[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
1.,“ 1 V in CHAPTER V . KINSHIP ORGANIZATION IN NORTH, CENTRAL, AND EAST MALEKULA From the other districts of Malekula, lying to the north of Lambumbu and Lagalag, and also along the east coast, very little information was obtained concerning the groupings and behaviour of kind.red and the regulation of marriage. Two diflerentlists of kinship terms have been recorded from different parts of the Big Nambas territory, and others exist from Senbarei district, and from ‘the four small inland districts to the south of Lagalag called Bangasa, Nesan, Niviar, and Uerik. THE Bic NAMBAS There are no records at all which give any certain information about the kinship structure or the marriage regulations among the Big Nambas. The evidence implies that the people are divided into a number of local, patrilineal, exogamous clans, and it is deï¬Ånitely stated that for a man and woman oi the same clan to have sexual intercourse is an offence punishable with death. Polygyny is practised, but almost exclusively by chiefs. In Lagalag and Lambumbu important men may have as many as from eight to twenty wives, but even this number is some- times exoeeded by the chiefs of the Big Narnbas. Undoubtedly this multiplicity of wives, like the multiplicity of boy lovers (cf. p. 261) which a chief usually has, is closely bound up with the economic lite of the people and the part which chiefs are expected to play in it. . . As has already been mentioned, the stretch of territory occupied by the people who are called by the Europeans " the Big Nambas â€ù is, in reality, inhabited by two or more distinct tribes, which, although they have what we are probably correct in regarding as fundamentally the same culture, possess distinct dialects and certain cultural peculiarities. Of the two lists of Big Nambas kinship terms which Deacon recorded, one comes from the small district of Malua (whence, too, a genealogy has I15 .i>. L