LDR   03478nkm^^22005533a^4500
001        LOAA004570_00001
005        20150312120042.0
006        m^^^^^o^^c^^^^^^^^
007        cr^^n^---ma^mp
008        150218n^^^^^^^^xx^nnn^^^^^^^^o^^^^neng^d
024 7    |a PP MS 58/02/K/14 |2 calm reference
040        |a UkLSOA |c UkLSOA
245 00 |a Path to Ungma with pool (Image number K.014, J.P. Mills Photographic Collection) |h [electronic resource].
260        |c [1918-1926], ©1926.
490        |a J.P. Mills Photographic Collection.
500        |a Date of photograph: [1918-1926], ©1926
500        |a Copyright held by the Estate of J.P. Mills. The Estate is currently (2015) represented by Geraldine Hobson.
500        |a This item may be used under license: Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial (CC BY-NC)
500        |a This photograph is part of album K. Many of the images of this album are published in "The Ao Nagas" 1926. Mongsen andChongli are two groups of the Ao, speaking their own dialect and following their own customs. At the time these photographs were taken some villages could contain khels of these separate groups, each khel knowing the other's language but speaking its own. This was often very inconvenient, so a village might decide to speak the same dialect, even though Mongsen or Chongli customs continued to be differentiated among the inhabitants. There were also, of course, villages which were purely Mongsen or Chongli.
500        |a Originally collected in Album K of the "J.P. Mills Photographic Collection". (Held in the SOAS, University of London, Archives and Special Collections.)
500        |a Mills, J. P. (James Philip), 1890-1960. The Ao Nagas. London : Macmillan & Co., 1926. (LCCN: 27013331)
500        |a Jacobs, Julian. The Nagas : hill peoples of Northeast India : society, culture, and the colonial encounter. London : Thames and Hudson, 1990.
500        |a VIAF ID: 2475026 (name authority) : Mills, J.P. (James Philip), 1890-1960
500        |a VIAF ID: 24095368 (name authority) : Hobson, Geraldine
500        |a Ethnologue reference: http://www.ethnologue.com/language/njo
506        |a Image: © 1926, The Estate of J.P. Mills. Text: © 1996, Geraldine Hobson.
520 3    |a Ungma is a village of the Chongli group. The Ao believed that the more water there is in the pools, which are often made beside the path leading to the villages, the better the rice crop will be. At the Ungma pool three stones have been placed in a line in the water and these are supposed to increase the amount of water in it. Every three years a ceremony takes place in which a boar and a cockerel are sacrificed beside the pool by the village priest.
533        |a Electronic reproduction. |b London : |c SOAS University of London, |c SOAS, University of London, |c Archives and Special Collections, |d 2015. |f (SOAS Digital Collections) |n Mode of access: World Wide Web. |n System requirements: Internet connectivity; Web browser software.
535 1    |a Archives and Special Collections.
650        |a Paths.
650    0 |a Roads.
650    0 |a Trails.
650        |a एशिया -- भारत -- नगालैंड -- मोकोकचुंग जिले.
650        |a এশিয়া -- ভারত -- নাগাল্যান্ড.
650    0 |a Naga (South Asian people).
650    7 |a Naga. |2 ethnicity
650    7 |a Ao Naga. |2 ethnicity
650    7 |a नागा. |2 ethnicity
650    7 |a एओ नागा. |2 ethnicity
720 1    |a Mills, J. P. (James Philip), 1890-1960..
720 1    |a Hobson, Geraldine. |4 ctb
752        |a India |b Nagaland |c Mokokchung District |d Ungma.
830    0 |a SOAS Digital Collections.
830    0 |a South Asia.
830    0 |a J.P. Mills Collection.
852        |a GBR |b SDC |c South Asia
856 40 |u http://digital.soas.ac.uk/LOAA004570/00001 |y Electronic Resource
992 04 |a http://digital.soas.ac.uk/content/LO/AA/00/45/70/00001/00014thm.jpg
997        |a South Asia


The record above was auto-generated from the METS file.