Large Dinka Hardwood Club - Fluted with Leather Wrapped Handle

Item A16


The price of this item will be reduced each week until it is sold. The current price is listed on the African Artifacts link. Instructions for ordering can be found on the How to Order web page.


This exceptional and well-balanced club is from the Dinka People of South Sudan. It dates to the 19th century and possibly to the early 19th century.

It is carved from a single piece of dense hardwood. It has a superb dark and lustrous patina. It has shallow fluting along the main body of the shaft. The grip end is sheafed in leather wrap which has a superb patina commensurate with the rest of the club.

An example is illustrated in Ginzberg (2000, p. 200). Other examples can be found in the Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford.

The Dinka people are an ethnic group inhabiting South Sudan. Largely, they are agri-pastoral people, and are known for their cattle herding. They also grow millet and other grains. Traditionally, their political organisation has been restricted to a number of interlinked clans without any central authority.

The club was acquired in the UK and almost certainly has been in the UK since colonial times. It is unusually fine in terms of the depth and precision of its fluting, the condition of the skin handle cover, and the depth of the patina. It is superior to most or all published examples. Check out the photos below.

Span = 76 cm ; Weight = 770 gm


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