'Leaving camp to lay bombs, Yungya'

B&W photographic print. 'Hutton and Shakespear (probably) with a dog and a group of soldiers and Chang Coolies [term from original source, indentured/contract labourers]. The Coolies searched the jungle around the village, finding pigs hidden in holes underground, so placed that they could not r...

Full description


Date(s) of creation: 10 April 1923
Level: Item
Format: Archive           
URL: http://digital.soas.ac.uk/LOAA004130
URL Description: Digital version available online at SOAS Digital Collections

Summary: B&W photographic print. 'Hutton and Shakespear (probably) with a dog and a group of soldiers and Chang Coolies [term from original source, indentured/contract labourers]. The Coolies searched the jungle around the village, finding pigs hidden in holes underground, so placed that they could not root their way out, and paddy buried in earthenware pots. 30 or 40 old skull trophies were also found hidden, probably mainly heads from Kamahu, though one fairly recent one was pointed out as having come from Mongnyu.'
Extent: 1 photograph
Note: Naga (South Asian people)
Konyak (Indic people)
Europeans
Land mines
Unskilled labor
Skulls
Naga Hills (India)
Yungya is also known as Aopao or Ao Pao and resides in the Champang H.Q. of the Mon District, Nagaland, India.
Ethnicity: Konyak Naga
Ethnicity: Europeans
Coolie is the photographer's term. When originally applied, the term 'coolie' was widely used to describe to anyone of Asia ethnicity. It is thought to have originate from terms in Gujarati, Tamil and Turkish roughly meaning labourer or slave. The term has since come to be used as a racial slur.
Access status: Open
Language: English
Scripts: Latin
Physical description: 8 x 5.5cm
Format: Archive