589,269 images for simSearch:873-06440384,k
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873-06440384
Portrait of Two Masai Women Tanzania
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873-06440386
Portrait of Masai Woman Wearing Beads around Neck, Tanzania
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873-06440682
Portrait or Rendille Tribeswoman Kenya, Africa
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873-06440426
Profile of Masai Man Outdoors Kenya
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873-06441046
Portrait of African Woman Wearing Traditional Clothing, Soweto, Gauteng, South Africa
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873-06440975
Group Of Masai People in Traditional Dress
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873-06440385
Portrait of Himba Man Wearing Beads around Neck, Namibia
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873-06441187
Portrait of Turkana Tribeswoman, Lake Turkana Region, Kenya
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873-06440437
Portrait of Himba Woman Standing Near Hut with Goats Namibia, Africa
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873-06440425
Portrait of Two Masai Men Holding Weapons Outdoors, Kenya
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873-06441055
Woman in Traditional Clothing in Vegetable Garden, Vosloorus, Gauteng, South Africa
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873-06441054
Portrait of Woman in Traditional Clothing, Vosloorus, Gauteng, South Africa
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873-06441053
Woman in Traditional Clothing Sewing, Vosloorus, Gauteng, South Africa
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873-06441052
Portrait of Woman in Traditional Clothing, Vosloorus, Gauteng, South Africa
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873-06440565
Portrait of Bushman Child Outdoors Namibia, Africa
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873-06440564
Portrait of Bushman Child Outdoors Namibia, Africa
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873-06440557
Portrait of Himba Woman in Traditional Dress Namibia, Africa
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873-06440551
Rear-View of Himba Tribe Standing Outdoors Namibia, Africa
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700-00162695
Masai Woman in Ceremonial Dress, Kenya, Africa
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700-03865404
Woman Taking Self-Portrait with Group of Masai Men
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700-03865403
Female Tourist with Group of Masai Men
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873-06440556
Portrait of Himba Woman in Traditional Dress Namibia, Africa
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700-00067772
Portrait of Masai Tribesman Kenya, Africa
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700-00067768
Group of Masai Women with Child Outdoors, Kenya, Africa
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700-00067763
Two Masai Women with Child Kenya, Africa
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700-03865405
Tourist Showing Photo on Cell Phone to Group of Masai Men
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873-06440558
Himba Woman and Child Sitting Near Fire Namibia, Africa
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873-06440555
Portrait of Himba Woman in Traditional Dress Namibia, Africa
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873-06440554
Portrait of Himba Woman in Traditional Dress Namibia, Africa
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873-06440552
Himba Tribe Outdoors Namibia, Africa
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700-00067769
Portrait of Masai Woman Outdoors Kenya, Africa
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700-00067766
Group of Masai Men Standing Outdoors, Kenya, Africa
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700-03865396
Woman Playing Bao, Zanzibar, Tanzania, Africa
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700-03865395
Woman Playing Bao, Zanzibar, Tanzania, Africa
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700-03865394
Portrait of Woman with Henna on Palm of Hand
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700-03865393
Portrait of Woman Wearing Headscarf
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862-03820437
A Karo woman with her face painted in preparation for a dance in the village of Duss. A small Omotic tribe related to the Hamar, who live along the banks of the Omo River in southwestern Ethiopia, the Karo are renowned for their elaborate body painting using white chalk, crushed rock and other natural pigments. She is wearing a goatskin apron and carries a leather belt decorated with cowrie shells
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862-03820436
A Karo women stands in the doorway to her hut in the village of Duss. A small Omotic tribe related to the Hamar, who live along the banks of the Omo River in southwestern Ethiopia, the Karo are renowned for their elaborate body painting using white chalk, crushed rock and other natural pigments. In addition to painting her face she has decorated her body with whorls of goat hair tied by leather co
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700-03865392
Portrait of Woman Leaning Against Tree, Zanzibar, United Republic of Tanzania, Africa
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700-00067765
Masai Woman Carrying Child on Back, Kenya, Africa
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700-00067764
Masai Mother Carrying Child on Back, Kenya, Africa
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700-00162696
Masai Woman's Feet Kenya, Africa
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700-00162694
Masai Man in Traditional Clothes
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700-00186949
Indigenous Girls Dancing Umtata, Transkei South Africa
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862-03820650
Samburu girls are given strings of beads by their fathers when they are still young. As soon as they are old enough to have lovers from the warrior age set, they regularly receive gifts from them.Over a period of years, their necklaces can smother them up to their necks.
