10th January 2010, 07:56 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 2
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Advice on African (Congo?) arrow
Hello everyone. Allow me to introduce myself - my name is Leah, and I am a postgraduate student of Historical Conservation at the University of Lincoln, UK
Your site admin has kindly allowed me to register an account in order to ask your advice on an object which I have been treating during the course of my studies, and on which I am now writing a report. The object is an ethnographic arrow, believed to be of African origin (I have attached images below). My research suggests that it may originate from the Democratic Republic of Congo. It is 547mm long from end to end, has a leaf-shaped socketed head which is made of steel and decorated with triangular punch-marks, and is fletched by a leaf located in a slit through the shaft (the outer extremities of the leaf have rotted away, but there is a section remaining inside the shaft). I know that a very similar arrow appears in "Ijzerwerk van Centraal-Afrika" (in a group of arrows labelled Group IV), but I cannot locate a copy of the book, and in any case cannot speak Dutch! I wondered if any of you here could offer me any further insight into the cultural background/method of manufacture/use of the arrow, please? I understand that different shaped arrowheads were used for different purposes, so I would be particularly interested to know if this arrow was for a particular kind of prey. Also, does the decoration on the head, and the notches to the end of the shaft signify that it was "special" in some way, or would this just be for identification purposes? Any and all information you could give me would be very helpful, thank-you |
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