-
anthropologist and ethnographer.
Tremearne was born in
Melbourne in 1877, son of Ada
Tremearne, of Melbourne, Australia, and John
Tremearne MRCS. He was educated...
-
translation available in some, but not all, editions. In 1914, A.J.N.
Tremearne published the
Hausa texts of over 170
Hausa stories in
Hausa Folktales...
- 82–104.
Tremearne, A.J.N. Ban of the Bori. p. 102.
Tremearne, A.J.N. Ban of the Bori. pp. 32–35.
Tremearne, A.J.N. Ban of the Bori. pp. 44–45.
Tremearne, A...
-
Superstitions and
Beliefs of the
Common People. London:
Sheldon Press.
Tremearne, A. J. N. (1914). Ban of the Bori:
Demons and Demon-Dancing in West and...
- Gizo is a
mythic hero.
According to
anthropologist Arthur John
Newman Tremearne,
Gizzo is
considered the most
prominent heroic figure in
Hausa traditions...
-
Jinns (Alijanu and Iskoki) gods and
spirits were these, as
described by
Tremearne in 1912: Kuri, a male
corresponding to Pan,
another name
being Rago; he...
-
Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) in 1994 for its
biological interest.
Tremearne Par SSSI and
Porthcew SSSI,
along the
coast west of Porthleven, were designated...
-
Tremearne,
Arthur John Newman.
Hausa superstitions and customs: an
introduction to the folk-lore and the folk. London: Bale. 1913. p. 16.
Tremearne,...
-
allegorical stories that
often also
teach a
moral lesson.
Major A.J.N.
Tremearne observed that the
Hausa also view the
spider with high
esteem as the most...
- however,
seems to be false, as the name "Kafanchan" was
mentioned by A.J.N.
Tremearne in his
notes published in 1912, over a
decade before the
railway construction...