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862-03820649
A Samburu bride waits pensively outside her new home until she is enticed in with promises of cattle.Her wedding gown is made of three goatskins, which are well oiled and covered in red ochre.She carries on her back a gourd full of milk and a small wooden jar containing butter.She now wears the mporro necklace of married women.
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862-03820646
A Samburu woman wearing a mporro necklace, which denotes her married status. These necklaces were once made of hair from giraffe tails but nowadays, the fibres of doum palm fronds, Hyphaene coriacea, are used instead.The red beads after which the necklace is named are wound glass beads made in Venice c.1850.
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862-03820645
A Samburu woman wearing a mporro necklace, which denotes her married status. These necklaces were once made of hair from giraffe tails but nowadays, the fibres of doum palm fronds, Hyphaene coriacea, are used instead.The red beads after which the necklace is named are wound glass beads made in Venice c.1850.
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862-03820644
A Samburu woman wearing a mporro necklace, which denotes her married status. These necklaces were once made of hair from giraffe tails but nowadays, the fibres of doum palm fronds, Hyphaene coriacea, are used instead.The red beads after which the necklace is named are wound glass beads made in Venice c.1850.
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862-03820548
A pregnant Nyangatom woman in traditional attire outside her neatly thatched home.The Nyangatom are one of the largest tribes and arguably the most warlike people living along the Omo River in Southwest Ethiopia.
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862-03820521
A Hamar woman dances around cattle while she blows a tin trumpet at a Jumping of the Bull ceremony.The Hamar are semi nomadic pastoralists of Southwest Ethiopia whose women wear striking traditional dress and style their red ochred hair mop fashion.The Jumping of the Bull ceremony is a rite of passage for young men.
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862-03820519
Hamar women dance at a Jumping of the Bull ceremony.The Hamar are semi nomadic pastoralists of Southwest Ethiopia whose women wear striking traditional dress and style their red ochred hair mop fashion. The Jumping of the Bull ceremony is a rite of passage for young men.After the ceremony, the initiate attains full manhood and is permitted to marry.
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862-03820517
Hamar women dance around cattle at a Jumping of the Bull ceremony as a rainbow gives colour to a threatening sky overhead.The Hamar are semi nomadic pastoralists of Southwest Ethiopia whose women wear striking traditional dress and style their red ochre hair mop fashion.The phallic protrusion of the women's chokers denote they are their husbands first wives.The Jumping of the Bull ceremony is a ri
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862-03820516
A group of Hamar women at a Jumping of the Bull ceremony.The Hamar are semi nomadic pastoralists of Southwest Ethiopia whose women wear striking traditional dress and style their red ochred hair mop fashion.The Jumping of the Bull ceremony is a rite of passage for young men.
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862-03820511
A Hamar woman blows a tin trumpet at a Jumping of the Bull ceremony.The Hamar are semi nomadic pastoralists of Southwest Ethiopia whose women wear striking traditional dress and style their red ochred hair mop fashion.The Jumping of the Bull ceremony is a rite of passage for young men.
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862-03820510
A Hamar woman blows a tin trumpet at a Jumping of the Bull ceremony.The Hamar are semi nomadic pastoralists of Southwest Ethiopia whose women wear striking traditional dress and style their red ochred hair mop fashion.The Jumping of the Bull ceremony is a rite of passage for young men.
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862-03820509
A Hamar woman at a Jumping of the Bull ceremony.The Hamar are semi nomadic pastoralists of Southwest Ethiopia whose women wear striking traditional dress and style their red ochred hair mop fashion.The Jumping of the Bull ceremony is a rite of passage for young men.
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862-03820508
A Hamar woman blows a tin trumpet at a Jumping of the Bull ceremony.The Hamar are semi nomadic pastoralists of Southwest Ethiopia whose women wear striking traditional dress and style their red ochred hair mop fashion.The Jumping of the Bull ceremony is a rite of passage for young men.
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862-03820429
A Nyangatom woman wears multiple layers of beads in necklaces, an elaborately beaded calfskin skirt and metal bracelets, amulets and anklets. She is standing beside a temporary beehive construction of sticks, grass and leaves built to provide shade for her goats. The Nyangatom or Bume are a Nilotic tribe of semi-nomadic pastoralists who live along the banks of the Omo River in south western Ethio
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862-03820398
An old Oromo woman wears a brass necklace and pendant, and a silver pendant made from a Maria Theresa thaler, an old silver coin minted in Austria, which was widely used as currency in northern Ethiopia and Arabia until the end of World War II. With a bright red headscarf, She was on her way to Senbete, an important weekly market close to the western scarp of the Abyssinian Rift.
