'Hkahku girl tapping opium' - Collection Image, WA0122

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Uploaded on:
2017-03-09 16:30:49.0
File Size:
32.21 MB
Extension:
tif
Dimensions:
2869 x 3923 pixels
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Details

Digital Media Bank ID: 63991
Original Filename: dmas_wa0122_d01.tif
Description: This photograph was taken by James Henry Green in Kachin Land in the 1920s. In his dissertation submitted to Cambridge University (1934), Green wrote, 'the Hkahkus women of the Northern Triangle smoke pipes and do not chew. Opium is grown, chiefly for local consumption. It is, however, seldom taken to excess, as it is smoked in a diluted form toasted with shredded plantain or other leaves. The pipe is made of bamboo, and the smoke is drawn through water. The opium is generally collected by the women who scratch the poppy heads in the morning and scrape off pure opium in the evening. It is sometimes wiped off and kept in the form of impregnated rags' (p. 147).
Categories: Timeline/ 1920s, Collections/ World Art/ Asia/ James Henry Green Photos of Burma (Myanmar), Collections/ World Art/ Photographs  
Copyright & Re-use
Credit: James Henry Green Charitable Trust
Licence: CC BY-SA
Caption: 'Hkahku girl tapping opium' - Collection Image, WA0122
Object or Artwork info
Type (of Object or Artwork): Photographic Print
Creator (of Artwork / Object): James Henry Green
Date Created (of Object / Artwork): Early 20th Century
Source (of Object / Artwork): Royal Pavilion & Museums, Brighton & Hove
Subject tags:
Other Keywords: Photograph; Burma; Kachin; Hkahku; Myanmar
File info
Media: Image
Size: 32.21 MB; 2869 x 3923 pixels; 243 x 332 mm (print at 300 DPI);
Orientation: Portrait
Administrative info
Linked Accession no.: WA0122
Date Created: Wed Mar 29 00:00:00 BST 2017