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Club
Club

Club

Label TextKnob-stick for life Knobkerries from South Africa have been used, banned, coveted and collected in large quantities. In early royal Zulu courts, a knobkerrie was the instrument of choice for executions. For many years, Zulu men carried them and used their hardwood elegance with lethal precision. By the 1850s, they were outlawed in many urban areas of the Cape and Natal. Laws specified that the knobs had to be small enough to fit in the owner's mouth or that only one could be carried. After the British-Zulu wars, British soldiers coveted them as trophies of their success in overcoming the tactics of the Zulu armies and the resilience of the warriors.
Object number81.17.1272
Exhibition HistorySeattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, Elegant Plain Art: Art from the Shaker World and Beyond, July 7, 1999 - Feb. 1, 2001. Seattle, Washington, Seattle Art Museum, The Untold Story, Nov. 14, 2003 - Nov.14, 2004.
Credit LineGift of Katherine White and the Boeing Company
DimensionsL.: 16 3/4 in. Diam.: 3 1/8 in.
MediumWood
War Club
Polynesian
early 19th century
Object number: 63.25
Polynesian
Object number: 81.17.1425
Polynesian
Object number: 81.17.1431
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1441
Melanesian
Object number: 81.17.1445
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Polynesian
Object number: 58.137
Carved Club (wahaika)
Polynesian
Object number: 57.22
Mace, or Pineapple Club
Polynesian
19th century
Object number: 67.6
Ka'heit'am (Club)
First Nations, Nuu-chah-nulth, Hesquiat
before 1778
Object number: 91.1.21
Photo: Susan Cole
First Nations, Nuu-chah-nulth, Hesquiat
ca. 1800
Object number: 99.36