Gwilym Iwan Jones was
born on the 3rd of May 1904 in South Africa. He spent some of his
childhood in Chile before coming to England where he read history at
St. John's, Leatherhead and won a Welsh scholarship to Jesus College,
Oxford. After completing his degree at Oxford he joined the Colonial
Service and served as an Administrative Officer in Nigeria from 1926 to
1946. Most of his service was in the Eastern Region where he became
District Officer for Bende and adjacent divisions of what was then
Owerri Province. During this time he developed a profound interest in
the society, history and arts of the peoples of southeastern Nigeria.
In the 1930s Jones acquired a Roloflex camera and developed a system
for immediate developing which produced negatives of such high quality
that they continue to produce excellent prints six decades later. It
was at this time that he built up the extraordinary photographic record
of Southeastern Nigerian culture of which this archive provides a
sample.
In 1939 Jones
married Ursula Whittall. As a result of his growing interest in
ethnology, and with the encouragement of Ursula, he chose, at age 43 to
begin a new career and became a Lecturer in Social Anthropology at
University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Jesus College. He became a
leading scholar of Africa and his official investigation of ritual
murders in Basutoland in 1949 earned him the nick-name 'Sherlock Jones'
in the popular press. He returned to Nigeria in 1957 on a commission to
inquire into indigenous political systems and the role of chiefs. He
returned again in 1963-64 and 1964-65 for ethnographic and historical
research. This project included the collection of village histories
written by local chiefs. His researches were extensive. His most
important publications from this time period included an ethnography, The Ibo and Ibibio Speaking
Peoples of S.E. Nigeria, [with Daryll
Forde] (1950) and his important historical work, The Trading States of
the Oil Rivers, (1963) which examined the great coastal states
of
Kalabar and Bonny. He retired from his lectureship at Cambridge in 1971
but continued his academic pursuits, publishing several books
including: The Art of Southeastern
Nigeria, (1984); Annual
Reports of
Bende Division, South Eastern Nigeria, 1905-1912, (1986); Ibo Art,
(1989); and From Slaves to Palm Oil,
(1989).
In many ways Jones' scholarship was ahead of his time. He found little
utility in the models of self-contained self-regulating tribal
societies that occupied his functionalist colleagues. Trading States of the Oil Rivers
provides a historically rich analysis of a complex system of shifting
regional allegiances between polyglot polities. His focus on the arts
was also progressive. While museum collections provide documentation of
African art history, the cultural context is lost. Jones' photographs
provide a unique record of masks in performance and shrines in-situ in
the early colonial period.
In his retirement Jones
remained active in Jesus College where, in time, he became the oldest
fellow. He died on the 25th of January 1995. In his 90 years of life
he accomplished two full careers and produced a wealth of research and
scholarship on the peoples of southeastern Nigeria -- particularly the
Igbo people, whom he greatly admired and among whom he gained lifelong
friends. This web site is a celebration of Jones and his work and also
of the peoples of southeastern Nigeria. Much of the art and culture
recorded in these photographs has weathered the pressures of Christian
missionization and the commercial culture of modern Nigeria. It remains
an important part of life for many Nigerians. The brilliant expressive
culture of this region was an inspiration to Jones and it is our hope
that his record of it will inspire you as well.
Link to the obituary for Jones in The Independent
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Gwilym Iwan Jones
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