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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
710 MALEKULA type ; by the use of the bull-roarer ; by the cult of the dead and of the skulls of the dead (involving the treatment of the corpse with ï¬Åre and being manifested in South Malekula by the custom of making mmbammqb) ; by the carving of tree-fern images ; by the cult of the cycas, croton, Erythrina, and cordyline ; by the setting up of stone structures such as dolmens, monoliths, and stone images; by the development of a graded society with chieftainship, a rigid sex dichotomy, and the attendant ritual phenomena of the Sukwe and Nimangki. To this culture I also attribute totemism, the use of the spear and of the conch tnimpet, the institution of tebu and, where it occurs, the sky home of the dead. Very probably, too, the use of the slit gong and of a system of signalling by means of gong-rhythms,‘ the practice of giving a pig as a burnt offering, which occurs in Ambryrn and Malekula, and the An-lbat~Qat mythological cycle belong to this culture. Finally, it was, I presume, distinguished by patrilineal descent, inheritance, and succession. It appears to have spread over both the patrilineal and the matrilineal areas of the Northern New Hebrides, modifying the kinship organization of the latter region by changing the rules of inheritance and succession to patriliny. It is most strongly developed, or acquired the strongest hold, in those places where the mat-skirt culture had penetrated only very slightly or not at all, and is lacking many of its features in those places where the mat-skirt culture is dominant. The great influence of this fourth “ secret society culture in East, South, and North-West Malekula is probably associated with the former presence in these parts of the island of the great sea-going canoes which have been described, and indeed it is more than likely that these were the vehicles whereby the culture reached these shores. This theory is strengthened when we remember that in days gone by a nimbembew canoe was, in Lambumbu, one of the sacred things for the purchase of which a man celebrated a Nimangki festival. As regards the relative date at which this secret society ‘ It is obvious that the system of gongsignalling as it is carried out in South-West Malekula would be impossible in a community having a simple dual organization or even in one whose social structure involved six marriage sections. 1: is essentially bound up with the System oi local village exogamy as is that found in Malekula. (See above, pp. 52-54.) It will also have been noticed how very similar are the rites celebrated at the erection and purchase oi a new gong, to those performed at entrance to a new Nimanghi rank in Seniang. or at the acquisition of a new " sacred thing " in Lambu!:nbu.—C. H. W. ..-_, ,1 J.
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