A junjung (or variously jung-jung, gungun, dyoung-dyoung etc.)[1] is the royal war drum of the Serer people in Senegal and the Gambia.[2] It was played on the way to the battlefield, on special state occasions as well as on Serer religious ceremonies.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b8/Serer_Royal_War_Drum_%28Jung-Jung%29._19th_Century._Jung-Jung_From_The_Kingdom_of_Sine_%28in_modern_day_Senegal%29.jpg/220px-Serer_Royal_War_Drum_%28Jung-Jung%29._19th_Century._Jung-Jung_From_The_Kingdom_of_Sine_%28in_modern_day_Senegal%29.jpg)
It is also the progenitor of the music of the same name found in the Caribbean.[3]
See also
editNotes
edit- ^ Léopold Sédar Senghor, À l'appel de la race de Saba (1936) : « Ma tête bourdonnant au galop guerrier des dyoungs-dyoungs, au grand galop de mon sang de pur sang »
- ^ Louis Diène Faye. Mort et naissance: le monde Sereer, p56. Nouvelles Éditions africaines, 1983 ISBN 2723608689
- ^ Pathé Diagne, Tarana ou l'Amérique précolombienne : un continent africain, Harmattan, 2010, p. 260, ISBN 978-2-296-11484-5