The Technical Style of Wallaga Pottery Making: An Ethnoarchaeological Study of Oromo Potters in Southwest Highland Ethiopia |
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Authors: | Bula Sirika Wayessa |
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Institution: | (1) University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada |
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Abstract: | Pottery making is still practiced widely in parts of Ethiopia but variations in its technical practices are poorly documented.
This study presents an ethnoarchaeological investigation of the technical style of pottery making among the Oromo of western
Wallaga, located in the highlands of southwestern Ethiopia. The Oromo are a Cushitic-speaking people who occupied Wallaga
as part of a massive expansion that occurred between the early sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This resulted in the Oromo
settling among Omotic and Nilo-Saharan peoples in Wallaga. Oromo pottery production in the region is passed down through family
lines, and these potters use specific technical styles, which are distinct in material properties and production processes
from the surrounding non-Oromo communities. Documentation of the technical styles of contemporary potter communities provides
a material means for archaeologists to investigate the history and interaction of social groups in the past. Specifically,
this study is relevant to investigating the poorly documented history of the Oromo expansion. |
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Keywords: | |
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