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[Note: this transcription was produced by an automatic OCR engine]
346 MALEKULA ' stitched together (Fig. 19b), while the nau na-mbzmgon nivongan ii/ah is a much wider belt, cut at one end so as to form four separate tassels which are again edged with a yellow fringe (Fig. Igc). Another nisit tlel is a ï¬Ållet or head-band called mm llel. It carries with it very great prestige and is the same as the mtel mulun/an of Seniang, which, it will be remembered, was obtained from Lambumbu for candidates entering Nu/zlvel and higher grades. The arm-band, called in Seniang nimbinben and there purchased afresh at every rise in rank, is known as Mimum in the north, and is, it seems, acquired only once, generally in connection with the title Tovtdp. As with the other objects, so too with the ï¬Åres of the Nimangki of Larnhurnbu ; they are not correlated with any special name or object, but in effect they do (or rather did) to some extent stratify society. Formerly, before the Nimangki had become largely disorganized as a result of the depopulation of the district, four ï¬Åres were distinguished: naamb luv Mghe, naamb ievi mint, naamb miliin, and mmmb min/Mu. Of these mzamb 1m'li1'n and naumb mlivafu alone survive, and the latter has almost fallen into disuetude, for there were in I926 only two men living who had the right to eat at it, and for the sake of companionship they had joined the common ï¬Åre miliin. Ruhvam belongs exclusively to members of the highest ranks, those bearing the tltlc Rhus Nevat, or one yet more exalted. Here we meet with another signiï¬Åcant difference between the Nimangki as it is iound in Seniang and in Lambumbu. In the south it is fundamentally a democratic institution ; any man who can accumulate the necessary wealth can attain as high as he chooses, and though, as was pointed out, a prosperous man could expedite the advancement of his sons, there was no system by which a child could claim membership of any degree as a birthright. In Lambumbu on the other hand, chieftainship, although undoubtedly inconceivable apart from the possession oi full Nimangki dignity, and though built up by the Nimangki, transcends the constitution of this society and has become, for all practical purposes, the prerogative and heritage of one or two families who have the prestige of a line of chieftainship behind them in each of the small areas which go to make up the district. Thus the sons of a man of Rus Nevat '1 -1. 1 ., i.
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