Untitled Image (Canoe Construction and Usages)

This image shows two Africans making a dugout canoe, while several others paddle a canoe on a river in the Voltaic region. According to Dapper, "the canoes of the Negroes are distinctive enough that they deserve being described," Dapper details the techniques of their construction (pp. 297-98). In an informed discussion of Dapper as an historical source, Adam Jones writes "there is virtually no evidence that Dapper took much interest in what sort of visual material was to accompany his text, and that it was the publisher, Van Meurs, who probably did all the engraving himself." With respect to the plates, in particular, Jones concludes that "for those interested in seventeenth-century black Africa rather than in the history of European perceptions, few of the plates showing human beings and artefacts are of any value. . . [and] originated solely from Van Meurs' imagination. . . [although] they have been used as historical evidence in modern works." See Jones, "Decompiling Dapper: A Preliminary Search for Evidence" History in Africa, 17 (1990), pp. 187-190.

Image Title

Untitled Image (Canoe Construction and Usages)

RegID

SI-OB-638

Date

Late-1600s

Title

Untitled Image (Canoe Construction and Usages)

Source

D. O. Dapper, Description de l'Afrique. . . Traduite du Flamand (Amsterdam, 1686; 1st ed., 1668), p. 297. Copy in the John Carter Brown Library at Brown University.

Language

French

Item sets

Pre-Colonial Africa: Society, Polity, Culture

Spatial Coverage

Africa--Voltaic

Reproduced In

D. O. Dapper, Description de l'Afrique . . . Traduite du Flamand (Amsterdam,1686;1st ed., 1668), p. 297.

Researchers

Jerome Handler; Michael Tuite; Henry B. Lovejoy Graduate Research Assistants: Tiffany Beebe; Travis May

Identifier

DAP6