Ear Ornaments

P46

From: Borneo | Dutch West Borneo | Mendalam River

Curatorial Section: Oceanian

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Object Number P46
Current Location Collections Storage
Culture Kayan (uncertain)
Provenience Borneo | Dutch West Borneo | Mendalam River
Date Made 1897
Section Oceanian
Materials Clouded Leopard Tooth | Glass
Description

Pair of clouded leopard tooth ear ornaments, topped with tassels of tiny multicolored glass beads, connected by a string of dark, mostly blue and greenish blue beads. Udang koleh. Worn by men. "The upper part of each ear is . . . perforated, so as to permit the insertion of a tiger-cat's tooth; this ornament is, however, inserted only for full dress; in every day life a plug of wood about half an inch in diameter is substituted." When Kenyah and Kayan men "attain to full manhood and have been on a war expedition" they have a hole punched in the upper parts of their ears wherein "there is inserted a tiger-cat's canine tooth decorated at the large end with a tuft of bead-work . . . to keep it in place." (Home-Life of Borneo Head-Hunters, p. 155)

Length 40.64 cm
Credit Line Gift of Alfred C. Harrison Jr. and Dr. H. M. Hiller, 1899

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