Anuak spoon

Anuak spoon
Other views of this artifact:


Accession Number:
1936.10.45
Country:
Sudan
Region:
[Southern Sudan]
Cultural Group:
Anywaa [Anuak]
Date Made:
By 1936
Materials:
Mussel Shell , Mother of Pearl Shell
Process:
Carved
Dimensions:
Max L = 118 mm Max W = 64 mm Max H = 16.5 mm th edge = 1 mm [RTS 1/7/2004].
Weight:
25.3 g
Local Name:
?apäl
Other Owners:
Presumably collected by Evans-Pritchard during his period of fieldwork amongst the Anuak between early March and May 1935 [RTS 18/6/2004].
Field Collector:
Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard
PRM Source:
Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard
Acquired:
Donated 1936
Collected Date:
March - May 1935
Description:
Spoon or scoop made from one half of a mussel bivalve shell, separated from its paired shell at the hinge. This is largely oval in plan view, but the edges have been ground and it has been cut at one end to form a point, and given a series of small v-shaped notches in the opposite end to produce a well defined serrated edge. The underside, or back of the shell is convex, with traces of a dark brown surface (Pantone 4625C) over a creamy orange layer (Pantone 712C), under which the mother-of-pearl shell lining is partially exposed. The interior hollow is concave and made from this natural mother-of-pearl lining of the shell, which is an opalescent purple, pink and white colour (Pantone 7415C). The spoon is complete, except for the surface damage already described and damage to the ends of 3 of the 16 teeth along the serrated edge. It is 118 mm long, 64 mm wide and 16.5 mm high; the shell is around 1 mm thick near its edge, and has a weight of 25.3 grams.

Presumably collected by Evans-Pritchard during his period of fieldwork amongst the Anuak between early March and May 1935 (see (E.E. Evans-Pritchard, 1940,
The Political System of the Anuak of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, p. 3).

The local name for this type of object was
apäl. For similar spoons made out of mussel shells, see 1936.10.41-43; for a variant shell form with serrated end, see 1936.10.44-45. None of these shells make up the two halves of a single bivalve. These spoons were stored in a small basket, 1936.10.46, called akoga . Similar shells, used as spoons or ladles, are known amongst the Dinka Tuich (see 1979.20.57-8). Patti Langton described these as 'oyster' shells, but they seem to be of the same type, and are probably also mussels.

Rachael Sparks 20/08/2005.

Primary Documentation:
Accession Book Entry [p. 410] - 1936 [insert] 10 [end insert] E. EVANS-PRITCHARD, M.A., Exeter College, Oxford. - Specimens collected by himself in the EASTERN SUDAN, while travelling with a Grant from the Rockefeller Leverhulme Trustees, viz: [p. 412] [insert] 44-45 [end insert] - [One of] 2 ditto [Valves of mussel-shells], pointed at one end & serrated at the other end, used as spoons. ANUAK.

Card Catalogue Entry - There is no further information on the catalogue card [RTS 30/1/2004].

Old Pitt Rivers Museum label - Apäl , mussel-shell spoon. ANUAK, E. SUDAN, d.d. E. Evans-Pritchard, 1936.10.45 [on label stuck to inside surface; RTS 1/7/2004].



 
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