd Islands This group of islands is situated between the island of Epi in the north and the island of Efate to the south. It covers 86 sq. km. and has a population of about 5000. About twenty generations ago, the Shepherd Islands (Tongoa, Togariki, Buninga and Ewose) would have been but a single island named Kuwae. The chiefly lines were mostly from Efate, the largest island in this group and, situated to the south of the Shepherds only a few of them would have come from the north. The names of these chiefly clans are still known today as well as their canoes and the succession stages leading them to Kuwae, passing through the south of the archipelago, then through Efate where these travellers would have settled for some time.112 These islands are situated in the path of tropical cyclones and are sometimes devastated. Houses there had a special shape the better to withstand the strength of the wind (cyclone hut). A certain number of these buildings are still in existence. The Island of Emae Its population is spread over the villages of Makata, Sangava, Sasake and Marae 113. The Island of Makira or Makura This islet, with excellent soil is very difficult of access. Its land tenure and social structure have changed little by colonization, but the various communities have all settled in a single village, which in 1958 had 249 inhabitants. The Island of Mataso This island is composed of two rocky islets connected by a strip of sand. Formerly the population was spread over four villages — Worokoto, Mata'as(o), Sawi(a) and Silimauri. Today the 134 in habitants (1958) all live in the only village of Na’asang. Fig 162 Hurricane shelter at Mara, Emae (from B. Hebert, 1965, p 129’). ififfrr *— fÊë'iïmë The island of Tongariki Its name is Polynesian in origin. There are highlands, not easily accessible, of over 100m. on an average. Its 460 inhabitants (1958) live in the four villages: Erata, Lakilia, Lewaymwa and Tavia, established on the plateau. "The small island of Tongariki is the place where an almost aristocratic system still functions to this day. In addition to his individual name, given at birth, each adult male may later receive a traditional title, with which goes the right to the use of certain parcels of land scattered all over the island, without reference to the possible limits of the four villages. Without obtaining the said title (i.e. of rank), one would not be able to have land at one’s disposal, except in a precarious sort of way, that is a revocable right, which is the case today for many of the islanders. Titles come under the authority of the holder of a title whose standing is traditionally regarded as the highest — within a village. Each village is comprised of several of these groups, or varea, whose concrete existence was, in olden days, marked by the construction of a men's communal house, also called varea.114 Thus "each varea is placed under the authority of a chief, having a certain number of dignitaries at his disposal, forming a sort of court around him, and a certain number of titles bestowed, or otherwise, whose virtual existence defines the extension of that group 115.” The design of the vareas and family homes is very similar to that of Tongoa which we shall study hereunder in detail. In olden days, groups of vertical drums stood on the varea squares. “An original rite for the inauguration of the drum is the one that we related in 1958, the regretted Makambo Matongo of Lewaymwa, on the islet of Tongariki, former holder of the title Ti Tongoa Mata. At the inauguration ceremony, the spectators (neither woman nor child being present) remain at a respectful distance, in front of the drum which stands upright on the ground, its lips meeting on both sides of the wide, circular openings both at the top and the bottom Two masked men (namalau) come dancing in from the same direc tion, coming and going. The fact that to this day the first drummer bears the title of atavi tonga bears out the belief that it would be dangerous to touch the drum before completing its inauguration rite. The atavi's function is actually to protect the chief from all supernatural danger due to contact with the world of ritual and the invisible. 116 a. /V LCr~" 1 'V-' 'xA/-—- -xmW>PSs\x Fig. 164 Communal house (na kamal) at Erata village, Tangariki. Fig. 165 Communal house at Lakilia, Tongariki h-T y k-w ■ •?, *Ī.■!■.. x. XU Fig. 166 Dwelling (Via suma) at Erata (Figs 164,165,166, from Hebert, pp. 128.18). s LAIKA Filakara Kouroumanpe Ralinga Lamboukouti TONGOA Mangarisiou Moeriou ^ EWOSE LAIKATONGARIKI & BUNINGA Marae Souioua Makata Sang' ha va EMAE ^ MAKOURA MATASO Nasanga Fig. 167 Map of the Shepherd Archipelago The Island of Buninga This is a circular island 2 km. to the south-west of Tongariki. About a hundred inhabitants live there in the village of Munpohai. The Island of Ewose Situated to the south-west of the island of Tangoa, this island is uninhabited. The Island of Tongoa This is the largest and most populated of the Shepherd Islands. Its inhabitants (over 2000 in 1958) were spread over 14 villages of differing sizes but more or less corresponding to former groups around the vareas. Linguistically the island can be divided into two areas — the Na Makura language and the Na Kanamanga language. Large meeting houses shaped like an upturned boat, are still built in each village. This ribbed construction is obtained by placing posts side by side, bent and crossed at their upper part to support the ridgepole. The interior space is then mainly free for moving about. As long as it is well maintained, the thickness of the thatch placed over this framework is very effective protection against the intemperate climate. The house also remains very cool during the heat and filters out the excessive humidity. The interior is covered with artistically woven mats. From his personal experience B. Hebert" 7 confirms the opinion of P. Milne.118 “These houses are really comfortable and in many aspects better than the new style European houses with walls.” Houses were formerly grouped together to form hamlets but up to the present we do not have any plans of their lay-out. These hamlets were called Na Toko-Ana and were inhabited by extended families. The different groupings were more or less linked together by a network of land, history, war, religion, etc, despite the fact that they were situated quite far apart. The village sometimes bore the name of the men's great meeting house, called varea in the Na kanamenga dialect and kamali in the Na makura. The size of the house depended upon the size of the population of the village, i.e. two or three times the size of a family home (A/a Suma). "But its opening is practically right along or almost the whole length of the windward side and of one of the arched recesses. Being very like an inverted boat of the Na Suma it is called Na Kamali Na Toka (that is with lateral posts). Fig. 168 Erect drums in front of the communal house at Lambukuti, Tongoa, 1871. (from a sketch by N.N. Mikloukho-Maclay, 1954). But if its size demands a more solid structure, the ridgepole rests on a row of central pillars, the hut is called Na Kamali Na Mangui(that is with centre posts). In its greatest size the Toka become the rafters of a great double sloping roof and are replaced by four rows of thick pillars, the central ones forming a succession of high porticos; the huge hut is then called Na Kamali Na Mangui Raru (that is with two centre posts). In this case its centre part is comparable to the great traditional huts of the islands in the centre and north of the archipelago (Malakula, Santo, Banks) but this building retains its main shape, the rounded alcoves and the long, horizontal opening and the original character of the traditional huts of the region119 . When the population of a village is not large enough to build its own meeting house, they can use the house of a related village or one having a chief paramount to their own. Like everywhere else in Melanesia, the construction of a communal building demands many hands and a good framework. A new building will be erected on the occasion of the nomination of a new chief or the creation of a village. Lengthy preparations are necessary for erecting a new Na kamali. The Munuae (clairvoyant or soothsayer) may be consulted, the Atavi submit the construction site for the approval of leading citizens, the Namataisau, the carpenters responsible for the construction of the varea, canoes, drums and weapons, choose the necessary trees for the building. They fell the trees and after roughly trimming them, leave them on the spot. The beginning of work should coincide with yam-planting time for the largest yams will be saved for the inauguration ceremonies. The construction The land is cleaned and levelled, and heavy material is dragged to the building site with the help of all the villagers to the accompani ment of traditional songs. The main parts of the framework are supplied and put in place according to their importance in the building, and according to the order of precedence in the tribe. Thus, the highest ranking dignitaries, the elders making up the Council, na malua, supply and put the main pillars (na toka) in place; the second in rank, the warriors and heralds, supply and set up the posts for the opening, na hang; the third in rank, the guards of the chief’s house and gardens the communal hut, etc., supply and place the lintels of the opening, na kilikilik; those of lesser importance, including