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Beads
Unknown - Enlarge image
Beads
- Place of origin:
Venice, Italy (possibly, made)
Bohemia, Czech Republic (possibly, made) - Date:
19th century (made)
- Artist/Maker:
Unknown (production)
- Materials and Techniques:
Glass, white, single-coloured and variegated
- Credit Line:
Transferred from the Museum of Practical Geology
- Museum number:
4555:2-1901
- Gallery location:
In Storage
These beads are of the kind known as ‘trade’, ‘aggry’ or, sometimes, ‘slave’ beads. They are usually associated with West Africa but were originally created in Europe, particularly Venice, Bohemia and the Netherlands. The history of trade beads dates to the 15th century when Portuguese trading ships arrived on the coast of West Africa to exploit its many resources, including gold, slaves, ivory and palm oil. At that time, beads were a major part of the currency exchanged for people and products. The beads traded were not of a set form, but were produced according to demand, which could vary from region to region, resulting in many thousands of different designs, as apparent here. The cost of producing the beads declined as glassmaking technologies developed and, for Europeans, the beads provided a cheap and efficient means of exploiting African resources.
The numbers of people involved in trading beads for goods, the diversity of bead design and the fact that European glassmakers – and their designs – moved around makes it difficult to link a bead to a specific time and place. Some beads can be given a more precise provenance through dated sample cards, sample books and bead catalogues produced by European bead trading houses in the mid-19th to early 20th centuries, now held in museum collections.

