Caption, Temple des Talbes ou Marabouts. The Talbes, according to Villeneuve, were Moorish clerics (pretres maures) while the Marabouts (in the Wolof language called Serime) were Black Muslim clerics; the latter were disciples of the former and there was a great deal of contact between the two. Their mosques are an uncovered straw enclosure forming a long square at the end of which is found another square for those at prayer (pp. 99, 101-102). Villeneuve lived in the Senegal region for about two years in the mid-to-late 1780s. The engravings in his book, he writes, were made from drawings that were mostly done on the spot during his African residence (vol. 1, pp. v-vi). The same illustration appears in color in the English translation of Villeneuve; see Frederic Shoberl (ed.), Africa; containing a description of the manners and customs, with some historical particulars of the Moors of the Zahara . . . (London, 1821), vol. 3, facing p. 63.
Muslims at Prayer, Senegal, 1780s
SI-OB-616
1780-1790
Muslims at Prayer, Senegal, 1780s
Renè Claude Geoffroy de Villeneuve, L'Afrique, ou histoire, moeurs, usages et coutumes des africains: le Sènègal (Paris, 1814), vol. 4, facing p. 102. (Copy in Special Collections, University of Virginia Library)
French
Pre-Colonial Africa: Society, Polity, Culture
Africa--Western Savanna
Renè Claude Geoffroy de Villeneuve, L'Afrique, ou histoire, moeurs, usages et coutumes des africains: le Sènègal (Paris, 1814), vol. 4, facing p. 102.
Handler, Jerome; Tuite, Michael; Randall Ericson; Henry B. Lovejoy Graduate Research Assistants: Tiffany Beebe; Travis May
26-Aug-10
VILE-102