Expeditions into Darkest Africa

A Painting Guide

By Mark Copplestone

EXPLORERS

Early European explorers tended to wear clothes of a cut and colour popular at home, or a specially made, often idiosyncratic, travelling costume. Later a white or pale khaki "uniform" with a tropical helmet or wide-brimmed hat became the norm. Some of the more famous explorers were associated with a particular costume:

Livingstone - a red smock and a blue peaked cap with a gold band.

Baker - a loose smock and trousers, dyed in natural shades, with a peaked cap with neckflap.

Speke - light brown trousers, a greenish tweed waistcoat with many pockets, and a check shirt.

Stanley - a frogged jacket and curious hat ofhis own devising, in a pale shade of khaki.

Flags - expeditions starting in Zanzibar usually carried the Sultan's plain red flag, and often a national flag too.

ASKARIS

Skin - could vary from yellowish bronze to dark brown. Askaris would net wear warpaint, although some, would have tribal scars.

Loincloths - most commonly off-white cotton, sometimes dyed yellow-brown, indigo (all shades from blue-black to faded denim) or white with a narrow reddish border. Other more colourful fabrics included blue with a broad red stripe, dark blue with a red or yellow border, multi-coloured checks and sometimes plain red. In practice these best clothes would be kept for special occasions, and everyday loincloths would be ragged and stained.

Waistcoats - blue or red in imitation of the Zanzibaris.

Coats and Shirts - if worn at all, could represent a rudimentary uniform eg the white coats with red or blue cuffs and a matching square between the shoulders worn by Imperial British East Africa Company troops in 1890.

Hats - either fezzes and caps, in red or white, or turbans, usually white.

BEARERSM

Dressed more poorly than askaris in plain fabrics or animal skins.

ZANZIBARI ARABS

Skin - varied, from olive to dark brown, with the number of generations a family had been settled in East Africa .

Gown - a long shirt with full-length sleeves. Originally this was yellow, but by the 1860s was invariably white, its brightness increasing with status. At the waist there was usually a sash, often white although any colour could be used. A shorter shirt, in a striped or patterned fabric, was sometimes worn over the gown.

Waistcoats and Jackets - dark blue or red zouave style with contrasting edging and decoration.

Overmantles - in dark blue or red, worn by leaders,

Hats - white fezzes or turbans. Wealthier Arabs often used multicoloured, striped silks for their turbans,

Flags - a blood-red flag was the sign of a caravan from Zanzibar, although the contingents ofindividual leaders carried their own flags. These were probably simple vertical or horizontal stripes in blue, red and white, although patterned fabrics may have been used.

RUGA-RUGA

Clothing - a mixture of askari, Zanzibari and tribal styles, Red cloaks were sometimes worn. Officers wore white gowns and red or blue coats.

Hats - large turbans with feathers, feathered tribal headdresses and probably fezzes.

Ornaments - lots of ivory bangles, brass or copper wire around wrists and ankles and chums.

CENTRAL AFRICAN TRIBES

Skin - from light to very dark brown, fairly uniform within a particular tribe

Loincloths - animal skins, bark cloth (pale red-brown) and later imported cloth.

Hair and Headgear - huge variety ofhairstyles, which were often the distinguishing feature of a tribe. Feathers could be fixed in hair - ostrich feathers (long white and short black) in East Africa, and parrot feathers (long crimson and short grey) in the Congo basin. Feathers could also be attached to animal skin or basketwork caps.

Warpaint - not always used, but when it was red and white were the usual colours. Patterns usually involved painting parts ofthc body in solid colours (eg white arms and ]cgs or red upper body). Sometimes the entire body could be painted, halfred and halfwhite. A tribe might uso a common style, but would not be painted absolutely uniformly.

Shields - in East Africa, when used, were round or oval and made of hide. They were often unpainted, although at least one tribe painted theirs half red and half black. Any combination of red, white and black is possible. In the damper Congo, where hide was unavailable or would rot too fast, shields were made of basketwork or light wood. Both types were commonly painted black, either plain or with geometric patterns left in the natural cane colour. Shields were held by a central hand-grip.


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© Copyright 1997 Hal Thinglum
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