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Brass spoon for dispensing gold
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Object Description
Rating
Title
Brass
spoon
for
dispensing
gold
Subject
Implements, utensils, etc.
Spoons
Gold Coast
Ghana
Akan (African people)
Akan (African people)--Social life and customs
Description
The
trade
in
gold
across
Africa’s
Sahara
desert
,
called
the
Trans-Saharan
gold
trade
,
dominated
West
African
commerce
from the
7th
to the
14th
centuries
. In
search
of
gold
for
coinage
,
Arabs
from the
Mediterranean
made
annual
camel
treks
across
the
Sahara
to
trade
salt
and
other
goods
in
exchange
for
gold
.
Known
as the
Gold
Coast
,
Africa’s
Atlantic
coast
held
many
sources
rich
in
gold
, in
both
rivers
and the
ground
.
Located
at the
crossroads
of the
trans-Saharan
trade
routes
, the
Kingdom
of
Ghana
(located
in the
southwestern
region
of
modern-day
Mali)
dominated
the
trade
in
gold
up
until
the
13th
century
.
During
the
colonial
era
,
gold
merchants
continued
to
trade
with
Europeans
. The
trading
of
gold
was
commonplace
in
everyday
transactions
between
gold
traders
,
chiefs
,
kings
and
merchants
.
Traders
had a
special
system
of
weighing
out
gold
. They
used
a
brass
pan
scale
which
held
gold
dust
or
nuggets
on
one
pan
and
brass
counterweights
or
abrus
seeds
on the
other
to
determine
the
weight
of the
gold
.
Brass
,
copper
and
bronze
counterweights
were
created
in
many
different
shapes
and
forms
,
often
symbolic
of
traditional
Akan
proverbs
or
stories
. This
brass
spoon
was
used
by
traders
of the
British
Gold
Coast
around
1930
to
dispense
gold
dust
and
nuggets
. To this
day
,
gold
continues
to be an
important
part
of the
culture
of
modern-day
Ghana
,
used
to
create
extravagant
regalia
and
ceremonial
objects
for
royalty
.
Photographer
Kaveney, Wendy
Identifier
78.20.5
Collection
Artifacts at the Children's Museum of Indianapolis
Coverage-Spatial
Ghana
Rights
This file is licensed under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license by The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis.
Description
Title
View
1
Photographer
Kaveney, Wendy
Collection
Artifacts at the Children's Museum of Indianapolis
Rights
This file is licensed under a CC BY-SA 3.0 license by The Children’s Museum of Indianapolis.
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