- Collection type
- Object
- Description
- Bronze hip pendant mask of human face with a headdress, a ruffle around the neck and tribal markings on the forehead.
- Cultural groups
- Edo
- Person
- Field collector Harold Moseley Douglas
- PRM source Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford
- PRM source James Coffin Harle
- Date / Period
- Date made: Before 1897
- Date collected
- circa 1897
- Acquisition information
- Loaned: 1983
- Materials and processes
- Material Bronze Metal, Process Lost Wax Cast
- Dimensions
- Height: max 186 mm
- Object numbers
- Accession number: 1983.25.2 Other numbers: 1978.2625
- Research and responses
Examined by Benin specialist Barbara Blackmun in July 1991. According to Blackmun, these masks probably all represent women, and if so, that they were given by the Queen Mother to her chiefs. [LMM 7 1991 ?; JC 9 7 2000]
Masks like this were symbols of leadership in Benin. They were worn by the Oba and the Edo chiefs and also sent to the Oba's vassal leaders as emblems of their authority. While the Edo chiefs wore these masks attached to their belts, often on the left hip, vassal leaders wore them around their necks. [presumably LMM 3 1991 ?]
- Associated publications
- Apparently not listed in An Illustrated Catalogue of Benin Art, by Philip J. C. Dark (Boston, MA: G. K. Hall, 1982). [JC 1995]
Search terms: Mask, Ornament, Insignia, Religion, Status, Status Object
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