basotho blanket

{{Short description|Woollen blanket in Lesotho and South Africa}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2021}}

File:Parade of Basotho women.jpg

File:Retsilisitsoe Nthunya.jpg

The Basotho blanket is a distinctive form of woollen blanket commonly worn by Sotho people in Lesotho and South Africa.{{Cite web |url=http://maliba-lodge.com/blanketwrap/2010/lesotho-stories/the-history-of-the-basotho-traditional-blanket/ |title=The History of the Basotho traditional blanket |date=2010-11-01 |work=The Blanket Wrap |access-date=2017-09-23 |language=en-US |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170603184100/http://maliba-lodge.com/blanketwrap/2010/lesotho-stories/the-history-of-the-basotho-traditional-blanket/ |archive-date=June 3, 2017}}

History

Originally gifted to the then ruler King Moshoeshoe I by a British man known only as "Mr Howell" in the late 19th century,{{Cite news |last=Pierce |first=Thom |date=2016-10-17 |title=Riding the southern wilds: the horsemen of Lesotho – in pictures |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/gallery/2016/oct/17/riding-southern-wilds-horsemen-semonkong-lesotho-in-pictures |access-date=2017-09-23 |newspaper=The Guardian}} these blankets quickly gained popularity in the Lesotho region.

The way that Basotho men wear these traditional blankets is based on the traditional Kaross, an animal skin cloak although their transformation to "factory-woven textile" is attributed to King Moshoeshoe I.{{Cite book |first=Christopher |last=Spring |url=https://archive.org/details/africantextilest0000spri |title=African Textiles Today |date=2012 |publisher=Smithsonian Books, in association with British Museum Press |location=London, UK/Washington, DC |isbn=978-0-71411-559-7 |oclc=793219855 |url-access=registration}} By 1860 securing sufficient skins for Karosses was increasingly difficult and by 1872 a large majority of sheepskin covers had been replaced by poor quality cotton or wool. The King secured the production of "special blankets" in 1876 after meeting with Scottish textile manufacturer Donald Fraser. These new blankets were not only sturdier but they could also be fashioned in a way that more resembled the Kaross and they therefore quickly replaced the poor quality imported cloth that the people of Lesotho were previously wearing.

Ceremonial use

Across the kingdom, a variety of these blankets are worn by the people of Lesotho to represent the different rites of passage in society.

The Moholobela is a fertility blanket worn by young Sotho men in preparation of their transition to manhood. After the initiation ceremony, the young men in Lesotho will don a different blanket known as the Lekhokolo, which confirms that they have reached adulthood.

It used to be the case that a Mosotho bride would wear a Motlotlehi blanket on their wedding day, but the Lingoetsi blanket has since replaced its obsolete counterpart.{{Cite web|title=How the Basotho blanket became the brand identity of a nation|url=https://www.timeslive.co.za/sunday-times/lifestyle/fashion-and-beauty/2017-01-22-how-the-basotho-blanket-became-the-brand-identity-of-a-nation/|access-date=2021-04-27|website=TimesLIVE|language=en-ZA}} Husbands, on the other hand, traditionally gift their wife a Serope blanket when their first child is born.{{Cite web |url=https://mzansimagic.dstv.com/news/the-power-of-the-seannamarena |title=The power of the seannamarena |website=Mzansi Magic Official Website |date=21 April 2016 |language=en |access-date=2017-09-23}}

Seana Marena:{{cite journal |title=Why did the Sotho blanket become popular? |first=Myrtle |last=Karstel |journal=Culna |date=October 1991 |issue=41 |pages=25–26 |publisher=National Museum |location=Bloemfontein |issn=1016-2275}} Means chief's blanket or to swear by the king: This particular blanket is exclusively worn by the king and his chiefs, it has the highest status of all Basotho blankets.

Lehlosi:{{Cite web |url=https://www.wantedonline.co.za/art-design/2017-02-01-how-the-basotho-blanket-became-the-brand-identity-of-a-nation/ |title=How the Basotho blanket became the brand identity of a nation |first=Andrew |last=Unsworth |date=1 February 2017 |website=Wanted Online}} A Chiefly blanket made of patterns from the skin of wild cat or leopards. At present, one will often observe chiefs wearing commercially manufactured blankets bearing the print of a leopard, rather than actual leopard skins.

Victorian/ Malakabane: According to a local legend, in 1897 Queen Victoria visited the Lesotho (this did not actually occur). She gave King Lerotholi a gift, which happened to be a blanket. He wore the blanket with elegance, in a manner that represented the Poncho, over his shoulders and there the blanket wearing tradition began. The blanket was named Victoria England. The Sotho people had a great love and respect for Queen Victoria and the Victoria England blanket has become a sought after status symbol.

Motlatsi: designed and produced to pay tribute to the birth of Prince Lerotholi. Motlatsi means "successor".

Letlama:{{cite thesis |type=Ph. D. |last=Riep |first=David Matthew Merkel |date=May 2011 |title=House of the Crocodile: South Sotho Art and History in Southern Africa |publisher=University of Iowa}} worn by traditionally initiated men & women " tlama" is to tie "ke e tlametse mathata aseng basali ba batho" ("I have tied it(the blanket) for my own problems not for other men's wives') is what one who wears this particular blanket would say.

Lingoetsi:{{Cite web |url=https://africa.uima.uiowa.edu/topic-essays/show/43?start=0 |title=Visual Symbols of Self: South Sotho Arts and Initiation |last=Riep |first=David Matthew Merkel |website=The University of Iowa Museum of Art}} a bride's blanket.

Batho Ba Roma: remembering Pope John Paul's visit to Lesotho in 1988.

Kharetsa: named after the aloe which is indigenous to the Maloti Mountains of Lesotho.

Sefate and Morena: are used by the Basotho people as an everyday wearing blanket.

Ketelo ea Morena Papa which means the visit of the Pope:Lebollo la basadi Pope John Paul II once had a visit to Lesotho in 1988, a blanket gift was given to him which has been placed in the Vatican in Rome.

See also

References

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