Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T08:51:41.089Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Brass Casting and its Antecedents in West Africa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2009

Abstract

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1977

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

* Icon and Image, by Williams, Denis, London, Allen Lane, 1974. Pp. 331 + xv, 221, figs., 6 tables, £8.50.Google Scholar

1 Von Luschan, F., Die Altertümer von Benin (Berlin, 1919).Google Scholar

2 Dark, Philip J. C., An Introduction to Benin Art and Technology (Oxford, 1973), 45Google Scholar; Fagg, W. B., Nigerian Images (London, 1963).Google Scholar

3 Connah, Graham, The Archaeology of Benin (Oxford, 1975), 67.Google Scholar

4 Oliver, Roland and Fagan, Brian M., Africa in the Iron Age (Cambridge, 1975).Google Scholar

5 Posnansky, Merrick and McIntosh, Roderick, ‘New Radiocarbon Dates for Northern and Western AfricaJ. Afr. Hist., xvii (1976), 168, 171–2.Google Scholar

6 Tylecote, R. F., ‘The origin of Iron smelting in West AfricaWest Afr. J. Archaeol., v (1975), 4.Google Scholar

7 Pole, Len M., Iron Smelting in Northern Ghana (National Museum of Ghana, Occ. Paper no. 6, 1974)Google Scholar, and Iron-working Apparatus and Techniques: Upper Region of GhanaWest Afr. J. Archaeol., V (1975), 1135Google Scholar, records yields as low as 2–3.5 kg. Per smelt.

8 Penfold, D. A., ‘Excavation of an Iron smelting Furnace at Cape CoastTrans. Hist. Soc. Ghana, xii (1971), 115Google Scholar (see particularly 13–14).

9 Pole, op. cit.

10 Pole, op. cit., 1974.

11 Tylecote, op. cit., 6.

12 Pole, op. cit.

13 Trigger, Bruce G., ‘The Myth of Meroë and the African Iron AgeAfr. Hist. Studies, ii (1969), 2350.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

14 Tylecote, R. F., ‘Iron working at Meroë, Sudan’, Bull. Hist. Metallurgy, iv (1970), 6272Google Scholar. In 1970 he gave the date as 200 B.C. (p. 67); in 1975 (op. cit.) he writes that the first indication of smelting, associated with Bowl furnaces, is pre-Roman and lies above a level dated to 280 ± 120 B.C.

15 Connah, Graham, ‘The coming of Iron: Nok and Daima’ in Nigerian Prehistory and Archaeology, ed. Shaw, Thurstan (Ibadan, 1969), 34.Google Scholar

16 Fagg, B. E. B., ‘Recent work in West Africa: new light on the Nok cultureWorld Archaeology, i (1969), 4150.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

17 Mauny, R., ‘Autour de la répartition des chars repestres du Nord-Ouest africain’, Proc. IIme, Pan. Afr. Prehist. Cong., ed. Balout, L. (Algiers, 1955), 741–6.Google Scholar

18 Posnansky and McIntosh, op. cit., 187.

19 Diop, L. M., ‘Metallurgie et l'a^ge du fer en AfriqueBull. IFAN (série B), xxx (1968), 1038Google Scholar. One of the main advocates of this view is Dr B. W. Andah to whom I am indebted for stimulating ideas.

20 See in particular dates of the ninth to twelfth century for Ife (Willett, F., J. Afr. Hist., xii (1971), 367)Google Scholar and of the first quarter of the second millennium A.D. for Benin (Connah, op. cit., 1975, 248) and Begho (Posnansky and McIntosh, op. cit., 166).

21 Lambert, Nicole, ‘Les Industries sur Cuivre dans 1'Ouest SaharienWest Afr. J. Archaeol., i (1971), 921Google Scholar, and Willett, op. cit., 359.

22 Thilmans, G. and Descamps, C., ‘Excavations at De Ndalane (Sine Saloum) 27 November–14 January 1972’Google Scholar report privately duplicated and circulated by IFAN, Dakar; and paper given at 7th Pan Afr. Prehist. Congress at Addis Ababa 1971 by Cyr Descamps.