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862-03820397
A woman at Senbete market wears old silver and brass jewellery.Her two pendants are made from Maria Theresa thalers, old silver coins minted in Austria, which were widely used as currency in northern Ethiopia and Arabia until the end of World War II.Other silver coins have been strung on her necklace.
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862-03820396
An Oromo old woman wears a necklace and a pendant made from a Maria Theresa thaler, an old silver coin minted in Austria, which was widely used as currency in northern Ethiopia and Arabia until the end of World War II. She was on her way to Senbete, an important weekly market close to the western scarp of the Abyssinian Rift.Afar nomads from the low lying arid regions of Eastern Ethiopia trek long
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862-03820395
A woman in a colourful dress and matching headscarf wears round her neck a Maria Theresa thaler an old silver coin minted in Austria, which was widely used as currency in northern Ethiopia and Arabia until the end of World War II.
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862-03820365
A Mursi woman wearing a large clay lip plate. Shortly before marriage, a girls lower lip will be pierced and progressively stretched over a year or so. The size of the lip plate often determines the quantum of the bride price. They live in a remote area of southwest Ethiopia along the Omo River, the country's largest river.
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862-03820364
A Mursi woman wearing a large wooden lip plate. Shortly before marriage, a girls lower lip will be pierced and progressively stretched over a year or so. The size of the lip plate often determines the quantum of the bride price. They live in a remote area of southwest Ethiopia along the Omo River.
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862-03820363
Shaded from the hot sun, a Karo woman grinds sorghum using large flat stones.It is customary for females of the tribe when in their teens to make a small hole in the flesh below their lower lips into which they put an ornament, this woman has used a small nail. Numerous heavy metal bracelets are worn by married womenThe Karo are a small tribe living in three main villages along the lower reaches o
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862-03820348
An old Dassanech woman prepares her fields beside the Omo River with a digging stick in readiness to plant sorghum. This crude form of agricultural implement is in common use in this remote part of Ethiopia.
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862-03820347
A young Daasanech girl beside the Omo River. Her hairstyle, necklaces and metal armbands are typical of her tribe.The Dassanech people live in the Omo Delta of southwest Ethiopia, one of the largest inland deltas in the world.
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873-06441051
Portrait of Woman at Spaza Shop, Soweto, Gauteng, South Africa
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873-06440686
Bushman Walking Through Kalahari Desert, Botswana, Africa
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873-06440685
Bushmen Carrying Their Kill Botswana, Africa
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873-06440561
Portrait of Bushman Hunters with Bows, Arrows and Quivers Outdoors Namibia, Africa
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873-06440560
Portrait of Bushman Hunters with Bows, Arrows and Quivers Outdoors Namibia, Africa
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873-06440559
Himba Tribe Clapping Hands Namibia, Africa
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873-06440222
Bush People Sitting Outdoors Namibia
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873-06440208
Bushmen Singing and Dancing Kalahari Desert, Botswana
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862-03366590
A Samburu woman singing. The strings of black and white beads hanging from her ears signify that she has two grown-up sons who are warriors of the tribe. Note: the traditional horn snuff container hanging from her neck.
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862-03366589
A Samburu woman wearing a mporro necklace,which signifies her married status.These necklaces,once made of hair from giraffe tails,are now made from fibres of doum palm fronds (Hyphaene coriacea). The beads are mid-19th century Venetian glass beads,which were introduced to Samburuland by early hunters and traders.
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862-03366588
A pretty Samburu girl in traditional attire.
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862-03366047
Samburu girls are given strings of beads by their fathers when they are still young. As soon as they are old enough to have lovers from the warrior age-set,they regularly receive gifts from them. Over a period of years,their necklaces can smother them up to their necks. The metal cross-like ornament hanging from the girl's headband has no religious significance.
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862-03366046
Samburu girls are given strings of beads by their fathers when they are still young. As soon as they are old enough to have lovers from the warrior age-set,they regularly receive gifts from them. Over a period of years,their necklaces can smother them up to their necks. The metal cross-like ornament hanging from the girl's headband has no religious significance.
Rights-Managed