Head hunter's basket decorated with raffia fringing

Made:
1851-1920 in Assam
maker:
Naga people
Head hunter's basket decorated with raffia fringing

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Head hunter's basket decorated with raffia fringing
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Head hunter's basket decorated with raffia fringing, tassel of coloured goat & human hair and monkey skull, from Naga people of Assam, Indian, 1851-1920

This woven basket was made by the Naga people of North East India. It is described as a head hunter’s basket and is decorated with raffia fringing, a tassel of coloured hair and a monkey’s skull. The Naga used head hunting – the gathering of human heads – to defend themselves against enemies. They also believed taking heads was a fertility rite which could ensure the continuity of their people. The successful warrior brought the heads home in baskets like this to prove his valour. It also made him attractive to the women of his tribe.

However, there is also the possibility that this basket was made as a rather exotic souvenir for tourists visiting India at the turn of the 19th century.

Details

Category:
Asian Medicine
Collection:
Sir Henry Wellcome's Museum Collection
Object Number:
A232811
Materials:
complete, cane, raffia, bone, human hair, human remains and goat hair
Measurements:
overall: 300 mm x 170 mm x 187 mm,
base: 170 mm x 60 mm,
top: 187 mm,
type:
basket
credit:
Glendining