outsiders, supply and place the roofing pieces, na kion; and finally the commoners supply and put in place the slats, na nerot and the thatch, na kinisit, as well as all the other material of secondary importance. But it is all the assembled dignitaries who supply and place the chief’s pillow, na iling, the top lintel of the opening, and the chief himself who supplies and places the ridgepole, na tamboat. n0 The women help in gathering and carrying the material and preparing the workmen’s meals, but they do not have the right to enter the na kamali. Each dignitary supervises the construction work between the toka that he has supplied and the neighbouring toka, checking the position of the parts and the strength of the joints. Woods of various types are used, but generally the toka are of na mparo, a kind of pandanus, the hang of na kumair; the kilikalik from na tawo the makita tree (probably Parinari Laurina (Rosaceas); the tamboat from na mbatao (breadfruit tree); the kion, the tafira and the tamboat susum are made of na veno and the nerof are cut from the bole of the na mpumpu, the arec tree.121 The entire building is covered with thick thatch. Sheathing Is tightly plaited over the ridgepole and along the opening, the thatch is cut as high as a man’s chest. This makes it difficult to reach the occupants by throwing weapons in from outside, nor is rain able to penetrate the building. Light can also be diffused into the building by this means. At the end of the ridgepole there is a huge painted wooden bird with outspread wings underneath which is a hole in the thatch, na mata ni mala, (the sparrow-hawk’s eye). The bird is supposed to symbolise the chief’s spirit watching over the village. Tree-trunks used for the thick pillars can be as long as 8-10 metres and sunk 1-2 metres into the ground. Kilometres of creepers and tons of reeds are used for building, requiring dozens of workers. The preparation of food is taken care of by the women for the duration of the work. Thus, as in other places in Melanesia, the great meeting-house represents its community’s unity and the power of its chiefs. Names of the various parts of a Meeting-House122 Designation b) Great centre pillars b) Curved posts c) Small pillars for the opening or periphery of the building d) Ridgepoles or long beams e) Small ridge-beams f) Small cross-girders Na Makura Dialects Na Kanamenga na mangui na toka na toka na sagna na hang na su na tamboat na tamboat susum na kafirankot Fig. 170 Front view and plan of a family house (na suma) (from Hebert, p. Fig. 171 Cross section of a na suma (Hebert, p. 14). 11). r J j Fig. 173 Cross-section and plan of a large communal house, Erata (from sketches by Hebert, p. 15). Fig. 174 View of the interior of the same building, Erata (from a photo by Hebert, p. 20). g) h) i) j) k) 1) m) n) o) P) q) r) s) t) u) Unaer-ridge girders Over-ridge girders Curved beams; open recess Curved beams; closed recess Lateral lintels Upper lintel Beam'supporting roofing material Beam supporting roofing material at the opening to the meeting-house Slats Reed thatch Plaited reed partition Closed recess Closed side Open recess Covered side, door na tafira na n’daleu na kelekel na n’dalidal na kilikalik na iling na kion na silatar na nérof na kinisila na totokon na mang na mbwei na traman na katam na sila na sola na rof The Island of Efate (In 1774 James Cook christened it Sandwich Island) This is the third largest island in the archipelago with an area of 1000 sq. km. As Port Vila, the capital of Vanuatu, is situated there, it is also the most densely populated (17000 inhabitants in 1979). Efate is surrounded by satellite islands — Retoka, Lelepa, Moso, Nguna, Pwele and Mau. Most of the villages are spread along the coast, the interior being almost uninhabited. Local communities are scattered and few in number, and the most compact remaining community is on the island of Mau (517 inhabitants in 1956). However, compared with the people of the Shepherd Islands, more to the north, whose buildings appear better maintained, certain variations can be discerned in the social organisation of people in the Efate region. Titles are not always similar to those found in the Shepherd Islands.123 In 1882 Monin wrote: There are better huts here than in the preceding islands, in groups of four to five, separated from each other by circular fences made from strong pieces of timber placed very close together and about two metres high. There is no gate, but at one point they are lower in height, although not low enough to be easily stepped over The huts in each group belong to one family and are built with their main side facing the crossroads in which their dead are buried.12'1 Roberjot is more precise: Fig. 175 Hurricane shelter, Matarisu village, Efate (from a photo by Coiffier). Fig. 176 Village plan, Saama, Efate in 1979 (from a photo by Coiffier). Fig. 177 Dwelling at Leleppa, Efate (from Speiser, pi. 18 (1)) Fig. 178 Hurricane shelter at Ifira, Fila Island (from a photo by Beattie, in Vanuatu, 1980, p. 17). A house, whose opening faces the central ground, which is decorated with posts on which pigs’ jaws hang.125 Hagen relates On Deception Islands, some of the poles supporting the roof are roughly carved on their free end into the shape of a bird, an arrow, an axe, an assegai, a human foot or a club.'26 Monin also writes that: Huts are 3 x 8 metres and seem very low because they are dug half into the ground and a tree-trunk makes up the threshold. The roof projects from the walls, forming an outside corridor. The door is very low. The interior is divided into three compartments, a middle one and two sides ones — the middle being for domestic life.127 Goodenough128 gives the measurements as 10 feet by 34 feet, which roughly corresponds to Erskine’s data on the size of a village communal house which differed from an ordinary house, having one side completely open. The usual shape was oblong with a rounded roof, closed on one side and open on the other. Except for the fireplace, the floors of these buildings are covered with mats of plaited pandanus leaves.129 Speiser writes about encountering this kind of dwelling on the islands of Lelepa — according to him, more like Polynesian houses. In their writings, many travellers and missionaries visiting Efate in the last century, testified to the existence of architecture very like that still to be seen in the Shepherd Islands today. On the islet of Fila The huts are a little different from those of the Aneytum people in that one enters by a long side opening instead of one at the end. They are also larger than those of the latter people and have a better appearance.130 In the Efate region of Port-Havannah... The huts have a wooden framework covered with thatch. This thatch is made of reeds, a kind of long grass, and plaited coconut leaves or solely of reeds. The hut is usually shaped like an inverted boat, with a single opening in the middle of the sides for an entrance.131 On Nguna, the village farea look very like the hull of an inverted boat with its stern cut off, thus leaving it completely open at the end, which is the main entrance of the farea. In addition to this there is a long low opening on the windward side extending from the open end to almost half the length of a farea, the equivalent of an entrance to an ordinary house.103 B. Hebert confirms this, The hurricane hut is nothing more nor less than the centre part of the traditional hut bereft of its two recesses, which are replaced by vertical partitions of reeds or boards into which doors and windows are fitted.133 The Village of Matarisu In the north-east of the island, between Onésua and Eikpé, lies the village of Matarisu, whose community originated from the island ofTongoa. Its site is partly surrounded by asmall coral-block wall on the road and sea side. Various types of buildings corresponding to old descriptions can be seen there and thus the chief’s (Taripoamata) house has a closed in recess at the rear: this building resembles the one in Speiser’s photograph No 1, plate 18 (see Fig 177).134 Two other special types of houses can also be seen: oblong in shape with their very low opening on their longer side and others with ribbed or pointed roofing with two gables of split and plaited bamboo. This latter type of construction is completely closed in with only an opening with a wooden door at one of the gabled ends allowing access. The thick thatch covering the various buildings is made of reeds onto which whole coconut fronts have been fixed 135 This reed thatch is kept in place with the help of bourao fibre bands and banyan roots, or with creepers over a framework of plaited coconut leaves. On one of its gabled ends, another type of house has a rectangular projection entirely closed in by walls of woven coconut fronds clamped in place by two lots of dense creepers and having a small reed-covered roof. The interiors of the buildings are very clean and the floors are very often covered with woven pandanus leaf mats, except by the fireplace. There is a cycad (na mele) at the entrance to the village. No one should ignore two crossed na mele leaves: it is the mark of a taboo! And this is how they appear in the centre of a curved pig’s tusk, on Vanuatu’s national flag. Fig. 179 View of the village of Matarisu, with surrounding wall (from a photo by Coiffier). TT I Fig 180 Front vertical section and plan of the house of chief Taripoamata, Matarisu (from Coiffier). Fig. 181 Back view of