ABSTRACT

This chapter examines changes in the perception and use of sacred groves among the Ndia and Gichugu Kikuyu of Kirinyaga District, Kenya. It analyzes the linkages between religious conversion, wider processes of sociocultural change, and modifications in a particular form of common property resource regime. The chapter focuses on Kirinyaga, some comparative information is included from other parts of central Kenya. Kirinyaga is located on the southern slopes of Mount Kenya. Some of contemporary Kirinyaga‘s most beautiful trees owe their survival to their reputation as shrines and ceremonial sites. Kirinyaga was brought under colonial control in 1904, nearly a decade after Great Britain established the East Africa Protectorate. Colonialism undermined the indigenous sociocultural system which supported the sacred groves. Relatively few sacred trees were lost through land appropriation in Kirinyaga. In colonial Kirinyaga, the introduction of new belief systems, political hierarchy, and economic stratification eroded the old bonds of sociocultural unity.