Kinship and affinal relations among the Karo of North Sumatra
Abstract
The anthropological study of the Indonesian peoples is far
from complete. Compared with what has been done in other areas,
namely Africa, India, Australia, Melanesia and Polynesia, the
state of the ethnography of the Indonesian peoples in general has
been described by the doyen Dutch anthropologist, Fischer
(1952: 57-8), as 'embarrassing'. This, to a certain extent, holds
also true for the Batak, especially for the Karo, Simelungun and
Pakpak.
In addition to the various general ethnographic accounts
already in existence, a number of adat-law studies concerning the
Batak peoples have been made, the most important of which are the
works of Vergouwen (1933), Ypes (1932), Enda Boemi (1925),
Nasoetion (1943) and Keuning (1948). Of these Vergouwen's book
dealing with the jural life of the Toba Batak ranks as one of the
best of comprehensive legal studies of an Indonesian people. Ter
Haar (1948: 238) wrote of this book that 'it might well be first
if the sequence were dependent of the manner in which a forceful
description of the sphere of adat law is joined to a treatment of
typical problems of the adat law'.
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