chief Taripoamata's house, Matarisu (from photo by Coiffier). The Islands of the South The Tafea Group The Island of Erromango This island has an area of 975 km. and a population of 945 inhabitants (1978) and its name, in the language of the country, means ‘it’s a man'. It was also known as the Sandalwood Islands in the nineteenth century, when boats of all origins came to load their holds with this fragrant wood, destined for China. Erromango became famous in the west on account of a novel by Pierre Benoit, the action of which takes place on this island, but little useful information on the life of the islanders can be gleaned from it, for it is typical of the colonial era, and as in many such tales of that time, the island of Erromango and its inhabitants represent only a background. Of the village itself, nothing remained One would have had really to know where the huts once stood to be able to make out their traces in this accumulation of earth and rotting moss, beneath this jumble of vegetation, denser perhaps in this spot than elsewhere as if the earth had been made more fertile by the long accumulation of domestic waste. On the other hand, the high ground, or place of sacrifice, had remained intact. The centre of the square was taken up by a banyan tree which supported — God knows by what diabolical means — a stone of huge proportions, perched 8-10 metres high up on the tree — this was the sacrifical altar. Fetishes were arranged around this banyan tree and they alternated with the war drums cut out of tree-trunk split with a fine ridge lengthwise. 136 These words form a vivid picture of a long abandoned village site, with its cultural square, its banyan tree, stone altar, ancestral carvings and slit drums. Robertson 137 gave a more detailed description of the island — Huts in former times were built without posts or walls, as now, and were in shape not unlike a huge boat, keel up, or turned turtle. The ground was first raised from 12 to 18 inches, then slender poles, about 3 ft. apart, were sunk 12 inches in the ground. These were bent over and tied with very tough creepers to the ridgepole. Across these, lighter poles were placed, and on this frame work was a covering of reeds (the stems of the tall reedgrass) beautifully woven together. Over all this was placed the thatch of sugar-cane-leaf or reeds with their grassy tops, this being securely tied through reedwork underneath. This covering was very strong and yet cool. When it was to be used as a sleeping-house, both ends were thatched with the exception of a small entrance or doorway. The door was simply a plaited coconut-leaf, with hinges of creepers. These sleeping-huts would be about twelve feet by eight feet. The large Siman-lo (general cooking and sleeping house for the young or unmarried males) is almost always built in the old way without walls. It has a very rustic and picturesque appearance. These Siman-lo are usually from forty feet to fifty feet in length and from fifteen to twenty feet in width. When we first came to Erromango, the Siman-lo was, in every case, owned by a chief of rank. None of the common people dared to imitate the fan-lo or high-chiefs, by putting up one of these houses. They were very large and built with the utmost taste and care. In the south districts of the island, I have seen Siman-lo, which were over one hundred feet long, twenty feet wide and about twenty-five feet in height The Erromangan houses are indeed very pretty, when new, and in my opinion are much finer than those of the other islands.136 These kinds of homes have now disappeared from Erromango, but certain materials are still used for present-day building. The Island of Tanna With an area of 550 sq. km., this island is densely populated (15715 in 1979). A coral island, volcanic in origin, it is dominated, in the south by a mountain range of 100m. and a small volcano, the Yasur, which is permanently active. Captain Cook does not appear to have been very impressed by the inhabitants of Tanna: “The village consisted of about twenty houses the most of which need no other description than comparing them to the roof of a thatched house in England, taken off the walls and put on the ground. Some were open at both ends, others partly closed with needs; and all were covered with palm-thatch. A few of them were thirty or forty feet long and fourteen or sixteen broad. Besides these, they have other mean havels which, I conceived, were only to sleep in."139 Ngouna I-> Moso Leieppa a Pole Mao EFATE Nevolou 4i Oupongkor v ERROMANGO "V Ipota Lowiteui White Sands TANNA Lenakei U*1 Ipao lasoa FUTUNA imaki Aname ÿ ANATOM Oulmetch Fig. 183 Map of the iles of south Vanuatu (from Speiser, 1923). Monin gives further details: “villages of 40 huts, arranged in uneven rows within an enclosure made by a fence of about 2m. high, having only two openings where there were no stakes. All these huts are 9m. * 2'Æm. x 2m., a triangular prism, resting on beaten earth. There are three openings: one on the partition wall facing the village centre, the other two on the side walls. Speiser writes that the hamlets are small, consisting often of five to six houses at the most. The inhabitants would often have moved house on account of the frequent wars that raged on the island. All hamlets and fields were surrounded by fences 1 %m. high. These were of two kinds: either of plaited reeds or vertical stakes. Roofing materials were reeds, pandanus leaves or sugar cane. 142 It is thought that it was formerly much more populous that it is at present (according to J. Guiart, 20,000 inhabitants on Cook’s arrival). 143 “These people today live in several hundred hamlets scattered along paths climbing the hill-crests or crossing this way and that on the plateau. Near each one — a space of cleared earth, varying in size, shaded by age-old banyan trees, where in the evening people come to share the national drink, kava. According to the place, the hut is in the old style with double sided roofs sloping down to the ground or an imitation, on a reducedscale, of a European house, its roof of double thickness sugar-cane leaves, being raised on stakes complete with a wall of plaited reeds. No village type plan. The huts are scattered right along the dance square where the owners come and sit on important days. In the mountains and on the central plateau, huts are small in size, the humidity, they say, making material rot too quickly for it to be worth building larger ones. The lower parts of the White-Sands and PortResolution districts show the visitor huts in the grand manner, usual in dry places or on atolls of Polynesian descent as well as less scattered groups”. 143 Without doubt, Tanna is the island in the New Hebrides where traditional society has developed to its most logical extent, the principle of fixed territory and controlled mobility. Its society rests on a "system of titles" which are hierarchical, passed down from generation to generation within the small lineage, sometimes hereditary and sometimes by election'1.144 In-everyday practice, 165 territorial groups can be counted, composed of several hamlets, and whose average population is 42 inhabitants, an average from among the extremes ranging from 5 to 159 inhabitants. The principle of this social division, topographically fragmentary, follows that of land tenure. According to the mind of the local group it is unthinkable to establish an abode anywhere other Fig. 184 View of Tanna (from an engraving byE. Lejeune, in G.L.Domeny de Rienzi, L’univers, histoire et description de tous les peuples: Oceanie, 1873, pl. 252). to the 1 villages of Lokoripai and Losihur path to Nakamal yuwunier . ?r i s Napanaklai Yuwunier group limits Latun Swatu path to Nakamal Latun Swatu to Ikaoras Fig. 185 Dance area of Ipai village,Tanna (from J. Bonnemaison, LaDerniere kahoungalenimalatan touhou napwor or napor sapang bamboo trellis nakis I entrance ij* nokoulou nawakalouwaout I ji 5 * 2-=£l yokoukahaou iawarsannima kouhou Fig. 186 View of the frame for a hurricane shelter (nimaleten), Tanna, and detail of the method of securing the various structural elements. upper side of roof ndge reed bamboo pandanus palm frond nawakalouwaolisouhas plants used for the knotting nolaouliyao nouhil nameuhameuh Fig. 187 Interior view of a hurricane shelter near White Sands, east Tanna (from a photo by Coiffier). Fig. 1BB A village in east Tanna, Ipekel, at the foot of the volcano, Yasur (yahuwey) (from a photo by Coiffier). Fig. 189 A family house at White Sands, east Tanna (from a photo by Coiffier). Fig. 190 House at Ipekel village, with a cross symbolising the John Frum cult, White Sands region (from a photo by Coiffier). than one one’s own land. 145 But for the last 50 years the authorities and the missions have encouraged inhabitants to settle in larger villages. “In the light of the events of recent years, it has been noticed that this time is not that of the dance square where kava is drunk, a place designated, according to the dialect, by the term yimwayim or yimwarem. This square does not represent any place whatever, but is endowed with a supernatural patronage, its site having been chosen, once and for all, at the beginning of time, by the Wuhngen.146 The yimwayim is an area made out of plants, that is a great space of beaten earth protected by enormous banyan trees, some of which are considered sacred. There are several types of vimwayim. The ordinary squares are the place of minor dances called nepe, napuan, or