Short Club
Item number C1131 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number C1131 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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A flat green-blue jade club with a paddle-like shape and a small handle with a hole in the middle.
This club would have been held by a high-ranking male leader and viewed as a symbol of great mana (prestige). Traditionally, the sharp edge was used to kill someone with a single thrusting blow, to the head (cleaving the upper skull horizontally), the neck (smashing the windpipe) or the body (penetrating the ribs and stopping the heart). This would have carried a significant ancestral name, honouring the holder and those whose lives had been taken.
This was made from a rare form of nephrite (pounamu) called totoaka, which symbolically represented the streaked blood of fallen enemies. In addition, its white streaking (inanga) and translucency make this club unique.
The club's smooth, waxy surface would have been achieved through years of abrasion with fine sand and water.
This data has been provided to the RRN by the MOA: University of British Columbia. We've used it to provide the information on the Data tab.
A flat green-blue jade club with a paddle-like shape and a small handle with a hole in the middle.
This was made from a rare form of nephrite (pounamu) called totoaka, which symbolically represented the streaked blood of fallen enemies. In addition, its white streaking (inanga) and translucency make this club unique.
This club would have been held by a high-ranking male leader and viewed as a symbol of great mana (prestige). Traditionally, the sharp edge was used to kill someone with a single thrusting blow, to the head (cleaving the upper skull horizontally), the neck (smashing the windpipe) or the body (penetrating the ribs and stopping the heart). This would have carried a significant ancestral name, honouring the holder and those whose lives had been taken.
The club's smooth, waxy surface would have been achieved through years of abrasion with fine sand and water.
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