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Textiles of Francophone Africa: an Introduction

Textile Resources Home Page -coming soon

Francophone gallery - view cloths we have for sale here

Francophone links:

Art of Burkina Faso - by Dr Christopher Roy, has a section on weaving here

Baule weaving - a brief introduction

Amidou Coulibaly, Malinke weaver, Ivory Coast at African Crafts site here

webPulaaku - historical background on the Fulani, partly in French

webMande - the Mande peoples in French. 

World of the Mande here

Francophone References:

General:

Coquet,M. Textiles Africains (1998)

Boser-Sarivaxevanis,R. Les tissus de l'Afrique Occidentale (1972)

Gardi,B. Le Boubou -c'est chic (2000)

Monteil,C. Le Coton Chez les Noirs (1927)

Schaedler,K.F. African Weaving South of the Sahara (1987)

Benin: 

Adams,M. "Fon Appliqued cloths" in African Arts XIII (2) (1980)

Etienne-Nugue,J Artisanats traditionnels en Afrique Noire: Benin (1984)

Iroko, A.F. & Rivallain J. Les Appliqués sur tissus du Benin (1998)

Burkina Faso:

Etienne-Nugue,J Artisanats traditionnels en Afrique Noire: Haute-Volta (1982)

Roy,C. "Mossi Weaving" in African Arts XV(3) (1982)

Côte D'Ivoire:

Adams,M. & Holdcraft,T.R. "Dida Woven Raffia Cloth from Côte D'Ivoire2 in African Arts XXV(3) (1992)

Kirstin Bauer, African Styles: Kleidung und Textilien aus Afrika (Köln, Koppe,2001)  - chapter on Dyula (Dioula) and Senufo weaving. Bauer did her Masters thesis on weaving in Kong (Bayreuth, 1996) 

Etienne,M. "Women and Men, Cloth and Colonization: the transformation of Production-Distribution Relations among the Baule" Cahiers d'etudes africaines 17(1) (1977)

Etienne-Nugue,J Artisanats traditionnels en Afrique Noire: Côte D'Ivoire (1985)

Bobbie Sumberg, "Panther Skins & Loaves of Bread - the tie-dyed cloths of Oumé" in Hali 124 Sep-Oct 2002.

Sumberg, Barbara A. A History of Cloth Production and Use in the Gouro
Region of Côte-d'Ivoire
. Ph.D., University of Minnesota, 2001

Mali: see also bogolan introduction - with updated references soon.

Bafour-Paul,J. "Muddy River Blues" in Hali 105 (1999)

Bolland,R. Tellem Textiles: Archaeological Finds From Burial Caves in Mali's Bandiagara Cliffs (1991)

Brett-Smith,S. "Empty Space: the architecture of Dogon cloth" in Res 19/20 (1991)

Calame-Griaule,G. "Le vêtement dogon, confection et usage" Journal des Africanistes 21 (1951)

Gardi,B. Textiles du Mali (2003)

Gardi B. & Seydou C. "Arkilla Kerka: La tenture de mariage chez les Peuls du Mali" in Man Does Not Go Naked eds. Engelbrecht B. & Gardi B. (1989)

Imperato P. "Wool Blankets of the Peul of Mali" in African Arts VI(3) 1973

Imperato P. "Kereka blankets of the Peul" in African Arts IX(4) 1976

Imperato P. "Bamana and Maninka covers and blankets" in African Arts VII(3) 1979

Imperato P. "Blankets and Covers from the Niger bend" in African Arts XII(4) 1973

Johnson,M. "Manding Weaving" unpublished - Proceedings of the Manding Conference, SOAS,London (1972)

Roberts,R. "Women's Work and Women's Property: Household Social Relations in the Maraka Textile Industry of the Nineteenth Century" in Comparative Studies in Society and History 26 (1984)

Traoré,A. Mille Tisserands en Quête de Futur (1999)

Niger:

Etienne-Nugue, J. & Saley,M. Artisanats traditionnels en Afrique Noire.
Niger.

Senegal:

Dilley, R. "Tukolor Weavers and the Organisation of their craft in village and town" Africa 56(1986) -see also his PhD thesis.

