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Gold-weight

Akan

Artwork Details

Gold-weight
1900-1985
Akan
brass
2 in x 7/16 in x 1/16 in (5 cm x 1.1 cm x 0.2 cm)
Gift of Dr. James and Vivian Curtis
1997/1.502

On Display

Not currently on display

Description

Subject Matter:

Figurative gold-weight in the form of what may be folded and bound length of rope or a bound length of tobacco, called taa in Twi, the language spoken by Akan peoples in Ghana (cf. British Museum object number Af1979,01.3683). Everyday objects such as this one were a popular form of gold-weight (cf. Phillips, African Goldweights, 2010, p. 169), as both men and women, royal and non-royal alike used to use pipes to smoke tobacco. The practice of smoking tobacco was brought from Western Sudan into the Gold Coast region during the early 17th century and it was also introduced independently into the Accra area by the Dutch around 1640 (cf. Garrard, Akan Weights and the Gold Trade, 1980, p. 37; Sheales, African Goldweights, 2014).

Physical Description:

Gold-weight in the shape of an undulating line with incised knobs at both ends and an incised rectangle across the middle. 

Usage Rights:

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