Seven Metals of Africa
Exhibition (12 Nov 1959 - 12 Jan 1960)
- Object[94]
- african[94]
- adze[1]
- ankle bracelet[2]
- armlet[1]
- axe[7]
- baton[1]
- bell[2]
- bow[1]
- bracelet[3]
- ceremonial sword[1]
- ceremony[1]
- clothing ornament[1]
- costume[1]
- crucible[1]
- currency[1]
- dagger[1]
- dance costume ornament[1]
- eda figures[1]
- finger piano[1]
- gong[2]
- harness mount[2]
- hip-pendant[1]
- key[1]
- knife[14]
- knife sheath[3]
- mask[1]
- mold[7]
- nail fetish[1]
- neck piece[1]
- neck ring[2]
- necklace[2]
- ornament[1]
- pendant mask[1]
- pipe bowl[1]
- plaque[2]
- powder flask[1]
- powder keg[1]
- reliquary guardian figure[2]
- sanza[1]
- scale[1]
- sculpture[2]
- shield[1]
- spear[4]
- spear head[1]
- spike[1]
- spoon[1]
- staff head[1]
- statue[5]
- stool[1]
- sword[5]
- sword sheath[1]
- throwing knife[3]
- tool[1]
- wax[1]
- angola[1]
- bangala district[3]
- belgian congo[16]
- benin[2]
- benin kingdom[35]
- boyoma falls[4]
- brazzaville[1]
- cameroon[1]
- cataract district[1]
- central belgian congo[1]
- congo[1]
- dahomey[2]
- eastern province[2]
- equatorial province[2]
- french congo[1]
- gabon[3]
- gabun[1]
- ghana[1]
- gold coast[1]
- kasai district[13]
- kenya[2]
- lagos[1]
- liberia[1]
- lopori river[1]
- mali[2]
- maritime congo[1]
- masai[1]
- nigeria[26]
- ogooue river[1]
- republic of the congo[1]
- sangha river[1]
- sankuru river[2]
- south africa[2]
- southern nigeria[1]
- southwest belgian congo[2]
- tanzania[2]
- united kingdom[11]
- zaire[23]
- zambezi river[1]
- zambia[4]
- 16th century[1]
- modern[11]
- ambundu[1]
- arab[2]
- ashanti[1]
- babangi[2]
- badinga[1]
- bakongo[1]
- bakota[2]
- bakuba[1]
- bakundu[3]
- baluba[1]
- bambara[1]
- bangala[1]
- banyang[1]
- bapoto[1]
- bateke[1]
- batetela[2]
- bechuana[2]
- british[11]
- bushongo[3]
- edo (africa)[24]
- elgeyo[1]
- fan[1]
- fang[1]
- fon[2]
- ibo[1]
- ijebu[1]
- ikundu[1]
- kikuyu[1]
- lokele[1]
- lomiabo[1]
- mabali[1]
- mangbetu[1]
- masai[2]
- mashona[3]
- mobati[1]
- ngbandi[1]
- ngombe[1]
- nupe[2]
- sanga[2]
- sango[1]
- yoruba[2]
- central africa[2]
- edo (africa)[2]
- ijebu[1]
- west africa[13]
- yoruba[1]
- animal[1]
- bird[2]
- ceremonial sword[1]
- elephant[1]
- female head[1]
- human face[2]
- human figure[3]
- human hand[1]
- human head[2]
- instrument[1]
- male[1]
- male figures[1]
- male head[1]
- man[1]
- monkey head[1]
- mudfish[4]
- queen mother[1]
- shield[1]
- snake head[1]
- spear[1]
- standing male figure[2]
- cast[1]
- cire perdue[1]
- engraved[3]
- fired[1]
- incised[1]
- lost wax casting[17]
- actual citation[37]
1 - 30 of 94 Records
1 - 30 of 94 Records