Bronze female statue, Nigeria, 1801-1900

Made:
1801-1900 in Abeokuta
maker:
Yoruba people
Bronze statue, female, with a goitre-like growth, Yoruba Bronze statue, female, with a goitre-like growth, Yoruba

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Bronze statue, female, with a goitre-like growth, Yoruba
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Bronze statue, female, with a goitre-like growth, Yoruba
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Bronze statue, female, with a goitre-like growth, Yoruba, Nigerian, 19th century

At the side of the neck of this bronze female statue, a goitre growth can be seen. Goitre is the swelling of the thyroid gland. The woman is also holding a gourd which could be a container for sacrificial gifts. As well as showing a pathological condition, the members of the secret Ogboni Society for the cult of the Earth Spirit used this statue to communicate between the living and the dead. Ancestors would watch over the crops and land and in return for a good harvest the living would offer up food and wine in thanksgiving. This cult was especially strong in the mid 1800s.

Details

Category:
Ethnography and Folk Medicine
Collection:
Sir Henry Wellcome's Museum Collection
Object Number:
A67081
Materials:
bronze
type:
statue
credit:
Wellcome Trust (Purchased from Stevens)