Dilley, R. "Myth, Meaning, and the Tukolor Loom" Man 22 (2) (1987)

Dilley, R. "Tukolor Weaving Origin Myths: Islam and Reinterpretation" in A. Al-Shahi ed. The Diversity of the Muslim Community (London, Ithaca Press) (1987)

Pitts, D. An Economic and Social History of Cloth Production in Senegambia  (PhD thesis, University of Chicago) (1978)

Togo:

Etienne-Nugue,J Artisanats traditionnels en Afrique Noire: Togo (1992)

Posnansky,M. "Traditional Cloth from the Ewe Heartland" in History, Design, and Craft in West African Strip-Woven Cloth (1992)

 

(c) Duncan Clarke, Version 6/04/2003

 
On this page we introduce you to a few of the many textile traditions of the French-speaking countries of West Africa, specifically Burkina Faso, Cote D'Ivoire, Niger, Mali, Senegal, Togo, Benin and Guinea. Clearly the separation into Anglophone and Francophone blocks when discussing textile traditions is largely an arbitrary one - it is important to note that cloth making and cloth using traditions and practices did not follow colonial or national boundaries, being instead either more locally specific or in some instances more widely distributed. 

A weavers' compound in St.Louis, Senegal, Circa 1920. (postcard, published by P.Tacher)

Turning to the documentation and study of weaving however there is one useful generalisation that may be made. This is that unfortunately French speaking scholars were, with few exceptions, even less interested in cloth than Anglophone ones, and that consequently, the many textile traditions of these countries are mostly yet to be systematically studied. Some valuable research has been done, as the bibliography left shows, but its coverage remains extremely patchy. We can however make a few introductory points.  Across the region a wide range of mostly blue and white warped striped cotton cloths was woven in narrow strips of various widths by male weavers using the double heddle loom. Plain white cloths were resist dyed with indigo, or in parts of Mali, painted with mud pigments. Wider cloths woven by women on single heddle looms were found only in parts of Benin (formerly Dahomey) and Togo. Decorative techniques used in some areas included supplementary weft float, and more rarely warp ikat and warp float.  

Early C20th postcard captioned "A notable of Conakry and his wife" (photographer/publisher A. James.) The man wears a tailored boubou of Islamic inspiration, the woman a wrapper of locally woven cloth under a tailored blouse of imported fabric. 

As elsewhere in West Africa dress involved an interplay between tailored and wrapped cloths, with robes or boubou important in areas where Islamic influence was marked. At least from the late C19th these also interacted with European influenced dress modes as the picture above illustrates. Islam played an important part in the distribution of weaving and textiles, both through its influence on dress styles and through its crucial role in long distance trade, but by no means all weavers were Muslims. 

Fragment of an arkilla kunta, a wool marriage blanket of the Songhay, woven in the Niger bend region of Mali. 

The second major group of cloths associated with Francophone West Africa are the blankets and covers mostly woven in areas of the Sahel, an arid region of semi-desert south of the Sahara, stretching across large areas of Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger and the extreme north of Nigeria. Throughout this area wool or cotton blankets and cover cloths are used both for warmth in the surprisingly cold nights and as protection against mosquitoes. Weavers of Mande speaking origin (Mande, Bamana, Maninka,  Mandingo, Yarse, etc) would seem to be the most widespread and influential producers of these cloths, but distinctive types are also made by the Fulani (Peul), Hausa, and Dogon among others. All utilise a weft faced weave structure, producing bands of designs across the cloth strips. This appears to be an ancient technique in the area as it is used on Tellem textile fragments dating back to the C11th &12th found in Bandiagara,  Mali. Both the blankets and the influence of their design have in the past spread far south into the forest belt, for example in Sierra Leone, and even influenced certain types of Ewe weaving. Through the twentieth century some cloths, such as Fulani kaasa and arkila, continued to be woven in long established designs, while many other new styles developed to make vivid and inventive use of the full range of imported dyed cotton that became available. 

 Malinke weaver, Guinee, 1905. Old postcard, publisher/photographer Edmond Fortier 

Old postcard (circa 1920s ?): The Moro Naba, king of the Mossi in Ougadougou, Burkina Faso. Note the weft faced cloth worn by the woman at left. 

To View Our Francophone Africa  Cloths CLICK HERE