TY - JOUR KW - Maritime cultural heritage KW - intangible heritage KW - Kilwa Kisiwani KW - Fishers KW - Fishing songs AU - C.B. Lubao AU - E.B. Ichumbaki AB - Historically, fishers (both men and women) have engaged in different activities ranging from preparing fishing equipment (traps, nets, fishing vessels), weather forecasting, and sailing to fishing grounds and they continue to do so today. While sailing, fishers paddle collaboratively when the wind is low and when the boat is leaking, some crew will bail the vessel. Once they arrive at the fishing grounds, fishers cast anchor, mend the fishnets, and fix the boat foresheets. If successful, the fishers collect their catch, weigh the anchor, return to shore, and prepare to sell their fish. These fishing activities have always been accompanied by maritime customs, traditions, rituals, stories, and gestures. For instance, singing is one key tradition that has continued to accompany the fishing process from the start to the end. This paper documents and present the songs that have always been part of the fishing process in Kilwa Kisiwani, along the southern coast of Tanzania. The fishing songs are presented in the context of intangible cultural heritage of the east African Swahili coast. © 2023, The Author(s). BT - Journal of Maritime Archaeology DA - 2023/// DB - Scopus DO - 10.1007/s11457-023-09356-5 J2 - J. Marit. Archaeol. LA - English N2 - Historically, fishers (both men and women) have engaged in different activities ranging from preparing fishing equipment (traps, nets, fishing vessels), weather forecasting, and sailing to fishing grounds and they continue to do so today. While sailing, fishers paddle collaboratively when the wind is low and when the boat is leaking, some crew will bail the vessel. Once they arrive at the fishing grounds, fishers cast anchor, mend the fishnets, and fix the boat foresheets. If successful, the fishers collect their catch, weigh the anchor, return to shore, and prepare to sell their fish. These fishing activities have always been accompanied by maritime customs, traditions, rituals, stories, and gestures. For instance, singing is one key tradition that has continued to accompany the fishing process from the start to the end. This paper documents and present the songs that have always been part of the fishing process in Kilwa Kisiwani, along the southern coast of Tanzania. The fishing songs are presented in the context of intangible cultural heritage of the east African Swahili coast. © 2023, The Author(s). PY - 2023 SN - 15572285 (ISSN) T2 - Journal of Maritime Archaeology TI - Fishing Songs from Kilwa Kisiwani, Tanzania: A Case Study of Intangible Maritime Cultural Heritage on the Swahili Coast UR - https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85158145502&doi=10.1007%2fs11457-023-09356-5&partnerID=40&md5=2e39f93cd9da63b528b6babcf8ab3af3 ER -