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Anthropos, 32.1937

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Bibliographic Data

fullscreen: Anthropos, 32.1937

Journal

Structure Type:
Journal
Works URN (URL):
https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:kobv:11-714789
URN:
urn:nbn:de:kobv:11-714789
Persistent identifier:
BV041701500
Title:
Anthropos
Sub Title:
internationale Zeitschrift für Völker- u. Sprachenkunde
Other Titles:
Anthropos
Place of Publication:
Fribourg
Publisher:
Ed. St. Paul, Anthropos-Institut
Year of Publication:
1906
Collection:
Journals and Newspapers > Journals of Ethnology
Domain:
Social and cultural anthropology > General overview

Journal Volume

Structure Type:
Journal Volume
Works URN (URL):
https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:kobv:11-709549
URN:
urn:nbn:de:kobv:11-709549
Persistent identifier:
DE-11-001871392
Title:
Anthropos, 32.1937
Year of Publication:
1937
Call Number:
LA 1118-32
Collection:
Journals and Newspapers > Journals of Ethnology

Journal Issue

Structure Type:
Journal Issue
Title:
Bd. 32, 1937, Heft 5, 6
Collection:
Journals and Newspapers > Journals of Ethnology

Journal Article

Structure Type:
Journal Article
Title:
Negritos of Eastern Luzon
Other person:
Vanoverbergh, Morice
Collection:
Journals and Newspapers > Journals of Ethnology

Contents

Table of Contents

  • Anthropos
    -
  • Anthropos, 32.1937
    [I]
  • Front Cover
    -
  • Front Paste Down
    -
  • Endsheet
    -
  • Title Page
    [I]
  • Table of Contents: Index
    [III]
  • Journal Issue: Bd. 32, 1937, Heft 1, 2
    [1]
  • Journal Issue: Bd. 32, 1937, Heft 3, 4
    [347]
  • Journal Issue: Bd. 32, 1937, Heft 5, 6
    [723]
  • Journal Article: Germanentum und Wirtschaft / Hashagen, Justus
    [723]
  • Journal Article: Coutumes funéraires des Nkundo. (Fin.) / Hulstaert, Pére G.
    729
  • Journal Article: Zehn Volkserzählungen aus Peking / Weller, Friedrich
    743
  • Journal Article: Alpenländische Volksmusik im Lichte musikethnologischer Forschung / Sichardt, Wolfgang
    773
  • Journal Article: Some phases of Chippewa material culture / Hilger, M. Inez
    780
  • Journal Article: Rassendiagnose der Juden und ihrer Vorfahren / Wellisch, S.
    783
  • Journal Article: Totemismus und Zweiklassensystem bei den Sioux-Indianern. (Schluß.) / Haeckel, Josef
    795
  • Journal Article: Religion and Divination of the Logbara Tribe of North-Uganda. (Conclusion.) / Ramponi, Egidio
    849
  • Journal Article: Bericht über eine Expedition zu den Kalyo Kengyo Naga, Assam / Fürer-Haimendorf, Christoph von
    875
  • Journal Article: Die Hochzeitsgebräuche der Balahis / Fuchs, Stephan
    885
  • Journal Article: Negritos of Eastern Luzon / Vanoverbergh, Morice
    905
  • Journal Article: Die Sprache der Quiché (Kice) von Guatemala / Lewy, Ernst
    929
  • Journal Article: Analecta et Additamenta / Lehmann-Nitsche, Robert
    959
  • Journal Article: Miscellanea
    983
  • Bibliography: Bibliographie
    997
  • Bibliography: Avis
    1039
  • Bibliography: Zeitschriftenschau. - Revue des Revues.
    1046
  • Advertising
    -
  • Postscript
    -
  • Back Paste Down
    -
  • Back Cover
    -
  • Color Chart
    -

Full Text

922 
Father Morice Vanoverbergh, C. I. C. M., 
The latter type of hut was often partially walled and sometimes provided 
with a kind of penthouse, but the walling might be demolished for the smallest 
reason. Once at Dilalongan (Cas.), after I had entered a Negrito hut, the 
owner cut down the sole piece of walling it could claim, in order, he said, to 
give his guest more air. 
At Adawag (Cagayan) and at Makasabobo (Rizal), most of the huts 
were of this type, and some of them were provided with walling on two or 
three sides. At the latter place, I saw one very pretentious Negrito hut: it was 
supplied with a kind of unfloored balcony and contained a rough bamboo 
bench for visitors. 
The most usual type of Negrito hut, however, was the low unwalled 
shed, wind shields being mostly constructed only in places where the Negritos 
were temporarily working for other people. 
The dimensions of a typical hut of this kind, at Ditailin (Bal.), were as 
follows (Plate 12): 
Height of floor above the ground: 2' 2"; 
From floor to ridge of the roof: 4'; 
Breadth: 6' 7”; 
Length of each of the two slopes of the roof: 9' 5"; 
Area of floor, raised on separate sticks: 6' 5" X 5' 2". 
In the district of Casiguran, the furniture usually consisted of one iron 
kettle for cooking rice, and a few bamboo tubes for carrying water. No pottery 
of any kind was to be found there. 
Neither cats nor chickens were met with in any place, while dogs were 
comparatively numerous. 
VII. Food. 
1. Eating. 
Nowadays rice is the staple food among the Negritos as well as among 
the other tribes that inhabit the island of Luzon. Nevertheless very few of them 
raise rice, and even when they do, they never raise it in sufficient quantities, 
nor do they have granaries for storing agricultural products; therefore they 
largely depend on the Malays for their daily bread. 
Negritos live from day to day, or rather from meal to meal. Whenever 
they brought us a sufficient amount of fish or venison to last us for several 
days, the only thing they wanted in exchange was a quantity of rice that would 
suffice them and their families for one meal; after that, when they felt hungry 
again, they would come to “borrow” some more, but they never took it into 
their heads to ask us for full payment at once and to store away what was not 
needed for immediate consumption. 
The few products that are raised by them, provided they have any fields 
and cling to them up till harvest time, are consumed gradually according to 
their needs; for the rest they depend on hunting and fishing, and, at Baler 
and Casiguran, especially on the latter.
	        

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