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Glass Beads Made in Africa:
Part Two, "Kiffa Beads"
Written
by Peter Francis Jr. originally appearing on TheBeadSite.com
and reprinted here with permission of The
Bead Museum
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With
only two exceptions (Egypt and Bida, Nigeria), there has been no
traditional glassmaking in Africa. However, that didn't stop
inventive Africans from making glass beads. They did so by
recycling glass, crushing it into a fine powder and making beads
from the powder.
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One
of better known of these beads are called "Kiffa beads"
in the West, after a large town in Mauritania were some were made.
Historically, they are very important, as the technique is around
1000 years old.
The
women who make them first crush glass into a fine powder between
stones. Plain glass, such as that used for bottles, is formed into
a core. Brightly colored opaque glass will be used for the
decorations.
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The
core glass is wet with saliva and built up into a bead shape upon
a thin stick. At right is the "frame" used for the
triangular pendants that are commonly worn three at a time in the
hair. The inner stick remains in the bead, while the one
protruding from the bead will burn out and leave the perforation.
The
core is shaped in a shell or in a small clay mold.
From
Mauny 1949: 111, fig. 16.
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Once
the core is formed, the other colors of glass are wet and placed
on the core with a pin or needle. The blue bead at left will be
used on bracelets. This broken specimen is an older one, as it is
made of two shades of blue alternating in stripes. The all-red
triangular pendant is shown at its back side.
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The
finished beads are then placed on a piece of broken pottery to be
fired (Gabus 1982: 144, fig. 2; drawn by Walter Hugentobler).
The
decoration of beads such as those at the top of the page is the
most time-consuming part of the operation. A woman can only make
about three beads like these in a day.
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Firing
is done on a bed of charcoal. The potsherd is placed upon it and a
cover put over the beads (often a sardine can). Firing takes about
45 minutes.
From
Gabus 1982: 144, fig. 4; drawn by Walter Hugentobler).
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small-scale industry declined in the 1980s, but interest in the
beads in the West prompted a number of women to take the work up
again. Many of the newer beads are garish or poorly made. These
crosses (with no religious affiliations) were made in the late
1990s (they seem no longer to be made) and, while not as fine as
some earlier beads, do require considerable skill.
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the most interesting aspect of this beadmaking (wet-core
powder-glass) is its considerable age. French excavations led by
Roberts (1970) at Tegdaoust, Mauritania discovered beads made this
way and clay molds for them (see below), published by Vanacker
(1984). Some mold fragments were found dating to the 9th
century, but most dated to the 10th to 12th
centuries
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Tegdaoust
is assumed to be the ancient city of Aoudaghost, described by
Muslim North Africans beginning in the 9th century.
It
was originally a city of ancient Ghana (crosshatched on the map)
and later located in ancient Mali (vertical lines), which absorbed
Ghana.
Modern
Mali takes its name from the ancient kingdom, as part of it was in
the Kingdom of Mali. Modern Ghana has nothing to do geographically
with the Kingdom of Ghana.
From
Francis 1993.
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Below
are drawings of two wet-core powder-glass bead molds reconstructed
from fragments found at Tegdaoust, Mauritania.
Source:
Vanacker (1984: 48).
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from being a focus of collecting and writing, "Kiffa
beads" live on as an icon in the bead world. These porcelain
examples were made by Howard Newcomb for the Third International
Bead Conference held in Washington DC in1985. The arrangement is
similar to that used by Mauritanian women.
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Part
1: Bida, Nigeria
- Part 2: Kiffa and Wet-Core Beads - Part
3: Dry Powder-Glass Beads in Ghana
Some
References:
Gabus,
Jean
1976 Oualata et Gueïmaré des Nemadi. Neuchâtel: Musée
d'Ethnographie.
1982 Sahara Bijoux et Techniques. Neuchâtel: Baconniére
Mauny, Raymond
1949 Fabrication de Perles de Verre en Mauritanie. Notes Africaines
44: 116-117.
Opper, Marie-José and Howard Opper
1989 Kiffa Beads: Mauritanian Powdered Glass Beads. Alexandria VA:
Opper and Opper.
Nevill, David
2002 A Toubab in the Desert - A Trip to Kiffa, Mauritania. Bead
Society of Great Britain Newsletter 64: 2-5.
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