Jewelry, 1800s, Cleveland Museum of Art: African ArtShared by different Akan and Akan-related people
Jewelry, 1800s, Cleveland Museum of Art: African ArtShared by different Akan and Akan-related peoples, including the Asante and Baule, gold ornaments indicate status and wealth and are worn at public festivals by titleholders, chiefs, and kings. Most pectoral disks are suspended over the chest by a white, pineapple-fiber cord. They are owned by the okra, a young official who purifies the chief’s soul–hence, the name akrafokonmu, meaning “soul-washer’s badges” or “soul disks.”Size: Overall: 4.3 cm (1 11/16 in.)Medium: cast gold, hammeredhttps://clevelandart.org/art/1935.311 -- source link
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