Rare feather currency roll "manahau"
Description
red feathers of the red-scarlet honey-eater, sap (glue), plant fibre, bark cloth, Job’s tears, in acrylic display-case
The original value of a new piece of feather currency was determined by its size and the richness of colour. Feathers from about three hundred honey sucker birds were used for each band, and the average length (ca. 4,5 m) involved five to six hundred hours of work.
The feather money owed its high monetary value to the labor-intensive effort required to produce it.
Traditional use of the feather roll as bride price continued until the 1970s. Men wishing to marry would usually be required to compensate the bride’s father with ten rolls.
Feather rolls were already scarce in 1911. In 1962 there were only found five makers in operation and in 1967 only two were left. Today the manufacture of feather rolls has completely ceased.
Comparing literature
Conru, Kevin, Solomon Islands Art, Milan 2008, p. 190Exhibition
Krefeld, Karst: "Mit fremden Federn geschmückt - Eine kleine Kulturgeschichte der Feder", 1996Notices
This object is subject to CITES. Please note that it can only be sent within the European Union. At the present time export in third countries is prohibited, respectively, export licenses in third countries for objects containing or made of protected materials are only granted under stringent conditions.