1983.W.1770 Knife (tumi) with camelid head finial (Peru, Inka)


GENERAL DESCRIPTION
Knives with a half-moon shape (tumi) are common in the ancient Andes. This wide blade and short handle form became popular by the Late Horizon (1400-1532 CE). While the knives were produced with metal alloys, examples with plating and gilding also exist for presumed ceremonial function. By the Late Horizon, tin bronze was promoted alongside the more common arsenical bronze; the tin provided not only more strength to the knives but also an original yellow-gold color.

This knife is decorated by elaborate zigzags down the shaft and a modeled camelid head on the finial. Open loops on less decorative examples may have provided for suspension, presumably carried around the neck of a warrior.

Adapted from
Kimberly L. Jones, PhD, Inca: Conquests of the Andes / Los Incas y las conquistas de los Andes, Label text [1983.W.1769; 1983.W.1770], 2015.

NOTES
  • Inka (Inca), Late Horizon, A.D. 1476-1534, updated by KJones in TMS on 01/03/14 and 01/25/16.
  • Updated medium, geography, and dates in TMS to reflect to reflect Inca label -- tin bronze, Perú: Andean highlands, 1400-1540.
  • Fun Facts Source: Junius B. Bird Report, 1/26/1976, p. 14, TMS, Notes / Text Entries, Attribution.

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures
Inka (Inca): AAT: 300017326
Inca horizon: AAT: 300017352

Geography
Inca Empire: TGN: 6002741
Peru (nation): TGN: 1000056

Process/materials
bronze: AAT: 300010957
casting (process): AAT: 300053104
casts (sculpture): AAT: 300047806
solder: AAT: 300010993
repoussé: AAT: 300054023
sheet metal: AAT: 300223016
annealing: AAT: 300053886
chasing (metalworking): AAT: 300054016
embossing (technique): AAT: 300053826
metalwork: AAT: 300015336

Historical periods
Late Horizon Period: AAT: 300017332

Individuals

Subject terms
ceremonial objects: AAT: 300234117
funerary objects: AAT: 300234126
knives (cutting tools / cutting equipment): AAT: 300024668
ceremonial knives (ceremonial weapons): AAT: 300253581
tumi knife (sacrificial or ceremonial axe / knife): DMA
figures: AAT: 300189808
head: AAT: 300262520
faces (animal or human components): AAT: 300251798
face: DMA
animals: DMA
llama (species): AAT: 300256340

RELATED OBJECTS

PROVENANCE
Until 1976: Nora and John Wise, New York [1]

1976-1983: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, on long-term loan from the above [1], [2]

From 1983: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, the Nora and John Wise Collection, bequest of John Wise [1], [2]

[1] The main source for this provenance is existing information in TMS. Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.

[2] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

AUDIO ASSETS

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS
253365128: UMO. [Caption] A Llama (Lama glama), in front of the Machu Picchu archaeological site, Peru. Source: Schuyler Shepherd (Own work), Wikimedia Commons, accessed: May 12, 2015, http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Llama,_peru,_machu_picchu.jpg#/media/File:Llama,_peru,_machu_picchu.jpg.

WEB RESOURCES
NBC News~Read about an archaeological discovery of burials in Ferreñafe, Peru that contained tumi knives.

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS
  • In his 1976 report, Junius B. Bird, curator emeritus of South American archaeology at the American Museum of Natural History, notes: "Inca. No number. Typical Inca cast copper or bronze "tumi" knife with llama head on handle."

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 1983.W.1770


Category
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General Description
Knives with a half-moon shape (tumi) are common in the ancient Andes. This wide blade and short handle form became popular by the Late Horizon (1400-1532 CE). While the knives were produced with metal alloys, examples with plating and gilding also exist for presumed ceremonial function. By the Late Horizon, tin bronze was promoted alongside the more common arsenical bronze; the tin provided not only more strength to the knives but also an original yellow-gold color.

