On view

African Art

Oríkògbófo coronet,

20th century

Artist unrecorded
Yorùbá
1998-729
This gold-beaded coronet, used by a Yorùbá oba (king or chief) for daily wear or for minor occasions, combines indigenous Yorùbá iconography with the imported form of a British coronation crown. Decorated with birds that symbolize women, whose power gives the oba the authority to rule, the crown possibly affirms an oba’s political alliance with the British colonial power that ruled Nigeria between 1914 and 1960. The royal convention of covering the head, however, relates to the worship of the head among the Yorùbá, a tradition practiced for centuries.

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Handbook Entry

More About This Object

Information

Title
Oríkògbófo coronet
Dates

20th century

Medium
Glass beads and cloth
Dimensions
h. 19 × diam. 21 cm (7 1/2 × 8 1/4 in.)
Credit Line
Bequest of John B. Elliott, Class of 1951
Object Number
1998-729
Place Made

Africa, Nigeria, Ogun State, possibly Abẹokuta

Culture
Materials

John B. Elliott (1928-1997), New York, NY by 1989; bequeathed to the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ, 1998.