Fragment: Copper
Item number A2184 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
Item number A2184 from the MOA: University of British Columbia.
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Rectangular piece broken off from a larger copper; jagged edges.
Coppers can be named, displayed, and transferred in accordance with ceremonial privilege and protocol. Historically, within potlatch economies, coppers would rise in value each time they were purchased, ceremonially presented, and strategically re-sold or given away. Among the Kwakwaka’wakw, coppers were sometimes cut or broken during rivalries. Some of these were riveted together and used again, their value then having to be re-established.
status; wealth; ceremonial; potlatch
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Rectangular piece broken off from a larger copper; jagged edges.
status; wealth; ceremonial; potlatch
Coppers can be named, displayed, and transferred in accordance with ceremonial privilege and protocol. Historically, within potlatch economies, coppers would rise in value each time they were purchased, ceremonially presented, and strategically re-sold or given away. Among the Kwakwaka’wakw, coppers were sometimes cut or broken during rivalries. Some of these were riveted together and used again, their value then having to be re-established.
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