Food in the Domestic Economy of the Tallensi

  • Fortes M
  • Fortes S
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Abstract

The hinterland of the Gold Coast north of the 10th parallel N. Latitude is a land of sparse forestation lying within the Sudanese Zone. The continuous plains, the monotony of which is, in the dry season, broken only by scattered trees, occasional patches of low bush or a low range of hills, have been described as belonging to an ‘Orchard bush’ type of country. The Tale settlements occupy an area of some 200 square miles, immediately north of the White Volta river, and have a population density of over 170 to the square mile in the settled parts. Agriculture is the basic industry of the Tallensi and their neighbours, but their farms yield only a bare living to the majority of the populace. Unduly late rains or a visitation of locusts spells food deficiency bordering on famine for thousands.

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Fortes, M., & Fortes, S. L. (1936). Food in the Domestic Economy of the Tallensi. Africa, 9(2), 237–276. https://doi.org/10.2307/1155627

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