Dinka or Shilluk arm ornament

Dinka or Shilluk arm ornament
Other views of this artifact:


Accession Number:
1884.82.43
Country:
Sudan
Region:
[Southern Sudan]
Cultural Group:
?Dinka ?Shilluk
Date Made:
?Before 1865
Materials:
Iron Metal
Process:
Forged (Metal) , Hammered , Polished , Incised
Dimensions:
L = 72 mm, W = 61.5 mm, Ht = 14.5 mm [RTS 24/3/2004].
Weight:
155.2 g
Other Owners:
Collected in Sudan by John Petherick, sometime between 1853 and 1859, or 1861 to 1865. Subsequently acquired by Pitt Rivers by 1868, perhaps via auction as Petherick is known to have auctioned some of his collection through Mr Bullock of High Holborn, Lon
Field Collector:
John Petherick
PRM Source:
Augustus Henry Lane Fox Pitt Rivers founding collection
Acquired:
Donated 1884
Collected Date:
1853 - 1859 or 1861 - 1865
Description:
Penannular arm ornament consisting of an iron bar with rectangular section, bent into an oval loop with open ends, 20 mm apart. Slight hammering marks are still visible on the surface in places, particularly on the ends of the arms and on the inner face; the outer surfaces have been polished. The object is decorated with an incised design on each arm, consisting of a chevron filled with crosshatching joined to two lozenges and a triangle with similar crosshatched fill, with a horizontal line below then simple vertical hatching from here to the end of the arm. The object is complete and intact; the metal is currently a silver gray colour (Pantone 422C). The length across the outside edges of the bangle is 72 mm, and the width 61.5 mm; the length across the inside edges is 58 mm, the thickness of the metal 6 mm, and the height of the object is 14.5 mm. It has a weight of 155.2 grams.

Collected in Sudan by John Petherick. Petherick was based in Khartoum between 1853 and March 1859, during which period he mounted five trading expeditions into Southern Sudan. He encountered the Shilluk along the west bank of the Bahr el Abiad, stopping at two of their villages, Kaka and Gova. He also traded with at least two main groups of Dinka during this period; one group in the area east of the Bahr el Abiad and north of the Sobat river and another group, whom he calls the ‘Raik’, around the Bahr el Ghazal/Jur rivers. Any objects acquired in this period would have been shipped back to England with his other collections in 1859, and probably sold at his 1862 auction (see the Catalogue of the very interesting collection of arms and implements of war, husbandry, and the chase, and articles of costume and domestic use, procured during several expeditions up the White Nile, Bahr-il-Gazal, and among the various tribes of the country, to the cannibal Neam Nam territory on the Equator, by John Petherick, Esq., H.M. Consul, Khartoum, Soudan ); this included a number of Nilotic ornaments. In 1861 Petherick returned to Khartoum, and mounted an expedition which travelled south via the Bahr el Jebel and then overland to Gondokoro. Petherick employed a Shilluk interpreter on this trip, and may have encountered Dinka groups en-route (such as the ‘Kytch’). Any further material acquired during this period would have been shipped back to England in 1865, and seems to have been sold at a second auction. It was acquired by Pitt Rivers, who sent this object to Bethnal Green Museum for display, as part of the first batch of objects sent there, probably in 1874. This object was later displayed in the South Kensington Museum, and transferred from there to become part of the founding collection of the Pitt Rivers Museum in 1884.

Rachael Sparks 30/9/2005.

Primary Documentation:
Accession Book V entry [p. 1] - [insert] 1884.82 [end insert] PERSONAL ORNAMENTS (contd from Vol. IV) METAL BANGLES, BRACELETS, ANKLETS [insert] 43 [end insert] - C-shaped iron bangle, quadrangular in section ?SHILLUK or ?DINKA. ditto [Petherick coll.] (106).
Collectors Miscellaneous XI Accession Book entry [p. 193] - PETHERICK, Consul [p. 195] [insert] 18884.82.43 [end insert] C shaped iron bangle, quadrang[ular] section. ?SHILLUK ?DINKA. (P.R. 106/1619).
Black book entry [p. 67] - 1619. Bracelets (12), iron. Dinka & Schillook tribes, C. Africa. One a warrior's sharp edged iron bracelet. Djibba tribe, Africa [see 1884.82.23]. p. 110. [insert] 1884.78.93, 94, 95; 1884.82.23-28, 34 + 1884.82.43, 44 [end insert]. [Note that 1884.82.28 is actually PR 104 and does not belong to this group, while there is an additional object not listed here that should be added (to be accessioned), RTS 2/4/2004].
Added Black book entry [p. 67a] - Iron and bronze penannular knob ended bracelets Indian in form are found in Africa having been made and introduced for trade purposes by Birmingham firms.
Delivery Catalogue II entry [p. 300] - Personal Ornaments of various Nations [p. 306] [insert] 1884,78.93-95, 82.23-29, 34, 43-4 [end insert] 12 iron bracelets (Central Africa), 1619, Case 74, 345. [Note that while 12 bracelets are described, cross references are given to 13 objects. Of these, 1884.78.28 is marked with PR reference 104, and 1884.78.29 is PR 95/8386, meaning both should be omitted from the group, while there is an additional object marked with PR 106/1619 that should be added to it (this still needs to be accessioned). This makes a total of 12 items actually belonging to this group; RTS 2/4/2004].
Card Catalogue Entry - There is no further information on the tribes catalogue card [RTS 23/7/2004].
Old Pitt Rivers Museum label - C Shaped iron bangle of rectr section. ?DINKA, ?SHILLUK. C. AFRICA. Petherick coll. P.R. coll. black (1619) (196) [Tied to object; RTS 24/3/2004].
Written on object - CENTRAL AFRICA, PETHERICK. [1]06.1619 [black ink, worn; RTS 24/3/2004].

Display History:
Displayed in Bethnal Green and South Kensington Museums (V&A) [AP].


 
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