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A Short History of Ashanti Gold Weights
Since gold was always kept as dust (not as worked objects,
or as ingots with fixed values), scales and weights were
always required. They were already in use when the Portuguese
arrived in the late 15th century, where observers remarked on the
use of gold for personal adornment. As John Locke wrote following
his voyage in 1554-5, Some of their women weare in their bare
arms certain forsleeves made of the plates of beaten golde. On]
their figers also they weare rings, made of golden wires, like a
knot or a wreathe; whilst a traveller in 1693 mentions that
The gold they took here was all in Fetishes, which are small
pieces wrought in many pretty figures, which the Blacks tie
to all Parts of their Bodies for Ornament, and are generally
very good gold (both extracts cited from
McLeod 1981, 73). The subject-matter of
Ashanti weights is frequently
symbolic - bound up not only with their
social life, but
also with their rich fabric of
folk-tales (a legacy not, of course, restricted to the Ashanti), in that many weights
illustrate tales and
proverbs, many of them profound and humorous.
Again, the history of the
Ashanti state is intimately connected to the gold trade, which
cemented its power throughout West Africa, and its prestige abroad.
Joseph Dupius, in his Journal of a residence in
Ashantee, shows an Audience for representatives of the British
Govenment, and a portrait of an Ashanti soldier:
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