Jur anvil

Jur anvil
Other views of this artifact:


Accession Number:
1884.47.4
Country:
Sudan
Region:
[Southern Sudan]
Cultural Group:
Jur
Date Made:
?Before 1858
Materials:
Iron Metal
Process:
Forged (Metal) , Hammered
Dimensions:
L = 141 mm, W top = 16.7 by 16.5 mm, W mid body = 37.5 by 36.7 mm, Base W = 49.4 by 47.3 mm [RTS 9/8/2004].
Weight:
1300 g
Other Owners:
This object is said to have been collected in 1858; in that year Petherick led a trading expedition through Bongo territory, an account of which is given in his 1861 volume, Egypt, The Sudan and Central Africa; he refers to this group as the Dor. The expe
Field Collector:
John Petherick
PRM Source:
Augustus Henry Lane Fox Pitt Rivers founding collection
Acquired:
Donated 1884
Collected Date:
1858
Description:
Small anvil made from a single piece of iron, consisting of a narrow, slightly convex top, roughly round in section with edges splayed and slightly folded in where they have been hammered flat. The body below tapers out towards its base, and is circular at the top with a roughly pecked surface, before becoming square and more smoothly finished two thirds the way down the body where the sides have been flattened to produce four flat faces with angular edges. The underside is flat and almost square, and has been polished smooth through use. The polish extends to the lower part of each flattened side. The anvil is complete and intact, but there is a large flaw in the metal just above the base, visible as a deep fissure that has created a void near one edge. It is currently a metallic gray colour (Pantone 877C). It has a weight of approximately 1300 grams, is 141 mm long, and measures 16.7 by 16.5 mm across the top, 37.5 by 36.7 mm across the mid body, just before this becomes square, and 49.4 by 47.3 mm across the base.

This object is said to have been collected in 1858; in that year Petherick led a trading expedition through Bongo territory, an account of which is given in his 1861 volume, Egypt, The Sudan and Central Africa; he refers to this group as the Dor. The expedition entered Bongo territory on January 25, 1858, visiting villages called Djau, Kurkur, Maeha, Mura, Umbura, Modocunga, Miha, Nearhe, Gutu, Mungela, Ombelambe and Lungo. Later in February they passed back through the Bongo villages of Djamaga and Lungo again. This material was shipped back to England in 1859. Subsequently obtained by Pitt Rivers at an auction of Petherick’s collection, conducted through Mr Bullock of High Holborn, London, on 27th June 1862 (see the Catalogue of the very interesting collection of arms and implements of war, husbandry, and the chase, and articles of costume and domestic use, procured during several expeditions up the White Nile, Bahr-il-Gazal, and among the various tribes of the country, to the cannibal Neam Nam territory on the Equator, by John Petherick, Esq., H.M. Consul, Khartoum, Soudan ). This was sold with anvil 1884.47.3 as part of lot 44 ‘a smith’s anvil - page 396, and stake (Djour and Dor)’. It was sent to the Bethnal Green Museum for display by Pitt Rivers, probably in 1874, and later displayed in the South Kensington Museum, being transferred from there to become part of the founding collection of the Pitt Rivers Museum in 1884.

Both objects are used to illustrate a section on the Kytch (= cic Dinka?) not the Jur or Bongo, but in Petherick's original sketchbook, they were drawn on a page with the general title of 'Djour implements' (Wellcome Library MS 5789, p. 10), and Petherick certainly describes the Jur using objects of this type: ‘after securing their crops, the Djour, in large numbers, proceed in search of iron ore; and by means of small cupolas and charcoal fuel this is reduced on the spot to metal of the finest description.’ Once the slag is recovered by this process, it is broken into small pieces, which are ‘submitted to the heat of a smith’s hearth, and hammered with a large granite boulder on a small anvil presenting a surface of 1 1/2 inch square, stuck into an immense block of wood. By this process the metal is freed from its impurities, and converted into malleable iron of the best quality’. Once the iron is reduced to small ingots, they are ‘beaten into shape by the boulder, wielded by a powerful man; and the master smith, with a hammer, handleless like the pestle of a mortar, finishes them... Almost every Djour is employed in this manufacture, and by the disposal of the results of his labour, either in iron or grain, obtains an easy subsistence from the Dinka tribes’ (J. Petherick, 1861, Egypt, The Sudan and Central Africa, pp 395-6). The attribution in the various museum records 'Jur and Dor' seem to have originated from the auction catalogue, but the two items are a pair and belong together. This attribution may reflect no more than a comment that this type of tool was used by both groups.

Schweinfurth also illustrates a similar object amongst his Zande material (G. Schweinfurth, Artes Africanae , pl. XIII fig. 20, with the comment 'a smith's anvil for the manufacture of fine iron implements, serving also as a hammer, 0.12 metres long, 'Bande'); as well as amongst his Bongo finds (op.cit., pl. V no. 7 'quadrangular iron block, used as hammer and anvil... 'Berr').

Illustrated in Travels in Central Africa and Explorations of the Western Nile Tributaries, Vol. I, p. 163 top.

This object is currently on display in the Lower Gallery, case 62A.

Rachael Sparks 30/9/2005.

Primary Documentation:
Accession Book IV entry [PR IV, p. 110] - [insert] 1884.47 [end insert] METAL WORKING. TOOLS, IMPLEMENTS &c [insert] 3-4 [end insert] - [1 of] 2 Small iron anvils. JUR & DOR. Petherick coll. 1858. [insert] (1219 blue) [end insert].
Collectors Miscellaneous XI Accession Book entry [p. 193] - PETHERICK, Consul [p. 197] [insert] 1884.47.3-4 [end insert] 1219 blue. 2 small iron anvils. JUR & DOR. 1858. [p. 197] [insert] BONGO is tribe's name for itself. They are called DOR by neighbours [end insert, by BB].
Blue book entry [p. 60] - Hammer stones pounders mullers etc. [p. 62] 1219. Anvil used for working iron. Djour and Dor tribes Central Africa, obtained by Consul Petherick. [insert] 1884.47.3 + ?4 [end insert].
?
Delivery Catalogue I entry [p. 108] - Seals Tools & various objects. [insert] 1884.47.4 or 5 [end insert] Anvil (?African). not no'd [screen] 15 [case] 163.
Card Catalogue Entry - There is no further information on the catalogue card [RTS 6/4/2004].
Old Pitt Rivers Museum label - 1219 [tag stuck on object] [pencil insert] 3 [end insert] 268 [tag stuck on object] [RTS 20/7/2004].
Written on object -
ANVIL DJOUR AND DOR TRIBES, AFRICA. PETHERICK COLL:, 1858. P.R. 1219 (Blue.) [on side] ANVIL, DJOUR AND DOR TRIBES, CENTRAL; AFRICA CONSUL PETHERICK 1858 [on base; RTS 20/7/2004].

Display History:
Displayed in the Bethnal Green and South Kensington Museums (V&A) [AP].

Publication History:
This is probably the object illustrated by Katherine Petherick in Travels in Central Africa and Explorations of the Western Nile Tributaries, Vol. I, p. 163 top [RTS 4/1/2005].

 
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