napuk according to the language, circumcision dances, baptism dances, marriage dances as well as being the place of the ritual for the first-fruits. Other squares are used — the presentation and killing of pigs, toka dances and nao — during the ceremonial cycle called nekowiaror nanggowiati.”147 According to J. Bonnemaison, the ideal tree, the banyan (nepuk) represents man, whereas the canoe represents the tribe (niko), but niko is also the cup from which kava was drunk in the evening. If the tree is the place, the canoe is the way.148 Some villages today are still surrounded by coral stone walls and fences made up of stakes (village: John Frum). Traditional ribbedvaulted huts are still quite numerous; apparently they can resist the most violent of cyclones. The building of a hut (according to directions by Hubert Goron): After the site has been cleared, three forked posts are knocked (up to a metre) deep into tne ground, 2-50m. apart. On the forked ends of these three posts (sapang) at a height of 1.80m., the ridgepole is placed (touhou). At each side of the axis formed by the three posts are put long thin poles, 3cm. in diameter, at a distance of 1.50m. These are kept firm in the ground by a cross-piece and bent back up to the ridgepole where they are securely attached with creepers. These long thin poles are joined together by cross poles, parallel with the ridge pole and also tied with fibrous strings from various plants: Nolaouliyao, Nouhil, Nameuhameuh. Lighter-welght poles (Nawakalouwaolisouhas) are bound onto the cross-beams. All that remains to be done is to cover the whole with coconut-palm (kamek) leaf or pandanus plaques (noumankiou). The whole of the habitation takes up a ground space of three by five metres. The building is usually placed on sloping ground to facilitate drainage of rainwater. The interior features two distinct parts: a public area (eramrolkiyou) near the entrance, where strangers are received, a private area (nowanpousen) at the rear of the house where the fireplace is situated and where people also sleep. The gable end (nokoulou) of the public side has a door (napor or napwor) of plaited bamboos (nahou) and reeds (nouing), the gable end on the private side (nakis) is closed. The Island of Aniwa This isasmall island? sq. km., 26 km. to the east of Tanna. In 1874 there were 185 inhabitants, in 1936: 176 inhabitants and in 1951: 185 inhabitants,150 now there are 349 who make a living growing oranges for export to Port Vila. Today's largest village bears the name of Isowai on maps. But J. Guiart gives us the names of four modern villages151: Imwale, Itangutu, Imwasaand Ikoukao. From this article we also learn that the various patrilinear groups in these villages are the imarae, the same name as the dance squares where the men meet for the ritual preparation of kava. The chief ceriki of the island has a certain number of rights and has the privilege of having a special enclosure, taxopa in front of his abode. According to J.G. Paton,152 roofing material in the island of Aniwa was sugar-cane leaves. The Island of Futuna or Erronan Situated 70km. to the east of the island of Tanna, with an area of 11 sq. km. and a population of 320 (1978) it is one of the most isolated islands in the archipelago on account of its small size, distance and relief. Eckhardt153 writes that on this island some islanders live grouped together in a large house of nine to ten metres high by about the same breadth and from 35 to 40 metres long. Speiser relates154 that dwellings are of the Polynesian type, fairly similar to those of the island of Tanna. The word Futuna as the use of the term fares implies is reminiscent of the Polynesian origins of the island’s inhabitants. Six small villages are built on the hillside 100 to 150m. above sea level. A steep, winding road connects them. Rivers come down from the mountains to be channelled into village reservoirs. Ph. Prodhomme writes p. 1641 "Better than our ancestors1 drawbridges, the colossal, vertical ladders of bamboo and creepers by which one gains access to the villages and dwellings are real works of art” 155. Fig. 191 Traditional-style house built by students undertaking cultural studies, Futuna (from a photo in Vanuatu, 1980). Fig. 192 Stone carving designs discovered in rocks at Aneityum (from a photo by Rev. W. Gunn, in Speiser, pi. 107 (3)). Fig. 193 Oulmetch village, south Aneityum (from Ph. Prudhomme, 1979, p. 161). This is one of the first islands in the archipelago to have had contact with Europeans (sandalwood merchants and whalers). With an area of 158.5 sq. km., it enjoys a moderate climate but its mountainous interior obliges its inhabitants to make their villages along the seashore. At present it has a population of 357 inhabitants (1978) spread over three villages: Port Patrick (Anamé), Anelgaouat and Oulmetch. The village of Oulmetch still has traditional style houses very similar to those of Tanna. (see Fig. 194) According to Murray,156 the oio hamlets were made up of houses grouped together behind reed fences. Eckhardt157 writes that the people of Anetchom build themselves houses four metres high and six metres wide with the branches of trees and that their roofs were covered with large leaves. But Speiser158 adds that there were special houses, without walls, simply used to protect boats. In every village toilet facilities for each of the sexes were built with their backs to each other, people being afraid of the nahak magic. Speiser thinks that it is also for that reason that he never came across toilets built at the seaside. Conclusion We have now become aware of the great variety of architecture existing or having existed in all these islands. Moreover any differences are due to very good adaptation to the ecology and to special circumstances. It has much in common with the architecture of other Melanesian archipelagos. Firstly, it is the existence, even today, of a traditional type of architecture representing a considerable cultural heritage, which should not be allowed to disappear. Buildings of local design are still being built. A whole world of technological know-how still exists among the oldest men of the village and schooling (in its present form) is likely to kill off this cultural attainment as was the case in numerous Polynesian archipelagos (with the exception of Samoa). Secondly, cultural entity is found in the multiplicity of its variations between the various archipelagos from New Guinea to New Caledonia — its coherent society and particularly its family set-up. In the field of ceremonial architecture, there is a close connection in so far as importance of size goes: the centre posts and the fire places. Main parts of the house often have anthropomorphous names: the mouth, the eyes, the hair etc______ In the description of the Vao men’s house in Sepik in Papua New Guinea. They are in fact in front of the two facades of the buildings and inside their longitudinal axis. In Sepik there were Borassus palmtrees planted on mounds surrounded by upright stones, whereas in Vao there were great stone tables. The presence, on the roof, of great birds with spread wings (birds of prey) is found in many parts of Oceania. The division of the men’s long house into different areas according to one's rank in society was found on Banks and Torres Islands as in the Sepik valley. The making of covering material may differ so far as what is used is concerned but the technique is quite similar. We have discussed the influence of Polynesian technology on building in the islands of the centre and of the south, but mention must also be made of Wallisian traditional housing on the island of Efate on the road to Forari. It would be interesting to draw up a 'complete inventory of existing techniques and assure their distri bution throughout the archipelago and even in other countries. Techniques have sometimes followed the traditional circuits of exchange, now the development of inter-island relations should be fostered. It is to be hoped that we will soon see the end of the effects of imitating European design that have been festering for decades in most of the non-western countries. The disastrous results are known and another way must be found. If there can be no question of a return to the past, one has to admit that there was a certain measure of comfort in housing, called traditional. But economic and social conditions have greatly changed, therefore we should aim for development that knows how to reconcile new technological knowledge with that of the past. At the beginning of the century, R.J. Fletcher wrote159 : “This bungalow has always grieved me. It is built of wood and galvanised metal, frightfully straight and bare; at noon the heat is intolerable there. Unfortunately the galvanised roof is a necessity.. .we can drink rainwater only. I wonder why they do not build all the houses on the indigenous model; they would be cool, absolutely impermeable and pretty. And then they would not cost anything. The bush supplies all the material, vegetable fibre ropes are used for nails. The natives make doors of plaited coconut frond.” It may seem strange that R.J. Fletcher should write these lines, he who was so disillusioned by life in the islands. But one realises that he had not learned much about the life of the native people, when he says “they would cost nothing. The bush supplies everything". That is to forget the numerous ties of inter-aid and obligation that bind the inhabitants of