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Glass Beads Made in Africa:
Part Three, Dry Powder-Glass Beads in Ghana
Written
by Peter Francis Jr. originally appearing on TheBeadSite.com
and reprinted here with permission of The
Bead Museum
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As opposed to
wet-core powder glass beads like Kiffa and Bodom, dry powder-glass
beads are made without a core. Scrap glass is crushed very finely,
put into a mold and fired.
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This
rather small mold (10 cm; 4" across) comes from the Krobo
beadmaking village of Sikaben (or Singabin) in southeastern Ghana.
It was made from local clay
by the beadmakers themselves.
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Part of a broken
mold. Note the small depression at the bottom of the cell. Into it
will be put a section of cassava leaf stem (above), which will
burn out and leave the perforation. Cassava is native to America,
and while now universally used in Ghana, it could not have been
employed before 1500 or so. Wet-core powdered-glass beads do not
use a stick in this manner.
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The powdered
glass is then poured into the molds. This young worker has filled
a large numbers of molds that will be fired later in the day.
He is in the Asante (Ashanti) village of
Asamang, where a single family controls the production. They hire
others (such as this lad) out to do the actual work.
In other villages, such as Ohwim, each
family operates their own beadmaking facilities. When we visited
in 1990 there were no less than 60 families at Ohwim making beads.
Their beads also seem to be the most common on the market. A
testament to a free market.
From Francis 1993.
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While dry
powder-glass beadmaking is known to have gone on in Nigeria and
among the Ewe (who occupy the extreme east of Ghana and much of
Togo), most beadmaking today is found among the Asante of central
and northern Ghana and the Krobo of the southeast.
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Krobo once occupied what is known as Krobo Mountain, but were
forced off it by the British in 1892. There is evidence of
beadworking there, in the form of broken molds and spoiled beads.
Traditionally, Krobo beads have a yellow
base and this bead, known as an adjagba, is their hallmark.
The stripes are added by poking a stick down the side of the mold
and filling the hole with darker glass. During firing, the bead is
twisted some (I am not sure how this is done) to twist the
stripes. This is a large bead, 39 mm (1,6" long).
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Everyone
we met in Asanteland (9 villages) said that they had learned
beadmaking from Osei Kwame or at Dabaa. At Dabaa we were told that
Osei Kwame (who had died in 1978) began making beads after having
a dream in 1937. Dreams are the origins of many things in Ghana
and in 1937 two articles were published describing Asante
beadmaking. Though the account cannot be quite right, Osei Kwame
was clearly an important teacher and spread beadmaking to many
villages.
These are two beads he made. The top one
is apparently an attempt to duplicate the beads below.
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beads were made by the Ewe in the far southeast of Ghana. A long
mold was carefully filled with layers of glass, producing a tube
(often flattened or off-center) after being fired. Beads were cut
from the tube and ground on the ends. This laborious work is no
longer being done. Yellow is by far the most common color,
followed by green. Red and black (and maybe white) are rare.
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old is this industry? We can look at two lines of evidence. One is
archaeological. I know of seven sites from which powder-glass
beads have been excavated. Of them, the most closely dated is
Adansi Ahinson, dated to 1680-1750 (Francis 1993: 17).
The first historical description of
powder-glass beadmaking in Ghana (then the Gold Coast) was by John
Barbot (1746: 231), who visited in 1704: "The third sort of
false gold, grown pretty common among the Blacks, is a composition
which they make of a certain powder of coral glass which they
cast." "Coral" here simply refers to a bead.
Thomas E. Bowdich, the first European to
travel to the Asante region about 1815 had this to say: "The
natives pretend that imitations are made in the country, which
they call boiled beads, alleging that they are broken aggrey beads
ground into powder and boiled together, and that they know them
because they are heavier; but this I find to be mere conjecture
among themselves, unsupported by any thing [sic] like
observation or discovery." (Bowdich 1966: 268).
Bowdich must have been insufferable. He
tricked his way into leading the British campaign into Asanteland
and persuaded the British to colonize the country. His contempt
for the natives is palpable in this passage. He also mixed up koli
beads and powder-glass beads. He did the same thing for Aggrey
beads, throwing writers off the track for a very long time.
Combining these two lines of evidence, a
date of at least 1700 is derived. How much earlier than
that that dry powder-glass beads were made in Ghana (or to the
east) needs more investigation. Certainly, the method currently
used with the cassava leaf stem cannot predate contact with
America, but some other method may have preceded this one.
Part
1: Bida, Nigeria -
Part 2:
Kiffa and Wet-Core Beads -
Part 3: Dry Powder-Glass Beads in Ghana
References:
Barbot, John
1746 A Voyage to New Calabar, pp. 455-467 in A. and C.
Churchill, eds Collection of Voyages and Travels, some Now
firƒt Printed from Original Manuƒcripts, others Now firƒt
Publiƒhed in English.Vol. 5. London: Linot and Osborn (6
vols.).
Bowdich, T(homas) Edward, edited by W. E. F. Ward
1966 Mission from Cape Coast Castle to Ashantee. Frank Cass
& Co London. (3rd ed.; original 1819).
Francis, Peter, Jr.
1990 Powder-Glass Beads. Margaretologist 3(1): 9-11
1993 Where Beads Are Loved: Ghana, West Africa. Beads and
People Series 2 Lake Placid: Lapis Route Books.
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