ABSTRACT

Since publication in 1957 the importance of Bohannan's study of judicial institutions and procedures among the Tiv has been widely recognized. It has contributed widely to the continuing discussion concerning the objectives and methods to be followed in the anthropological study of law and the contribution this makes to comparative jurisprudence. the work describes and defines Tiv ideas of 'law' as expressed in the operations of their courts known as Jir. The analysis is based on and illustrated by numerous cases which the author attended and discussed with leaders in the Jir.

part |42 pages

Introductory

chapter I|11 pages

The Sahara

chapter II|10 pages

Africa Antiqua

chapter III|9 pages

Races of Man

chapter IV|11 pages

Medieval Arabic Writers

part |72 pages

Beled Es Sudan

chapter V|13 pages

The Almoravids

chapter VI|10 pages

Ghana

chapter VII|15 pages

Mali

chapter VIII|10 pages

The Rise of the Songhai Empire

chapter IX|11 pages

The Askias

chapter X|12 pages

Leo Africanus

part |86 pages

The Golden Trade

chapter XI|11 pages

The Crescent and the Cross

chapter XII|10 pages

The Quest for Gold

chapter XIII|14 pages

The Sea of Darkness

chapter XIV|19 pages

The Moorish Invasion*

chapter XV|13 pages

The Fall of the Songhai Empire

chapter XVI|9 pages

El Dzehebi

chapter XVII|9 pages

The Later Pashas

part |69 pages

The Sudan Unveiled

chapter XVIII|8 pages

The Veil

chapter XIX|9 pages

The Niger Quest

chapter XX|14 pages

The Sokoto Fulani

chapter XXI|13 pages

The Lifting of the Veil

chapter XXII|15 pages

The Great Caravans

chapter XXIII|9 pages

Shepherd Kings