This knife is decorated by elaborate zigzags down the shaft and a modeled camelid head on the finial. Open loops on less decorative examples may have provided for suspension, presumably carried around the neck of a warrior.

Adapted from
Kimberly L. Jones, PhD, Inca: Conquests of the Andes / Los Incas y las conquistas de los Andes, Label text [1983.W.1769; 1983.W.1770], 2015.

Fun Facts
  • In his 1976 report, Junius B. Bird, curator emeritus of South American archaeology at the American Museum of Natural History, notes: "Inca. No number. Typical Inca cast copper or bronze "tumi" knife with llama head on handle."

Archival Resources

Web Resources
NBC News~Read about an archaeological discovery of burials in Ferreñafe, Peru that contained tumi knives.

Notes
  • Inka (Inca), Late Horizon, A.D. 1476-1534, updated by KJones in TMS on 01/03/14 and 01/25/16.
  • Updated medium, geography, and dates in TMS to reflect to reflect Inca label -- tin bronze, Perú: Andean highlands, 1400-1540.
  • Fun Facts Source: Junius B. Bird Report, 1/26/1976, p. 14, TMS, Notes / Text Entries, Attribution.

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures
Inka (Inca): AAT: 300017326
Inca horizon: AAT: 300017352

Geography
Inca Empire: TGN: 6002741
Peru (nation): TGN: 1000056

Process/materials
bronze: AAT: 300010957
casting (process): AAT: 300053104
casts (sculpture): AAT: 300047806
solder: AAT: 300010993
repoussé: AAT: 300054023
sheet metal: AAT: 300223016
annealing: AAT: 300053886
chasing (metalworking): AAT: 300054016
embossing (technique): AAT: 300053826
metalwork: AAT: 300015336

Historical periods
Late Horizon Period: AAT: 300017332

Individuals

Subject terms
ceremonial objects: AAT: 300234117
funerary objects: AAT: 300234126
knives (cutting tools / cutting equipment): AAT: 300024668
ceremonial knives (ceremonial weapons): AAT: 300253581
tumi knife (sacrificial or ceremonial axe / knife): DMA
figures: AAT: 300189808
head: AAT: 300262520
faces (animal or human components): AAT: 300251798
face: DMA
animals: DMA
llama (species): AAT: 300256340

RELATED OBJECTS

PROVENANCE
Until 1976: Nora and John Wise, New York [1]

1976-1983: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, on long-term loan from the above [1], [2]

From 1983: Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, the Nora and John Wise Collection, bequest of John Wise [1], [2]

[1] The main source for this provenance is existing information in TMS. Exceptions and other supporting documents are noted.

[2] The name of the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, founded in 1933, was changed to the Dallas Museum of Art in 1983.

AUDIO ASSETS

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
1983.W.1770
tags
#draft
#completed
@Higgins
*Arts of the Americas
animals (Animalia kingdom): AAT: 300249395
%copyedited_Gail
funerary objects: AAT: 300234126
figures (representations): AAT: 300189808
%Archived
faces (animal or human components): AAT: 300251798
ceremonial objects: AAT: 300234117
knives: AAT: 300024668
ceremonial knives (ceremonial weapons): AAT: 300253581
heads (representations): AAT: 300262520
metalwork: AAT: 300015336
repoussé: AAT: 300054023
sheet metal: AAT: 300223016
chasing (metalworking): AAT: 300054016
embossing (technique): AAT: 300053826
Peru (nation): TGN: 1000056
solder: AAT: 300010993
annealing: AAT: 300053886
bronze: AAT: 300010957
casting (process): AAT: 300053104
Inca horizon: AAT: 300017352
Inca (Inka): AAT: 300017326
Late Horizon period (Pre-Columbian Andean styles and periods): AAT: 300017332
llama (animals/lama glama species): AAT: 300256340
casts (sculpture): AAT: 300047806
Inca Empire: TGN: 6002741
253365128: UMO
tumi knife (sacrificial or ceremonial axe / knife): DMA
source file
object_notes_3_b-0213.xml.nores