the same village, which makes B. Hébert write: As for the huts for living in, imported wood, corrugated iron, nails and wrought casings replace the local suma, if not esthetically or hygienically, at least with far fewer workmen and much less trouble. And when a cyclone sweeps away these light buildings, the public authorities or charitable organisations are there to help replace them as cheaply as possible if not gratuitously.160 Independence has brought new responsibilities to the people of Vanuatu and ought to re-establish justice in the matter of landed property. Let us re-read a few clauses of the new constitution161 Clause 71 All land in the territory of the Republic belongs to the customary, indigenous owners and their descendants. Clause 72 In the Republic, laws of custom constitute the base of ownership rights and land usage. Clause 73 Indigenous citizens alone, having acquired their pro perty according to a recognised system of land tenure, have the right of perpetual ownership over that property. Clause 78 Notwithstanding the provisions of articles 71 and 72, the government may buy land from the traditional owners with the object of transferring it to indigenous citizens from over-populated islands. Another problem has appeared in this country, that of the migration of youth from certain islands to the urban centres of Luganville and Port Vila. J. Bonnemaison, within the framework of ORSTOM, has carried out an excellent study on the subject which never ceases to grow in importance. 162 Thus he finds three distinct categories of migrants: 1. "The traditional, 'circulating' migrant, who remains essentially a rural dweller in transit, whose time of residence in town seems relatively brief and whose presence in the urban milieu comes about through groups controlled by the place he has left. 2. The ‘fixed’ migrant who has often initially been moving about, but who having acquired professional qualifications has brought along his family and who lives in the city for much longer periods. Generally he remains faithful to the structures of the group of which he is often the stable centre." 3. Finally, the ‘shy’ migrant, the latest arrival in the migratory system, whose ties with custom and the group seem more tenuous — whose position favours his individual insertion into urban life. He has no fixed date for his return to the rural world, but his urban destiny, appears hazardous and dependent upon the more or less stable work that he will find. The immediate future of the Vanuatuan economy is most specifi cally rural, plantations and stock-raising; moreover, in the latter fields, it would appear very promising. Neither is it the ideal solution for potential manpower to leave certain islands. It is to be hoped that the balance in agrarian activity will be restored and the people concerned will realise the quality of their former staple crops: yam, taro, bananas and fruit of all kinds. It is by diversifying to the full agricultural production in the islands and by helping the peasantry of the Archipelago to rediscover the quality of their own produce, that an initiai feeling of sufficiency between the latter and their natural environment will come about. 163 As far as housing is concerned, the problem is similar; the inhabitants must be helped to rediscover the quality of their own technical achievements. But, alas, education in both private and public schools, has up till the present, turned too many of the young against their own culture, the food they were brought up on, their way of sitting, their way of living etc “The adolescent school-leaver has become a stranger, not only to his own natural environment, but also to the society which is his. From then on, he has no choice but to leave for the city.” Education seems to us to be one of the most sensitive issues. Imagination will have to be exercised to adapt educational pro grammes to the reality of the country and of the international scene. The people of Vanuatu do not have to be ashamed of their past, on the contrary, they can be proud of the architectural achievement that their ancestors so very well knew how to adapt so often to a difficult environment. We hope that this work will be part of that realisation and be likely to motivate other research workers to continue to enrich it. Regional variation in the name given to men's houses throughout Vanuatu163 Often the word is combined with the article ‘na’. However, it would seem that the transcription of the various names by different travellers, missionaries and ethnologists has been very variable, and also that the same word has been spread throughout the islands to a certain extent by the medium of Bislama. In the Torres Islands the Bank Islands but on Motalava On Ambae On Santo St Philip’s and St. James’ Bay Nogugu Nogugu and Epi South Raga (Pornowol) Pentecost Ambrim Malakula Seniang Lambumbu Big Nambas : : : : gamel (Rivers) or gemel (Durrad) gamal (Codrington, Rivers) nagmel (Vienne) gamali (Rivers) : gamali (Rivers) : na-gamal, na gomali (Deacon) : komal, komali, komet (Rivers) : mal (Tattevin) : nakamal (Muller) : himel (Rivers), imel (Deacon), me/ (Guiart) Port Sandwich Aulua Small Nambas Lagalag West Epi (Burumba) Shepherd Islands : na-amel (Deacon) : (g)amal (Deacon) : ghamal (Deacon), naghamal (Guiart) : a mil (Rivers) : n’amal, n'amel (Rivers) : amel (Muller) : hamal (Deacon) : gomali (Deacon) : na-kamali, varea (He^ ert ^ Erromango : siman-lo (Robertson) The same term is used also to designate the dance area: Malakula Atchin Wala Lambumbu Lagalag Ambrim (Susol) : amaI, and lol-hamal (house of initiation; Layard) : n’amil (Layard) : na-amel (Deacon) : hamil (the sacred place of the clan; Deacon) : heme! (himel signifies the men's house; Rivers) Regional variation in the name given to family houses throughout Vanuatu Torres Islands Banks Islands Ureparapara Vanualava Mota Motalava Gaua Merelava Maewo Ambae Santo Bigbay women’s house youth’s meeting place Ambrym Malakula Epi Shepherd Islands Efate Erromango Tanna Aniwa Futuna Aneityum : n'ema (Durrad) em en, im, qeqek, govur ima em, neum (Vienne) uma, govur im vale, ima vale im na peruhu na peakava anali hale, ima namel (Guiart) uma, iuma na suma, (Hébert) suma, sum imo iuma fare fale im, eom Appendix B Various forms of vertical drum ambrym F- Speiser, 1923, pi. 109(19) AMBRYM from a photo by C. Coiffier, RANO F. Speiser, 1923, pi 101 (3). 1979 VAO From a photo by C. Coiffier, 1979 A EPI F Speiser, 1923, p|. 104 (6). MALAKULA (B. Nambas) malakula (S. Nambas) from photos by C. Coiffier. 158 1979. EFATE Musee de l'Homme Océanie, 1976, p. 105. Stages in the construction of the roofing of a traditional house Notes 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 16. 19. 20. 21. 22. See José Garanger. James Cook, 1954, Relations de voyages autour du monde. Leper Island is the present island of Ambae.(Aoba). Louis-Antoine de Bougainville, 1966, Voyage autour du monde, pp. 246-247. Thus the land of the salt-water men, as opposed to the bushmen. Except in certain parts of the island of Santo. On Malo, Malakula, Ambrym, Efate, south Pentecost, Ambae, Maewo, Erromango and Tanna, celibate boys sleep in the men’s house. Felix Speiser, 1923, Ethnographical Materialen aus den Neuen Hebriden und den Banks-lnseln. Ethnologists and Prehistorians do not seem able to collaborate towards an understanding of both the past and the present of these islands. It is not just a matter of prehistoric research but, above all, a realistic interdisciplinary approach is necessary. See José Garanger, 1975, Eléments d‘ Ethnologie, p. 303. Several new models have appeared, particularly concerning the missions. These could have arisen from the missionaries’ importation of models from upon other Pacific islands or other regions of the world. W.J. Durand, ‘Notes on the Torres Islands', Oceania 10(4) 1940, pp. 389-403. Cf. Speiser, 1923, p. 122. Cf. Speiser, 1923, p. 123. Cf. W.J. Durand, 1940. On this subject, see B. Vienne, Gens de Motlav, 1984, la Société des Océan istes, p. 27. It is known that Fijian, Kanak, Solomon Island and Polynesian architectural styles often make use of stone in the construction of terraces. R.H. Codrington, The Melanesians, 1972, p. 298. Cf. B. Vienne, 1984, pp. 35-36. Cf. F. Speiser, 1923, pl. II (1) and 18(2). F. Speiser, op.cit., ‘Rawenga in Vanua Lava liegt auf einer 10m hohen Bank’, p. 98. Brenchley, 1873. Cf. B. Vienne. 1984, p. 55. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. B. Hébert, ‘Nouveiles-Hébrides: Notes sur les cases traditionelles d' habitation et de réunion des iles du Centre sud’, in Etudes Mélanésiennes, no. 18/20, Dec. 1963/65. E. Aubert de la Rue, Les Nouveiles-Hébrides: iles de cendre et de corail, 1945, pl. XVII (1). Cf. B. Vienne, 1984, p. 50. F. Speiser, 1923, p. 105. ibid, p. 122. Cf. B. Vienne, 1984, p. 134, 135, 138, 140. B. Vienne, 1984, pp. 142-143. Cf. R.H. Codrington, 1891. F. Speiser, 1923, pl. 91 (12). ibid, p. 98. Compare Figs. 2, 23 and 24. ibid, p. 121. Cf. B. Vienne, 1984, p. 21. Cf. F. Speiser, op.cit., pp. 105 and 121. B. Vienne, op.cit., p. 135. Dr. H ans Nevermann, Masken und Geheimbunde in Melanesien, 1933, p. 94. J. Bonnemaison, 'Espaces et paysages agraires dans le nord des Nouveiles-Hébrides’, Journal de la Société des Océanistes, Vol. XXX, no. 45, Dec. 1974, p. 173. ibid, p. 178. Cf. F. Speiser, op.cit., pp. 120-121. Bonnemaison, op.cit., p. 173. Compare Figs. 30, 31 and 32, p. 26. Cf. L.A. de Bougainville, 1966, pp. 243 and 246. F. Speiser, op.cit, p. 119. Cf. J. Bonnemaison, op.cit., pp. 177 and 180. Patrick O’Reilly, ‘Megalithes hébridais’, Journal de la Société des Océanistes, Vol. VII, no. 7, Dec. 1951, pp. 175-180. ibid, pp. 175 and 176. Cf. F. Speiser, op.cit., pp. 99-101 and 108-113. See Figs. 42, 45 and 50. Jean Guiart, Espiritu Santo (Nouveiles-Hébrides), 1958, pp. 20, 25 and 26. Personal communication from H. Goron, Luganvllle, 1979. Guiart, op.cit., p. 27. See Fig. 68. F. Speiser, op.cit., p. 101. Cf. Speiser, pl. 10(3). Speiser, p. 114. J. Bonnemaison, 'Les voyages et l’enracinement', L' Espace Géo graphique, no. 4, 1979, pp. 308-309. Bonnemaison, Nouvelles Hebrides, Les éditions du pacifique, 1975, pp. 43-46. 