Toloy Explained
Toloy is the name given to the first occupants[1] of the Bandiagara Escarpment in Mali. Since the 15th century, this area has been known as Dogon country.
The people were named after the rocky channel located near Sangha, where the remains of this population were found. Evidence of their culture includes granaries, skeletal remains, pottery, and plants.
Carbon-14 dating has established these artifacts as possibly of 3rd and 2nd centuries BC.[2] [3]
The architecture of their granaries is quite specific to the area. They are formed of superimposed clay strands. This contrasts with the mud bricks used by the Tellem people who occupied the Bandiagara cliff from the 11th until the 16th centuries,[4] or the dry stones covered with mud as constructed by the Dogons since the 15th century.
See also
Notes and References
- Bedaux, Rogier Michiel Alphons, « Tellem, reconnaissance archéologique d'une culture de l'Ouest africain au Moyen Âge : recherches architectoniques », Journal de la Société des Africanistes (1974), nº 42, [in] Persée http://www.persee.fr/web/revues/home/prescript/article/jafr_0037-9166_1974_num_44_1_1747?_Prescripts_Search_isPortletOuvrage=false (retrieved March 15, 2020)
- photos & texte : Huib Blom, esquisses : Arian & Anneke Blom, p.2 (PDF) dogon-lobi.ch (retrieved March 15, 2020)
- Haour, Anne; Manning, K.; Arazi, N.; Gosselain, O.; African Pottery Roulettes Past and Present: Techniques, Identification and Distribution, Oxbow Books (2010), p. 3, (retrieved March 15, 2020) https://books.google.com/books?id=DkrsDAAAQBAJ&pg=SA3-PA3
- [Sarah Tarlow|Tarlow, Sarah]