Accession Number:
1927.84.1
Country:
Sudan
Region:
[Southern Sudan]
Cultural Group:
Shilluk
Date Made:
By 1890
Materials:
Wood Plant
Process:
Carved , Polished
Dimensions:
L = 674 mm, W head = 106.3 mm, 101.6 mm
Other Owners:
Collected by William Ernest Taylor while working for the Church Missionary Society in East Africa, and purchased from his widow Catherine Taylor after his death in October 1927 [RTS 10/2/2005].
Field Collector:
William Ernest Taylor, Church Missionary Society
PRM Source:
Catherine Taylor
Acquired:
Purchased December 1927
Collected Date:
1882 - 1890?
Description:
Club carved from a single piece of light yellowish brown wood (Pantone 1395C), consisting of a spherical head, oval in plan view, almost pointed at the top, with slightly irregular, convex sides turning in to the underside where the surface has been cut flat, and slopes slightly in to where it joins the handle.
The handle is oval in section, and tapers in towards a narrow, flat end.
The surface of the club has been well polished, with only a few tool marks visible around the top of the handle, and a single line, made up of several short, shallow cuts, around its upper body.
Complete and intact.
Total length 674 mm; length of head 74 mm, width of head 106.3 mm, thickness of head 101.6 mm; length of handle 600 mm; width and thickness at top of handle 36.6 x 34.8 mm; width and thickness at base of handle 8 x 6.3 mm.
Collected by William Ernest Taylor while working for the Church Missionary Society in East Africa, and purchased from his widow Catherine Taylor after his death in October 1927. Although the dates given for the collection of this object in the museum records are from 1882 to 1890, it should be noted that this was before Taylor married Catherine, so the collection dates cannot have come from her direct personal knowledge. In addition, his activities for the Church Missionary Society did not seem to take him to East Equatorial Africa until after this period; he was examining chaplain to the Bishop of that region in 1895, he was working in Cairo from 1896, is recorded as visiting Omdurman in 1900, and was a missionary for the society in Khartoum for a brief period in 1903. It seems more likely that this item was collected during this later part of his career.
Shilluk clubs of this type often have a socketed iron spike fitted to the end of the handle, to serve as an additional weapon, or to allow the club to be pushed into the ground and used as a stool (C. Spring, 1993, African Arms and Armour, p. 119; see also the photograph of Shilluk men with these clubs tucked under one arm on p. 111). There was no indication that this object had ever been fitted with such a spike.
For similar Shilluk clubs, see 1903.16.114-115, and also R. Boccassino, 1960, "Contributo allo studio della ergologia delle popolazioni nilotiche e nilo-camitiche, Annali Lateranensi XXIV, figs 45-46, 60-61 and 69. Clubs of this form often had a socketed iron spike fixed to the butt, which could be used as a weapon in its own right or pushed in the ground to let the club stand upright by itself (C. Spring 1993, African Arms and Armour , p. 119). Domville Fife describes this type of club as follows: "when at war with their neighbours the Dinkas [carry]… a special club, which is an ingenious affair, combining in one article, made of exceedingly hard wood, a spear, knobkerry and seat ... The point can be used for stabbing or for sticking in the ground" (C.W. Domville Fife, 1927, Savage Life in the Black Sudan, p. 69).
This object is currently on display in the Upper Gallery, case 47A.
Rachael Sparks 30/9/2005.
Collected by William Ernest Taylor while working for the Church Missionary Society in East Africa, and purchased from his widow Catherine Taylor after his death in October 1927. Although the dates given for the collection of this object in the museum records are from 1882 to 1890, it should be noted that this was before Taylor married Catherine, so the collection dates cannot have come from her direct personal knowledge. In addition, his activities for the Church Missionary Society did not seem to take him to East Equatorial Africa until after this period; he was examining chaplain to the Bishop of that region in 1895, he was working in Cairo from 1896, is recorded as visiting Omdurman in 1900, and was a missionary for the society in Khartoum for a brief period in 1903. It seems more likely that this item was collected during this later part of his career.
Shilluk clubs of this type often have a socketed iron spike fitted to the end of the handle, to serve as an additional weapon, or to allow the club to be pushed into the ground and used as a stool (C. Spring, 1993, African Arms and Armour, p. 119; see also the photograph of Shilluk men with these clubs tucked under one arm on p. 111). There was no indication that this object had ever been fitted with such a spike.
For similar Shilluk clubs, see 1903.16.114-115, and also R. Boccassino, 1960, "Contributo allo studio della ergologia delle popolazioni nilotiche e nilo-camitiche, Annali Lateranensi XXIV, figs 45-46, 60-61 and 69. Clubs of this form often had a socketed iron spike fixed to the butt, which could be used as a weapon in its own right or pushed in the ground to let the club stand upright by itself (C. Spring 1993, African Arms and Armour , p. 119). Domville Fife describes this type of club as follows: "when at war with their neighbours the Dinkas [carry]… a special club, which is an ingenious affair, combining in one article, made of exceedingly hard wood, a spear, knobkerry and seat ... The point can be used for stabbing or for sticking in the ground" (C.W. Domville Fife, 1927, Savage Life in the Black Sudan, p. 69).
This object is currently on display in the Upper Gallery, case 47A.
Rachael Sparks 30/9/2005.
Primary Documentation:
Accession Book Entry
[BIV, p.
88] - 1927 [insert] 84 [end insert]
MRS W.E.
TAYLOR
Dec.
Specimens collected in EAST AFRICA by the late Rev[erand].
W.E.
Taylor between 1882 and 1890, viz: [insert] 1 [end insert] - Wooden throwing-club with large ball-head, SHILLUK, UPPER NILE [p.
92, summary at end of group 1927.84.1-87] P[ai]d by cheque, 30 Dec.
1927 £
4-10-0
.
Added Accession Book Entry [page opposite 88] - 1927.84.1 No given AP l[ength] = 680 mm.
Card Catalogue Entry [tribes, clubs] - This repeats the accession book entry, but a photographic number has been added in red: A20 F18 29 [RTS 23/7/2004].
Written on object - SHILLUK CLUB. UPPER NILE. Rev. W.E. Taylor coll. pur. 1927 (Mrs Taylor) 1927.64.1 [RTS 8/3/2004].
Added Accession Book Entry [page opposite 88] - 1927.84.1 No given AP l[ength] = 680 mm.
Card Catalogue Entry [tribes, clubs] - This repeats the accession book entry, but a photographic number has been added in red: A20 F18 29 [RTS 23/7/2004].
Written on object - SHILLUK CLUB. UPPER NILE. Rev. W.E. Taylor coll. pur. 1927 (Mrs Taylor) 1927.64.1 [RTS 8/3/2004].