60. K. Muller, 1971, p. 73. 61. K. Muller, ‘Land Diving with the Pentecost Islanders', National Geo graphic, Vol. 138, no. 6, Dec. 1970, p.806. 62. I. & E. Johnson, 'South Seas’ Incredible Land Divers’, National Geo graphic, Vol. CVII, no. 1, Jan. 1955, p. 01. 63. During the construction, the men cook for themselves. 64. Cf. K. Muller, 1971, pp. 67 and 70. 65. In the indigenous language, these three supports are called: the penis, and the lips of the vagina (Muller, 1971, p. 70). 66. Muller, p. 70. 67. J. Guiart, Dec. 1956, p. 220. 68. Cf. F. Speiser, 1923, pi. 16(1) and 17(3). 69. ibid, pi. 97(3). 70. J. Guiart, 'Sociétés, rituels et mythes du Nord Ambrym', Journal de la Société des Océanistes, Vol. VII, no. 7, Dec. 1951, pp. 23 and 25. 71. ibid, p. 26. 72. ibid, p. 30. 73. ibid, pl. 96. 74. Guiart, Nouveiles-Hébrides, 1970, p. 18. 75. Guiart, ‘Unité culturelle et variations locales dans le centre-nord des Nouveiles-Hébrides', Journal de la Société des Océanistes, Vol. XII, no. 12, Dec. 1956, p. 217. 76. Guiart, ibid, pp. 334-335. 77. Ph. Diolé, 1976, p. 214. 78. Guiart, ‘L’organisation sociale et politique du Nord-Malekula’, Journal de la Société des Océanistes, Vol. VIII, no. 8, Dec. 1952, p. 154, pp. 168-9. 79. Guiart, ibid, pp. 169 and 178. 80. Cyathea (blakpam). See J. Barreau, 'L’agriculture vivriére indigene aux Nouveiles-Hébrides', Journal de la Société des Océanistes, Vol. XII, no. 12, Dec. 1956, p. 182. 81. Cf. J. Guiart, 1970, p. 14. 82. Guiart, Dec. 1952, pp. 170-172. 83. Ibid, 179-184. 84. M. Ch. Laroche, ‘Un documentaire hébridais: Les hommes d'Amok de Freddy Drilhon’, Journal de la Société des Océanistes, Vol. XII, no. 12, Dec 1956, p. 351 and 352. 85. Cf. F. Speiser, pl. 10(9). 86. Ph. Diolé, 1976, p. 214. 87. M. Laroche, F. Drilhon and J. Guiart, ‘Notes sur une cérémonie de grades chez les Big Nambas', Journal de la Société des Océanistes, Vol. XII, no. 12, Dec. 1956, pp. 229 and 230. 88. Guiart, 'La mort en Océanie’, in Les hommes et la mort, 1979, p. 129. 89. J. Layard, Stone Men of Malekula, Vao, 1942. 90. Cf. J. Guiart, 1970, p. 19. 91. Layard, op.cit., pp. 439-445. 92. Layard, op.cit., pp. 439-445. 93. P. O'Reilly, ‘Une sculpture des Nouveiles-Hébrides at the Musée de la France d'Outre Mer', Journal de la Société des Océanistes, Vol. V, no. 5, Dec. 1949, p. 192. 94. J. Guiart, 1970, p. 66. 95. Cf. Speiser, 1923, pi. 19)6) and Layard, 1942, map IV, p. 69. 96. Cf. P. O’Reilly, op.cit., pp. 192-194. 97. Layard, op.cit., pp. 345-347. 98. Speiser, p. 116. 99. Layard, op.cit., p. 273. 100. Cf. J. Layard, op.cit., p. 56. 101. K. Muller, ‘Les Mbotgote de I’ ile de Malekula', in Encyclopédia Alpha des peuples du monde entier, Vol. 3, 1976, pp. 116-119. 102. Muller, ‘Field Notes on the Small Nambas of the New Hebrides', Journal delà Société des Océanistes, Vol. XXVIII, no. 35, June 1972, pp. 154 and 155. 103. Cf. J. Guiart, 1970, p. 22. 104. See Fig. 158. 105. J. Guiart, Les religions de /’Océanie, 1962, p. 52. 106. B. Deacon, Malekula: a vanishing people in the New Hebrides, 1934. 107. See B. Deacon for a variety of sand drawings, in ‘Geometrical drawings from Malekula and other islands of the New Hebrides’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Vol. 64, 1934, pp. 129-175. 108. Cf. J. Guiart (1963, p. 121), (1970, p. 13), (1979, p. 135). 109. Table from Guiart, l'Art et les sociétés primitives, 1963, p. 129. 110. F. Speiser, pp. 103 and 118. 111. ibid, see photos 4 and 6, pi. 104 (Figs. 160 and 161). 112. J. Garanger, ‘Prehistoire et ethnologie exemples océaniens', in Eléments d'Ethnologie, Vol. 1, 1975, p. 309. 113. J.-J. Espirat, Systeme de titres dans les Nouvelles-Hebrides centrales d’ Efate aux /les Shepherd, 1973, pp. 51, 81 and 95. 114. Guiart, 1963, p. 39. 115. J. J. Espirat, 1973, p. 147. 116. Guiart, 1970, p. 15. 117. Cf. B Hébert, 1965. 118. Cited by A. Dan, in Peter Milne of Nguma, 1927, p. 16. 119. Cf. B. Hébert, 1965, p. 16. 120. ibid, pp. 17 and 19. 121. ibid, p. 19. 122. From Hébert, ‘Notes sur les cases traditionelles d’habitation et de réunion des iles du centre sud’, in Etudes Mélanésiennes, nos. 18, 20, 1965, p. 14. 123. J.-J. Espirat, 1973, p. 273. 124. Dr. Monin, "Contributions k la géographie médicale'-, Arch, de méd. nav., 1882. 125. A. Roberjot, 'L’Archipel des Nouveiles-Hébrides', Bull, de la Société de Géographie de Paris, 1883. 126. Dr. A. Hagen and Pineau, ‘Les Nouveiles-Hébrides', Rev. d’ethnographie, 1888. 127. Monin, 1882. 128. J.G. Goodenough, Journal of Commodore Goodenough, London, 1876. 129. J.E. Erskine, Journal of a cruise among the islands of the Western Pacific in H.M.S. Havannah, 1853. 130. F.A. Campbell, A year in the New Hebrides, Loyalty Islands, New Caledonia, 1873, p. 108. 131. D. Rev. MacDonald, Elate, New Hebrides, Vol. 4, 1893, p. 724. 132. A. Dan, 1927, p. 16. 133. B. Hebert, 1965, p. 7. 134. Cf. F. Speiser, pi. 18(1). 135. These leaves are placed in such a way on the roof structure that the wind is prevented from tearing the leaves of the reed-thatch. 136. See P. Benoit, Erromango, 1929, pp. 140-142. 137. Rev. H.A. Robertson, Erromangua: the Martyr Island, 1902. 138. ibid, p. 374. 139. James Cook, A voyage towards the South Pole and round the World, 1777. 140. G. Turner, Nineteen Years in Polynesia, 1862, p. 84. 141. Monin, 1882. 142. F. Speiser, pp. 105 and 124. 143. J. Guiart, ‘Un siecle et demi de contacts culturels 'a Tanna’, Société des Océanistes, no. 5, 1956. pp. 3 and 4. 144. J. Bonnemaison, ‘Les voyages et l’enracinement’, L"spacegéographique, no, 4, 1979, p. 309. 145. J. Guiart, 1956, no. 5, p. 10. 146. ibid, p. 14, 147. ibid, p. 15. 148. Communication from J. Bonnemaison a la Société des Océanistes, June 1983. 149. Personal communication from H. Goron, 1979. 150. M. Eckardt, Der Archipel der Neuen Hebriden, 1877, p. 19. 151. J. Guiart, The social anthropology of Aniwa, Southern New Hebrides’, Oceania, Vol. 32(1), 1961, pp. 34-53. 152. J. Paton, Autobiography, 1880. 153. Cf. F. Speiser, p. 105. 154. P. Prudhomme, Découvrir les Nouveiles-Hébrides, 1979, p. 164. 155. A. Wright Murray, Missions in Western Polynesia, 1863, p. 28. 156. Eckardt, op.cit., p. 19. 157. Speiser, p. 124. 158. R.J. Fletcher, lles-paradis iles d'illusion, lettres des mers du sud, 1979, pp. 70 and 71. 159. B. Hébert, 1965, p. 21. 160. Constitution of the State of Vanuatu. 161. J. Bonnemaison, ‘Système de migration et croisance urbaine a PortVila et Luganville (Nouveiles-Hébrides)’, Travaux et documents de I' O.R.S.T.O.M., no. 60, 1977, p. 8. 162. ibid, p. 93. 163. The information contained in Appendix A derives from two sources: J. Layard, Stone Men of Malekula, London, 1942, p. 60; and Dr. H. Tischner, Die Verbreitung der Hausformen in Ozeanien, Leipzig, 1934, p. 213. 164. From J. Guiart, L'Art et les Sociétés primitives, 1963, p. 136. 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Narody Avstralii i Okéanii (Les peuples de l'Australie et de l’Ocëanie), Moscow. Turner, G., 1862. Nineteen years in Polynesia, London. Van den Broek d'Obrenan, Charles, 1939. Le voyage de la Korrigane. Paris: Payot. Vanuatu, 1980. Twenti wan tingting long team blong independens, Institute of Pacific Studies, University of the South Pacific and the South Pacific Social Sciences Association. Vienne, Bernard, 1984. Gens de Motlav: idéologie et pratique sociale en Mélanésie. Paris: Pub. de la Société des Océanistes no. 42. Zervos, C., Loeb, P., Tzara, T. and Evrard, M., 1961. Sculpture monumentale de Nouvelle-Guinée et des Nouveiles-Hébrides. Paris: Ed. Jeanne Bucher, catalogue of an exhibition at the Galérie J. Bucher, Dec. 1961-Feb. 1962. Table of Illustrations Map of the Torres Archipelago 2 Plan of the interior of a Torres Islands gemel 4 Family dwellings in the village of Vipaka, 1906 4 Map of the Banks Archipelago 6 Family houses at Ureparapara 8 Diagrammatic representation of roof construction of a sleeping house 8 Another type of dwelling at Ureparapara 8 Plan of a village on Ureparapara 8 View of Mota 10 Cross-section and plan of a house with stone foundation 10 Statue or post indicating rank, Vanua-Lava 11 House of a man of high rank 11 Men’s house with stone wall 12 House built on a lava-block foundation 12 Interior of a men’s house on Vanua-Lava 12 Plan of a village on Vanua-Lava 13 Simplified plan of the present-day village of Vatrata 13 Simplified plan of the old village of Gamelvava 17 Plan of a village, Motlav 17 GamaI of the village of Ara 18 Ancestral sculpture near a men’s house 18 House with stone foundation and dance platform, Gaua 20 Plan of a dance area, Gaua 21 Tattoo designs, similar to those found at the entrance of men’s houses 21 1 74 Traditional Architecture in Vanuatu Fig. 25 House gable, Gaua 21 Fig- 26 Ancestral house, Gaua 22 Fig. 27 House of a man of high rank in the Suqe hierarchy 22 Fig. 28 