23 As those at Rao: for these and the tumuli above Segou see Mauny, R., Les Siècles Obscurs de l'Afrique Noire (Nancy, 1970).Google Scholar

24 Monod, Th., ‘Le Ma'den Ija^fen: une épave caravanière ancienne dans la Majabat Al-Koubra’ Actes du Premier Colloque Int. d'Archéol. Africaine (Fort Lamy, 1969), 286320.Google Scholar

25 Posnansky, Merrick, ‘Ghana and the Origins of West African TradeAfrica Quarterly, xi (1971), 111–14.Google Scholar

26 Shaw, Thurstan, Igbo-Ukvm: an account of archaeological discoveries in eastern Nigeria (London, 1970).Google Scholar

27 Lawal, Babatunde, ‘Archaeological Excavations at Igbo-Ukwu—A reassessment’ Odu, n.s. no. 8 (1972), 7297Google Scholar, and Dating Problems at Igbo-UkwuJ. Afr. Hist., xiv (1973). 18Google Scholar; Merrick Posnansky, review of Shaw, Thurstan's Igbo-Ukwu, Archaeology, vi (1973), 300–11Google Scholar; Northrup, David, ‘The Growth of Trade among the Igbo before 1800J. Afr. Hist., xiii (1972), 217–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

28 Shaw, Thurstan, ‘Those Igbo-Ukwu Radiocarbon dates: Facts, Fictions and Probabilities’, J. Afr. Hist., xvi (1975), 503–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

29 Ibid., 513.

30 Werner, O. and Willett, F., ‘The composition of brasses from Ife and BeninArchaeometry, xvii (1975), 141–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

31 Willett, Frank, Ife in the History of West African Sculpture (London, 1967).Google Scholar

32 Ryder, A. F. C., ‘A reconsideration of the Ife-Benin relationship’, J. Afr. Hist., vi (1965), 2537.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

33 Bradbury, R. E., ‘Chronological Problems in the study of Benin HistoryJ. Hist. Soc. Nigeria, i (1959), 265.Google Scholar

34 Eyo, Ekpo, ‘Excavations at Odo Ogbe Street and Lafogido, Ife, Nigeria’Google Scholar and Garlake, Peter, ‘Excavations at Obalara's land, Ife, NigeriaW. Afr. J. Archaeol, iv (1974), 99109 and 111–48.Google Scholar

35 Posnansky and McIntosh, op. cit. 169–70.

36 Connah, op. cit., 1975, 138–47.

37 Willett, F. and Fleming, S. J., ‘A Catalogue of important Nigerian Copper-alloy castings dated by thermoluminscenceArchaeometry, xviii (1976), 135–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

38 Private communication from Dr J. Charles, Cambridge.

39 Shaw, Thurstan, ‘An analysis of West African bronzesIbadan, xxviii (1970), 80–9.Google Scholar

40 Anquandah, James A., ‘Excavations at the Begho D2 site 1975Nyame Akuma, vii (10 1975).Google Scholar

41 Garrard, Tim, ‘Studies in Akan Gold weights (4) Their dateTrans. His. Soc. Ghana, xiv (1973), 149–68.Google Scholar

42 Figured on a rather fine gold weight in the Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford.

43 Garrard, Tim, ‘Studies in Akan Gold weights: (1) The Origin of the Gold weight systemTrans Hist. Soc. Ghana, xiii (1972), 120.Google Scholar

44 Private communication from Tim Garrard.

45 Williams in discussing a Nubian gold object wrote (p. 182) it ‘is solid and therefore probably not cast cire-perdue’. This is a non sequitur as most small objects made by the are-perdue method (such as gold weights) are solid.

46 Farmer, H. G., ‘Early references to music in the Western Sudan’ Oriental Studies Mainly Musical (London, 1953), 10.Google Scholar

47 Farmer, H. G., Studies in Oriental Musical Instruments (London, 1931), 50.Google Scholar

48 Morris, Ernest, Tintinnabula Small Bells (London, 1959)Google Scholar, and also Bells of all Nations (London, 1951).Google Scholar

49 Ryder, A. F. C., ‘The Re-establishment of Portuguese Factories on the costa da Mina to the mid eighteenth centuryJ. Hist. Soc. Nigeria, i (1958), 157–82.Google Scholar

50 Flight, Colin, ‘A Survey of Recent Results in the Radiocarbon Chronology of Northern and Western AfricaJ. Afr. Hist., xiv (1973), 549Google Scholar; and Eyo, Ekpo, ‘New Treasures from NigeriaExpedition, xiv (1972), 211.Google Scholar

51 I am most grateful to Miss Christine Fox, the sculptress who worked with brass casters in Kumasi and who works extensively in brass, for these points.

52 Westcott, R. W., ‘Ancient Egypt and Modern AfricaJ. Afr. Hist., ii (1961), 311–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

53 Merrick Posnansky, op. cit., 1971, 122.

54 Margaret Webster Plass, African Miniatures: The Gold Weights of the Ashanti (London, 1967)Google Scholar, and McLeod, Malcolm, Ashanti Gold-Weights (British Museum Publications Limited, London, 1976)Google Scholar, give the impression that gold weights were made exclusively by the Asante. Though responsible perhaps for some of the finest figurative pieces, the weights began long before the Asante State came into being. They were also made by the Akan of the Ivory Coast.

55 Information from Mr Tim Garrard to whom I am grateful for his insights into the gold weight system.