1963
DOI: 10.2307/2844334
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Some Aspects of Ecology and Social Structure in the Ensete Complex in South-West Ethiopia

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Cited by 15 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…The plant also provides fibre which is used for rope, sieves and cleaning material (Huffnagel 1961). Ritually prepared ensete has an important role in birth, circumcision, marriage, and death ceremonies (Shack 1963). As already noticed by Smeds (1955) and Stanley (1966), ensete had not been thoroughly investigated and up until the time that the present study was carried out this was still the case.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 72%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…The plant also provides fibre which is used for rope, sieves and cleaning material (Huffnagel 1961). Ritually prepared ensete has an important role in birth, circumcision, marriage, and death ceremonies (Shack 1963). As already noticed by Smeds (1955) and Stanley (1966), ensete had not been thoroughly investigated and up until the time that the present study was carried out this was still the case.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…A wide range of estimates of the number of ensete plants consumed per person annually has been reported: 3 by Wohlenberg in 1936 as cited in Smeds (1955), 9 by Stanley (1966), 10 by Shack (1966), 12 by Smeds (1955), 10-12 by Bezuneh and Feleke (1966), 12-15 by Shack (1963), and 15-20 by Huffnagel (1961). Taking into account a yield of ensete food of 34kg per plant (Table 1) and a daily consumption of 0-55 kg ensete, it can be calculated that the number of ensete plants consumed annually is 5.9 per person or 36 per household which on average comprise 6.1 persons.…”
Section: Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In all but the driest lowlands, where herders grow no crops, and the highest altitudes, where enset thrives best (Pijls et al 1995), people grow enset along with varying proportions of other root crops or cereals (see Brandt et al 1997, and R. Quinlan et aln.d.). Shack (1963) concludes that the sedentarypastoral dichotomy is inadequate, and we concur. Planting co-exists with the cattle complex in the form of agro-pastoralism, such that the "enset complex," in reality entails a subsistence system of mutual dependence between humans, livestock, and crops.…”
Section: Sidama Agro-pastoralism and Enset Gardeningmentioning
confidence: 68%
“…Within the hoe cultures, enset is "by far" the most important staple food (Murdock 1959), feeding a dense rural population across SW Ethiopia (see e.g. Bezuneh 1971, Bezuneh and Feleke 1966, Brandt et al 1997, Rahmato 1995, Shack 1963. In Ethiopia, the pastoralist, hoe, and plow farming distinctions remain useful, but, on the ground, these are not simple, isolated strategies.…”
Section: Sidama Agro-pastoralism and Enset Gardeningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The ensat-planting culture is located in the south-western highland zone between ca 1600 m and ca 3000 m (Smeds, 1955), and ensat is grown for food in no other part of Africa but for south-west Ethiopia (Murdock, 1960;Purseglove, 1972). This area is characterized by a complex of cultural traits connected with the ensat cultivation, the so-called ensat culture complex area (Shack, 1963). The people living in central and northern Ethiopia, however (either Semitic or Cushitic), prefer to cultivate cereals, pulses and oilcrops, and neglect tuber crops, vegetables and fruits.…”
Section: Ensat-planting Versus Grain-plough Agriculturementioning
confidence: 99%