House and gamal, Merlav 24 Fig. 29 Plan of a village in north Maewo 26 Fig. 30 Plan of a village in south Maewo 26 Fig. 31 Use of land in a traditional village 26 Fig. 32 Family house with stone foundation, Maewo 27 Fig. 33 Monolith on a grave at Maewo 27 Fig. 34 Plan of a hamlet, Ambae 29 Fig. 35 Plan of a hamlet, Ambae 29 Fig. 36 Use of land in Lolossori region, Ambae 29 Fig. 37 Houses with stone platform 30 Fig. 38 Houses in south-west Ambae 30 Fig. 39 House of a man of very high rank, Ambae 31 Fig. 40 House in west Ambae 31 Fig. 41 Longitudinal view and cross-section of a house in north-west Santo 34 Fig. 42 Storehouse in north-west Santo 34 Fig. 43 Sculpted columns of a men's house in north-west Santo 34 Fig. 44 Village plan, north-west Santo 35 Fig. 45 Village plan, north-east Santo 35 Fig. 46 Cross-section of a dwelling in north-east Santo 36 Fig. 47 Men’s house, Port-Orly 36 Fig. 48 Diagram of construction of fencing in north-east Santo 36 Fig. 49 The construction of a roof 36 Fig. 50 Village plan, central Santo 37 Fig. 51 Schematic representation of a family house in Tsrapae, central Santo 37 Plan and cross-section of a village house at Butmas 37 Fig. 52 Table of Illustrations 175 Fig. 53 Plan of house in south-west Santo 38 Fig. 54 Dwellings in south-west Santo 38 Fig. 55 House in the village of Vuinavanga, south-east Santo 38 Men’s house, north-west Santo 39 Fig. 56 Fig. 57 Men’s house on the west coast of Santo 39 Fig. 58 Interior of a men's house in west Santo 39 Fig. 59 Ceremonial area of a village in south-east Santo 40 Fig. 60 Men’s house, south-east Santo 40 Fig. 61 Dwelling in south-east Santo 41 Fig. 62 Longitudinal view and plan of house in central Santo 41 Dwelling in the village of Fwimatal 41 Fig. 64 Dwelling in the village of Vuinavanga 41 Fig. 65 Village plan, north Malo 45 Fig. 66 Dwelling in north Malo 45 Fig. 67 Reed fence, north Malo 45 Fig. 68 Cultural areas and patterns of interaction in north east Vanuatu 46 Partial schematic representation of the village of Bunlap, Pentecost 49 Fig. 70 Men working on the construction of a houseframe at Bunlap 49 Fig. 71 Men securing the roof beams with pandanus leaves, Bunlap 49 30 metre high wooden tower used for the Gol land-dive, Bunlap 50 Fig. 73 Men working on the base of the tower 50 Fig. 74 Detail of the diving platform 50 Fig. 75 Various stages of the land-dive 52 Fig. 76 House on a hillside, Bunlap 52 Fig. 77 House of a man of high rank, Pentecost 52 Fig. 78 Village plan, Ambrym 64 Fig'. 79 Men's house, Ambrym 64 Fig. 80 Men’s house, Ambrym 65 Fig. 63 Fig. 69 Fig. 72 Fig. 81 Men’s house with drums, tree-fern statue and sculpture representing stylised pig’s jaws 66 Fig. 82 Drums and statue at Bounlou village, 1871 66 Fig. 83 Men's house, Ambrym 67 Fig. 84 Drum beside a naghamal at Neha, north Ambrym 67 Fig. 85 Mel in Neha village, north Ambrym 67 Fig. 86 House with bamboo walls, Ambrym 68 Fig. 87 Family house, Ambrym 68 Fig. 88 Family house, Ambrym 68 Fig. 89 Sculptures of rank, carved from tree-fern stumps 70 Fig. 90 Vertical view and cross-section of a platform built around a statue of rank mage ne urur (wurwur) 72 Man on a platform with an axe in one hand, a pig club in the other 72 Fig. 91 Fig. 92 Rank-taking ceremony in an Ambrym village 73 Fig. 93 Head of a large siit-drum on Ambrym 75 Fig. 94 Ambrym slit-drum 75 Fig. 95 Two views of the detail on the head of an Ambrym drum 76 Fig. 96 Family house, Amok village 79 Fig. 97 Part of Amok village 79 Fig. 98 Various ponarats 81 Fig. 99 Ponarat positioned at the roof ridge of a men’s house 82 Fig. 100 House-frame under construction in north Malakula 82 Fig. 101 Interior of a name/ at Amok, north Malakula 82 Fig. 102 Village plan, central Malakula 84 Fig. 103 Village plan of Lexan, north Malakula 84 Fig. 104 Front view of a namel at Lexan (namel eya), north Malakula 85 Fig. 105 Namel, central Malakula 85 Fig. 106 Schematic perspective view of a house-frame 85 Fig. 107 Garden fence at Lexan, north-west Malakula 85 Fig. 108 Two men of the Big Nambas beating drums on the occasion of the killing of a pig, Amok 87 Table of Illustrations 177 Fig. 109 Dance area with large slit-drums, Batarmul 87 Fig. 110 Map of the islands of north-east Malakula 88 Fig. 111 Bird figurehead for canoe prow, Vao 90 Fig- 112 A ceremonial site (after J. Layard, 1942) at the village of Pete-hul, with drums and stone monuments 91 Fig. 113 Vertical section and plan of a ghamal of Pete-hul called Ber hangawul 92 Fig. 114 View of a ghamal at Pete-hul, Vao 92 Fig. 115 Gable of a ghamal, Vao, 1979 93 Fig. 116 Ceremonial site at Port-Sandwich at the beginning of the 20th century 93 Fig. 117 Multicoloured carved support post for a bird figure, forming one end of a roof beam, Vao 94 Village plan of Pete-hul with part of the villages of Togh-vanu and Peter-ihi, Vao 95 Fig. 119 Plan of the twin villages, Pete-hul and Togh-vanu, Vao 95 Fig. 120 Upper section of a vertical drum from Venu on the coast of Vao. Two pig jaws are hung on the drum 96 Fig. 121 Drum orchestra at Togh-vanu, Vao 98 Fig. 122 Drum orchestra, Vao 98 Fig. 123 Drum orchestra, Vao in 1979 98 Fig. 124 Graveyard with wooden sculpture and stone platforms 99 Grave sites and drum orchestra, Atchin 99 Fig. 118 Fig. 125 Fig. 126 Framework for a funeral monument 100 Fig. 127 Drum and sculpture, Rano 100 Fig. 128 Small Nambas house 105 Fig. 129 Men's houses, south Malakula 106 Fig. 130 Interior of the house of théold chief Tambwebalimbank, Mbotgote de Lendombwey village, south Malakula 106 Fig- 131 Tree-fern roof sculptures, Dirak village, south Lendombwey villager carrying Tambwebalimbank's rhambaramb 108 Fig. 133 Men's house, south Malakula 109 Fig. 134 Sculpture relating to the taking of rank ceremony of a man of high rank, south Malakula 109 Fig. 135 Man of high rank by a tree-fern sculpture 109 Fig. 136 A drum orchestra at Mendu, south-west Malakula Fig. 132 Fig. 137/138 Two drum heads Fig. 139 A child of Mbotgote beating a drum 111 111 111 Fig. 140 Village plan, south Malakula Fig. 141 Young folk in front of a house in South West Bay 112 Fig. 142 Men's house and drums at Meriver, 1891 112 Fig. 143 Village plan, Seniang 113 Fig. 144 Drum orchestra near a reed fence (naai seve), Seniang 113 Fig. 145 Dance area of Sarembal village, with stone sculpture 113 Fig. 146 Geometrical sand drawing, Seniang 114 Fig. 147 Geometrical sand drawing, Mewun, South West Bay 114 Fig. 148 Gable end of a naghamalat Tomman, south Malakula 117 Fig. 149 Wooden sculpture (mweleun sunburan), with small phallic figure 117 Naghama/in the dance area, Tomman 117 Fig. 151 Large men’s house at Tomman, Malakula 118 Fig. 152 Carved ancestral figures used as posts for a small house at Tomman, Malakula 118 Men’s house at Bwinembar, South West Bay, Malakula 119 Fig. 154 Diagrammatic representation of the framework of an amel 119 Fig. 155 Diagram of the gable of an amel, decorated for the rituals of Nalawan Amel Sesmandur, South West Bay 119 Fig. 150 Fig- 153 Fig. 156 Outhouse (amel nitemes) constructed for a 112 ceremony of the taking of rank Nevelvel ol Nimangki 120 Three figures of Tar-Lenunggor stand before a tree encircled by stones, South West Bay 120 Fig. 158 A palm (Ni-mweil) encircled by stones 120 Fig. 159 Map of part of the Isles of central Vanuatu 122 Fig. 160 Stone table for pig sacrifices, with two sculptures 122 Fig. 161 Drum orchestra at Lamen, Epi 122 Fig. 162 Hurricane shelter at Mara, Emae 125 Fig. 163 Family house (na suma) at Mulool, Buninga 125 Fig. 164 Communal house {na kamal) at Erata village, Tongariki 127 Communal house (na kamal) at Lakilia village, Tongariki 127 Fig. 166 Dwelling (na suma) at Erata, Tongariki 127 Fig. 167 Map of the Shepherd Archipelago 128 Fig. 168 Erect drums in front of the communal house at Lambukuti, 1871 130 Communal house (na kamal) at Lambukuti, Tongoa, in 1963. 130 Fig. 170 Front view and plan of a family house (na suma) 133 Fig. 171 Cross-section of a na suma 133 Fig. 172 Cross-section of a communal house (na kamali na toka) 133 Fig. 157 Fig. 165 Fig. 169 Fig. 173 Cross-section and plan of a large communal house, Erata 134 Fig. 174 View of the interior of the same building, Erata 134 Fig. 175 Hurricane shelter, Matarisu village, Efate 136 Fig. 176 Village plan, Saama, Efate in 1979 136 Fig. 177 Dwelling at Leleppa, Efate 136 Fig. 178 Hurricane shelter at Ifira, Fila Island 136 Fig. 179 View of the village of Matarisu, with surrounding wall 139 Front vertical section and plan of the house of chief Taripoamata 139 Fig. 180 Fig. 181 Back view of chief Taripoamata's house at Matarisu, Efate 140 Fig. 182 Family house, Matarisu 140 Fig. 183 Map of the isles of south Vanuatu 143 Fig. 184 View of Tanna, from an engraving by E. Lejeune 145 Fig. 185 Dance area of Ipai village, Tanna 145 Fig. 186 View of the frame for a hurricane shelter (nimaleten), Tanna, and diagram of the method of securing the various structural elements 146 Interior view of a hurricane shelter near White Sands 146 A village in east Tanna, Ipekel, at the foot of the volcano, Yasui A family house at White Sands, east Tanna 147 147 Fig. 190 House at Ipekel village, with a cross symbolising the John Frum cult, White Sands region 150 Fig. 191 Traditional-style house built by students undertaking cultural studies, Futuna 150 Stone carvings discovered in rocks at Aneityum 150 Fig. 187 Fig. 188 Fig. 189 Fig. 192 Fig. 193 Oulmetch village, south Aneityum 150 Appendix B Various forms of vertical drum 158 Appendix C Stages in the construction