Dyeing and Tanning Plants in East Africa

dc.bibliographicCitation.titleBulletinen
dc.bibliographicCitation.volume39en
dc.contributor.authorGreenway, P.J.null
dc.contributor.institutionEast African Agricultural Research Institute Amani
dc.date.accessioned2015-08-27T09:03:53Znull
dc.date.available2015-08-27T09:03:53Znull
dc.date.issued1941en
dc.description.abstractThis list, arranged in an alphabetical sequence, is the outcome of a request for information about plants that might be of value as sources of dyes and tannins in East Africa. On consulting the very mixed and limited literature of East African economic botany one is forced to the conclusion that the arts of dyeing and tanning are not now known to the East African native, and there is little evidence that they have been forgotten as a result of European influence. A search in the books written from 1885 onwards by J. Thomson, H. H. Johnson, A. C. Hollis, M. Merker, E. Werth and others is fruitless, and the handbook of the David Livingstone Memorial Museum at Livingstone, Northern Rhodesia, quotes only two dyes under the native names of the trees from which they are derived. This is in contrast with West Africa, where local cloth is, or was, dyed extensively by the natives.en
dc.description.statusPublisheden
dc.identifier.citationGreenway, P. J. (1941). Dyeing and tanning plants in East Africa. Bulletin of the Imperial Institute, 39 (3), 222-245.en
dc.identifier.urihttps://kalroerepository.kalro.org/handle/0/11590null
dc.language.isoenen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/en
dc.subject.agrovocTanningen
dc.subject.agrovocPlantsen
dc.subject.agrovocBotanistsen
dc.titleDyeing and Tanning Plants in East Africaen
dc.typeJournal Contribution*
dc.type.refereedRefereeden
dc.type.specifiedArticleen

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