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Select this text if you would like to see these kinds of sacred objects. To watch a video about the Bamum and the fon or king, select one of the following options: |


| In the past, the Royal Palace was a complex of bamboo
raffia buildings connected by many hallways and courtyards. Whenever fire
or another disaster destroyed a palace compound, the Bamum built another
palace of the same design in the same area. The central turret always faced
northeast because the first Bamum
king came from that direction.
King Njoya took inspiration from the brick home of a German colonial official when he designed the first fireproof palace. At first his followers laughed at his design-they couldn't imagine building such a large structure out of bricks. Eventually they helped Njoya build a palace that blended new materials with customary Bamum architecture. Like the old palace, the new palace has turrets topped with rounded sloped roofs. Palm fronds covered the old palace's roofs; the new roofs are tiled. Both palaces have arched doorways and large wings flanking the central turret. The old palace's elaborately carved posts were replaced by smooth brick posts in the new palace. Geometric patterns replaced the old palace's carved figures in every place except one, the double-headed snake on the railing over the central entrance. |

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One Continent. Many Worlds." web site. All photographic images and
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Photograph from Africa: One Continent. Many Worlds. traveling
exhibit.
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