Ekori

Language: unknown
Language: unknown
Headdress of the Herero women

This object, known as Ekori, is a sacred part of the Ovaherero pre-colonial women’s clothing, worn as a type of hair dressing. Basically, Ekori was worn by married women, and held in place by a head band studded with iron beads. Ekori was a solemnity of matrimony object, worn above leather women’s bonnets like those exhibited under the inventory numbers V 15168 N 02 & V 15169 N 02, alongside shin ornamental bands such as those exhibited under inventory numbers 60558 and 60559. At weddings the bride was solemnly crowned with an Ekori and a woman’s bonnet by her mother to mark the bride’s new status as an adult and married woman. Ekori is made of iron beads and animal skin usually derived from game animals of Namibian origin, and supplemented by the animal skin of domestic animals in pastoral communities like the Herero. It is so crafted to seem like and symbolise the horns of a cow, which is an economically and spiritually iconic animal in the Hereroland, e.g. the cow was the Herero’s main source of wealth and sustenance. The 19th century missionaries considered the cow horns symbolism as devilish and rejected it, thereby causing the people to people to switch the material from which Ekori was made, from animal to fabric; hence, its current name, Otjikaiva “headgear made from fabric”. It can be assumed that the collector Ernst Bernhard Kandler brought this and seven other objects from Namibia, where he stayed from 1895 (with some interruptions). Since he was back in Germany from February 1904 at the latest, he must have gotten hold of the clothing and jewelry pieces before then. Thus, it can at least be excluded that the objects originate from the war of extermination of the German colonial power against the Herero. The exact circumstances of the acquisition remain unclear so far (processing status: 2023). The objects from Ernst Bernhard Kandler's donation are still to be classified as sensitive.

Data Provider
Show only fields containing data

Cataloguing data

Cultural attribution
Herero
Object type
headgear
Dimensions
Height: 43 cm, depth: 9.5 cm, width: 10 cm (cap); 53.5 cm (chain)
Material/Technique
Leather, iron
Current location
Museum Burg Mylau
Inventory number
V 15169 N 01

Provenance and sources

when
Before 1904
where
Namibia
who
Ovaherero
when
Until 1904
where
Dresden
who
Ernst Bernhard Kandler
when
Since 1904
where
Reichenbach im Vogtland
who
Verein für Naturkunde zu Reichenbach im Vogtland
when
Since 1956
where
Mylau
Secondary literature
Museum des Vereins für Naturkunde zu Reichenbach i. V., 1914: Eingänge für das Museum des Vereins für Naturkunde zu Reichenbach i. V. (1914 bis 1926), Reichenbach

Lang, Sabine, 2022: Modische Schwergewichte aus Namibia – Traditionelle Kleidung und Schmuck der Hererofrauen. Eine virtuelle Ausstellung, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F7PTJkicT6U

Information about the record

Legal status metadata
This content was machine-translated
2.2 / 7.2