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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EUD-FAT |
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FANG (FAN, FANWE, PANWE, PAHOUIN, PAOUEN, MPANGWE) , a powerful African people occupying the Gabun district
call
bright expressive oval faces with prominent cheek-bones. Many of them file their teeth to points. Their hair , which is woolly, is worn by the women long, reaching below the nape of the neck. The men wear it in a variety of shapes, often building it up over a wooden base. The growth of the hair appears abundant, but that on the face is usually removed. Little clothing is worn; the men wear a bark waist-cloth, the women a plantain girdle, sometimes with a bustle of dried grass. A chief
tattoo
body
and delight in ornaments of every kind. The men, whose sole occupations are fighting and hunting, all carry armsmuskets, spears for throwing and stabbing, and curious throwing-knives with blades broader than they are long. Instead of bows and arrows they use crossbows made of ebony, with which they hunt apes and birds. In battle the Fang used to carry elephant hide shields; these have apparently been discarded. When first met by T. E. Bowdich (1815) the Paamways, as he calls the Fang, were an inland people inhabiting the hilly plateaus north of the Ogowe affluents. Now they have become the neighbours of the Mpongwe (q.v.) of Glass and Libreville on the Komo river, while south of the Gabun they have reached the sea at several points. Their original
Morally the Fang are superior to the negro. Mary Kingsley writes: " The Fan is full of fire, temper, intelligence and go, very teachable, rather difficult to manage, quick
worship , with a belief in sympathetic magic.R. E. Dennett, Notes on the Folklore of the Fjort (1898); William Winwood Reade, The African Sketch Book (1873) ; and (chiefly) A. L. Bennett, " Ethnographical Notes on the Fang," Journ. Anthr. Inst. N.S., p. 66, and L. Martron in Anthropos, t. i. (1906), fast. 4. End of Article: FANG (FAN, FANWE, PANWE, PAHOUIN, PAOUEN, MPANGWE) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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