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Tobacco pipe

Around 1900, kings, dignitaries and heads of families in the grasslands of Cameroon liked to smoke tobacco. The higher the rank of the smoker, the more splendid the pipe had to be. This tobacco pipe is made of cast brass. It is decorated with a pattern of halved spirals and was made by artists in the kingdom of Bamum in the early years of the 20th century. It is not clear whether it was ever smoked. Around 1908, the ethnologist Bernhard Ankermann (*1869 - †1943) commissioned dozens of tobacco pipes from local artists during a research trip to Cameroon. He bought other pipes in local markets. They were unused when the then Royal Museum of Ethnology acquired them. Main catalogue: "Tobacco pipe, cast brass bowl, very short wooden pipe with a long brass pipe inside. A triangle protruding freely from the base on both sides of the elbow. The upper edge of the bowl and the base of the triangle are decorated with halved spirals."

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Data Provider
Ethnologisches Museum Show original at data provider

Cataloguing data

Cultural attribution
Bamun (Bamum, Mamum, Bamoun, Mamoun, Mamoum)
Object type
Tobacco pipe
Dimensions
Depth: 6 cm
Weight: 2 kg
Height: 33 cm
Width: 3,1 cm
Depth: 6,5 cm
Length: 10 cm
Length: 24 cm
Material/Technique
Brass, Wood
Current location
Ethnologisches Museum, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
Inventory number
III C 25537 a,b

Provenance and sources

  • Production
    where
    Cameroon
    who
    Bamun (Bamum, Mamum, Bamoun, Mamoun, Mamoum)
  • Assignment to a curated holding:
    Africa

Information about the record

Legal status metadata
CC BY-SA 4.0 DEED
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