Amini Aza Mturi was[1] a Tanzanian archaeologist and director of the Tanzanian Division of Antiquities between 1968 and 1981.[2] He has been described as "one of the founding fathers of archaeology in Tanzania".[3]

Education and career

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Mturi studied history at Makerere University and archaeology and conservation at the Institute of Archaeology in London.[4] He joined the Tanzanian Division of Antiquities in 1966, as an assistant conservator.[5] In 1968, he succeeded Hamo Sassoon as its acting director, which was made a permanent appointment in 1970.[2][4] He was the first African to hold the post;[6][7] the previous directors Neville Chittick and Hamo Sassoon were part of the British colonial administration.[2] He also helped establish archaeology at the University of Dar es Salaam[8][verification needed] and he served as chairperson of UNESCO's Bureau of the World Heritage Committee (9th session, 1985).[9]

Mturi had a long association with the Leakey family and their excavations at Olduvai Gorge. He first met Louis Leakey at a conference in 1967, describing a "frustrating first encounter" where Louis refused to let him work at Olduvai, perhaps worried about training an African archaeologist who might replace him.[10] Nevertheless, Mturi wrote a positive obituary of Louis Leakey in 1974, describing him as having "contributed greatly to the protection and preservation of [Tanzania's] archaeological sites".[1] He had a better relationship with Mary Leakey, Louis' wife and successor at Olduvai,[10] and went on to deliver the keynote lecture at a conference held in her honour in 1994.[11] Mary recounted that Mturi often visited Olduvai to check on the foreign researchers there, and under his direction the Division of Antiquities took over its administration, replacing the Leakeys' Kenyan staff with Tanzanian guards and guides.[12] The Aguirre-Mturi Research Station at Olduvai Gorge is named jointly for Mturi and Spanish palaeoanthropologist Emiliano Aguirre.[3]

Mturi directed excavations at Lake Ndutu, where a considerable amount of lithic and faunal materials were uncovered, as well as the Ndutu cranium.[13] He was also involved in discussions on the conservation of Bagamoyo, arguing that socioeconomic development should not happen at the expense of cultural heritage.[14]

Selected publications

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  • Mturi, A. A., 1976. New hominid from Lake Ndutu. Nature 262: 284–285.
  • Mturi, A. A., 1986. The pastoral neolithic of west Kilimanjaro. Azania 21: 53–63.
  • Mturi, A. A. 1987. The archaeological sites of Lake Natron, Tanzania. Azania XXI: 56–63.
  • Mturi, A. A. 1996. Whose cultural heritage? Conflicts and contradictions in the conservation of historic structures, towns and rock art in Tanzania. In Peter R. Schmidt and Rodrick J. Mclntosh (eds.) Plundering Africa's Past. London: Currey.
  • Mturi, A. A., 1998. Archaeology of Tanzania: a teaching manual for the Open University of Tanzania. Dar es Salaam: Open University of Tanzania.
  • Mturi, A. A., 2005. State of rescue archaeology in Tanzania. In Mapunda, B and P. Msemwa (eds.), Salvaging Tanzania's cultural heritage. Dar es Salaam: Dar es Salaam University Press, pp. 293–210.

References

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  1. ^ a b Ranhorn, Kathryn (23 February 2015). "'Ancestors for Us All' - Cultural Heritage and Prehistory Research in Tanzania". Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology. The George Washington University. Retrieved 25 May 2021. [...] the letter was written by the late Amini Mturi, Tanzanian archaeologist and then director of the National Museums of Tanzania.
  2. ^ a b c "Antiquities Division | Ministry of Natural Resources and Tourism". Maliasili. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Research Station".
  4. ^ a b Bwasiri, Emmanuel James (2008). The Management of Indigenous Living Heritage in Archaeological World Heritage Sites: A Case Study of Mongomi wa Kolo Rock Painting Site, Central Tanzania (PDF) (Masters thesis). University of Witwatersrand.
  5. ^ Sassoon, H. 1968b. Annual report of the Department of Antiquities for the year 1966. Dar es Salaam: Department of Antiquities.
  6. ^ Mturi, A. A. 1976a. Annual report of the Department of Antiquities for the year 1968. Dar es Salaam: Department of Antiquities.
  7. ^ Mturi, A. A. 1976b. Annual report of the Department of Antiquities for the year 1970-71. Dar es Salaam: Department of Antiquities.
  8. ^ Mehari A.G., 2015. Practicing and teaching archaeology in East Africa: Tanzania and Uganda. PhD Dissertation. University of Florida.
  9. ^ "UNESCO World Heritage Centre - 9th session of the Bureau".
  10. ^ a b Morell, Virginia. "The Leakey Foundation Oral History Project: Amini Mturi". Bancroft Library Oral History Center. University of California, Berkeley. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
  11. ^ Kent, Susan (1994). "Archeology Division". Anthropology News. 35 (2): 11–15. doi:10.1111/an.1994.35.2.11.2. ISSN 1556-3502.
  12. ^ Schmidt, Peter R.; Pikirayi, Innocent (17 June 2016). Community Archaeology and Heritage in Africa: Decolonizing Practice. Routledge. p. 29. ISBN 978-1-317-22074-9.
  13. ^ MTURI, A. New hominid from Lake Ndutu, Tanzania. Nature 262, 484–485 (1976). https://doi.org/10.1038/262484a0
  14. ^ Lindström, Jan (August 2019). Muted Memories: Heritage-Making, Bagamoyo, and the East African Caravan Trade. Berghahn Books. pp. 28–29. ISBN 978-1-78920-173-4.

Further reading

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