of the roofing of a traditional house 159 Index A mbae, The Island of 28; Aoba, also known as 28; clubhouses, men's, open to women 32; dance squares 32; family homes 32; forbidden to women, Men's houses 32; funerary buildings 33; houses32; menstruation hutforwomen 32; population 28; two crater lakes dominate 28 Ambrym, The Island of 63; Christian villages 72; Council of elders 69; dance square 77; division of labour 74; drums, with vertical slits, world famous 63, 74, wooden 77; forbidden to women 69; funeral rites 74; hierarchal organisation 74; meeting houses, Men's 63; men's house, The 69; pagan villages 69; population 63; rituals, mostly con cealed from women and children 74; tree-fern carvings 63,74, description of making 74; volcanoes, two active 63 Anatom (or Aneityum, Anetchom) The Island of 149; European contact, one of the first islands 149; houses, traditional style 149; moderate climate 149; popu lation 149; special houses to prolect boats 151; villages along seashore 149 Aniwa, The Island of 149; growing oranges 149; largest village, Isowai 149; popu lation 149; ritual preparation of kava 149; roofing material sugar-cane leaves 149 Archaeological research xii Artefacts in museums x Atchin, The Island of 78, 101; ancestors, statues of 101; dance place with stone platforms 101; men's houses 101; sacrificial altars 101 Bamboo xii; dividing compartments 3; knives for circumcision 48; reservoirs 5; wall 90 Banks Islands 3, 5; Architecture interest ing 7; basic material for framework and fencing 47; copra 7; economy 5; house, detail 15, overhang of roof 16; housing changed since beginning of century 7; Ureparapara the most northerly 7; volcanic 5 Banyan, the ideal tree 148 Black Island, The (see Ambrym) 63 Botanical heritage xi Bougainville x Breadfruit Tree (autocarpus altitus) 77 Building materials xii; communal effort, a xiii; coral or volcanic stone xii; mineral and vegetable matter 7; of a house xiii; vegetable fibres most commonly used xii Buninga, The Island of 126; population 126 Bunlap 48; boys circumcised with bamboo knives 48; circumcised youth to men's community 53; custodians of custom 48; people of 48; social set-up of village 48; village of 48 Chiefly system 86 Christianity, introduction of ix Clan prestige 86 Climate xi Coconut palm xiii; plantations on island of Mota 14 Colonisation ix Constitution, new, some clauses 153 Conqueror, Human victims offered to 80 Cook James, Captain x, 142 Cycad, at entrance to village 136; classic flora for sepulchres 33 Cyclones, Tropical xi Dance square 7, 15, 23, 32,77, 97,110,121 Dawn Island (see Maewo) 25 Dead, libation to 83 Design, imitating European 153 Designs, comparison of various xiii Drum called chinchin, A 5 Durand, W.J. Father 1 Earthquakes, frequent xi Ecology, good adaptation to 152 Economy of coastal villages xi; mountain bush xi; Vanuatuan 154 Education, one of most sensitive issues 155 Efate, The Island of xi, 135, 153; Fila Islet 137; Hurricane hut 137; Matarisu, village of 138, Chief’s house 138; most densely populated 135; Nguna 137, PortHavannah 137, Port Vila 135, satel lite islands, surrounded by 135, villages spread along coast 135 Emae, The Island of 124; villages of Makata, San gava, Sasake, Marae 124 Environment, natural ix Epi, The Island of.121 Erromango, The Island of 141; population 141; Sandalwood Islands 141 Erronan, The Island of (see Futuna); 149 European navigators x; travellers xi Ewose, The Island of 126; uninhabited 129 Fences, chiefly 86 Food-safes 86 Funeral areas xii; feasts 5; rites 3, 74,102; sites xii Funerary buildings 33 Futuna, The Island of (see also Erronan) 149; isolated island 149; Polynesian origins of inhabitants 149; type dwell ings 149; population 149 Gaua, The Island of (or Santa Maria) 19; architecture, three type 19; family home of a high-ranking man 23; gamal 19; Go Jump, special rite 48; house of high-ranking ancestor 23; Lake Letas lies within crater 19; largest of Banks Islands 19; roofing, different types 19; social diversity in the village 23; ‘Stone Building at Gaua' 19; volcanic 19 ghamal, description 90; each village has only one 90; made by women 90; one erected in Pete-hul 90; thatch of palmleaf titles 90 Hat Ragha (see Penticost Island) 47 Heritage, cultural 152 Hostilities, in case of 80 House, building of a xiii; domestic 16 Human victims, offered to conqueror 80 Humidity makes material rot quickly 144 I le Aurore (see Maewo) 25 Independence, new responsibilities 153 Inter-island relations, development should be fostered 153 Introduction of new materials xi Kava 80; consumption of 86; cups from which it was drunk,148; double session 80; making 3, 5; national drink 144; ritual preparation of 149 Lakon (see Gaua) 19 Lepers', Island of (see Ambae) 28 Liro Village 121 Lopevi, The Island of 121; island un inhabited 121; volcano given to violent eruptions 121 Loulep Village 121 Luganville xi, 154 Maewo, The Island of 25, 28; Europeans, first contact with fatal 25; houses 25; village, in plan of 28; women, could not enter the man’s house 25 Makira or Makura, The Island of 124; population 124; soil excellent 124 Malakula, Island of 78; inter-island trading 78; mountainous 78; population 78; the great slit drums of 89, with human faces 89 Malekula, (seeMalakula) flooding, cutoff by 102; funeral rites 102; huts, distin guishing features 102; Nimangi, a hierarchal society 102 Malo, The Island of 44; homes often sur rounded by cane fences 47; houses 47; roof with two pitches 47 Mataso, The Island of 124; Four villages, Worokoto, Mata'as(o), Sawi(a), Silimauri 124; Na'asang now only village 124 Melanesian house, typical 7 Melanesians, the 19 Merig, The small Island of 19 Merlay, The Island of 23; dance square 23; has become Christian 24; houses 23; most populated 23 Meskelynes Islands 78 Migrants, three distinct categories 154 Migration of youth to urban centres 154 Mota, Island of 14; coconut plantations 14; housing kept to pre-European locality 14; land subsistence 14; population 14; volcanic cone 14 Mot lav, Island of 14; dance square 15; population 14; villages, five large 14 namal, building of a 80 Paama, The Island of 121; five villages 121 ; no river 121; volcanic origin 121 Pandanus xiii; leaves 144 Pentecost Island 47; Bunlap, Villages of (see under B) 48; circumcised youth admitted to men's community 53; Gojump, special rite 48, fatal accident, only one 54 Polynesian technology, influence of 152 Port Sandwich x Port Vilaxi, 154 Rano, The Isle of 78, 101 Ravena, Islet of 14 Roofs, of bamboo, bent over a ridge-pole 7; material in island of Aniwa 149; preferred material for xii, 144; with two pitches 47 Sago Palm xiii Saint Clare 19 Sand drawings 115; symbolic 115 Sandalwood Islands 141 Santa Maria (see Gaua Island) 19 Santo, The Island of 33; Christian village, A 43; European and Christian indi genous homes 43; house in Butmas village, two descriptions 44; largest Vanuatu island 33; least populated 33; number of posts in house 42; planta tions and stock-farming areas 33; small houses for conjugal encounters 42; Tshaped houses 42 Seniang region 110; house building 115; inhabitants Christian 110; rafter making 115; Suriot, Bay of 110;thatching 115 Shepherd, the — Islands 124; Cyclone hut 124; houses, better shape to withstand cyclones 124; path of tropical cyclones 124; population 124 Social structure, two distinct types xi South West Bay region 105; circles of stones 110; dialects, three distinct 105; man’s houses 110; na-me/105; profane part reserved for women 110; sacred part reserved for initiated men 110; skulls of high-ranking dead 110 Sugar Cane xiii, 144 Taal Netan 121 Taboo, two crossed cycad leaves 138 Tafea Group, the 141 Tahi Village 121 Tanna, The Islandof, building of ahut 148; coral island 142; densely populated 142; fences, detail 144; frequent wars raged on island 144; ideal tree, the Banyan 148; land tenure 144; nimwayim 148; people live in hamlets 144; pi ace of ritual 148; roofing materials 144; system of titles 144; volcanic in origin 142 Technical achievements, quality of 155 Techniques, new evolved ix Tomman Island 78, 116; Table of Bwenekhay history 116 Tongariki, The Island of 124; aristocratic system 126; highlands not easily accessible 124; population 124; right to use certain parcels of land 126; tradi tional title 126 Tongoa, The Island of 129; construction of building 131; fourteen villages 129; largest bf Shepherd Islands 129; meet ing houses 129, various parts 132, nomination of new chief 131; popula tion 129; thatch, thick — detail 132; women help in gathering material 131; woods used 132 Torres Islands, The 1, 5; Christianity changed traditional organisation 1; completion of thatching 3; Dwellings, ridge-pole weakest point 3; gemelmost important place in village 3 Urban centres xi Ureparapara, The Island of 7; curved houses on stone bases 7; homes of men of rank 7 Uripiv, The Isle of 102 Vanua-Lava, The Island of 9; higher alti tudes have poor soil 9; huts 9; largest island in Banks archipelago 9; popula tion 9; rainfall heavy 9 Vanuatu’s national flag 138 Vao, The Island of xii, 78, 97; dance squares 97; densely populated 97; family plots of land 97 Vegetable fibres xii Village, dance square 15; description of 15; established on gentle slopes 15; gamal 15; gardens, surrounded by 15; layout of houses 15; men’s public club house 15, forbidden to women 15; plants denoting what is forbidden, taboo 15 volcanic line, active xi Wailep Village 121 Wala Island, The 78,101 Wallisian traditional housing 153