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The Monk's Kop Ossuary

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Extract

This paper describes the excavation of a cave used for funerary purposes in the Mtoroshanga district of Rhodesia. The cave was found to contain a large quantity of skeletal material and pottery, together with the personal ornaments of the persons interred there. The physical type represented is similar to that of the modern Bantu-speaking peoples of Southern Africa. Bodies had been placed in the cave surrounded by pottery—although pottery, unlike the skeletal material, which was ubiquitous, was mainly placed towards the entrance of the cave. Quantities of palm-leaf and bark-cloth matting used for wrapping round the bodies of the persons interred were found. Conus shell end-whorls and glass beads indicate trade links with the outside world.

There are two superimposed funerary layers in the cave, both belonging to the same culture, but at different stages of its development. The earlier layer has been dated by radicarbon dating methods to approximately the late 13th or early 14th century A.D. Prior to its use for funerary purposes, the cave had been briefly occupied for other purposes by people of the same culture.

The ceramics of the site indicate that it belongs to a culture newly recognized in Rhodesia with a fairly wide distribution in the north-east of the country. Cultural affinities lie with Zambia and Malawi, rather than with the contemporary Zimbabwe culture, whose expansion, indeed, probably put an end to the occupation of the Mtoroshanga area by the people of the ossuary.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1967

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References

1 J. Clyde Mitchell, verbal communication.Google Scholar

2 Robinson, K. R., ‘A note on Iron Age sites in the Zambezi valley, etc.’, Arnoldia, 1 no. 27 (1965).Google Scholar

3 Anderson, F. V., ‘The Shimabala mass burial’, S.A. Arth. Bull. (1961), 144.Google Scholar

4 Robinson, K. R., Preliminary report on the recent archaeology of Ngonde, Northern Malawi, J. Afr. Hist. VII, no. 2 (1961), 169.Google Scholar