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Inlaid bird bowl, from Belau

by The British Museum
Inlaid bird bowl, likely 18th century, wood, inlaid with shell, from Belau, Micronesia, 93 x 53 cm (with lid), collected by Captain Henry Wilson (© The Trustees of the British Museum)
Inlaid bird bowl, likely 18th century, wood, inlaid with shell, from Belau, Micronesia, 93 x 53 cm (with lid), collected by Captain Henry Wilson (© The Trustees of the British Museum)
This is one of eight artifacts that forms the earliest known collection from Belau, formerly known as Palau or the Pelew Islands, which lie in the north-western Pacific in an area known as Micronesia. Belau is now a republic, established in 1981.
The finely carved wooden bowl, stained a reddish brown, is shaped like a bird. It was used as a container for sweet drink, with the upper section forming a lid. The white shell inlay includes bird motifs. Men of high rank used prestigious inlaid vessels for exchanging gifts of food, and early European visitors recorded that they were honored in this manner. This bowl originally belonged to the High Chief of Koror, the ibedul, who gave it to Captain Henry Wilson during a farewell feast. Wilson and his crew had stayed on Belau for three months in 1783, while a replacement was being built for Antelope, their wrecked East India Company ship. George Keate published a drawing of the bowl in his 1788 account of the experiences of the crew.
The Belauans continue to make inlaid vessels to this day.
© The Trustees of the British Museum

Additional resources:
G. Keate, An account of the Pelew Isla-1 (London, Wilson and Nichol, 1788)

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