Object History Note / Acquisition Notedescription, provenance, notes Following the British occupation of Benin City (Edo) in 1897 objects made of brass, ivory and wood were looted by British forces from the royal palace, its storerooms and compounds. Some of these objects were sold or exchanged on the coast. However, many were brought to the UK where they were sold through private auction, donated to museums, or retained by soldiers of the expedition The British Museum successfully petitioned the government to secure some of the relief plaques and over 300 were sent to the UK by the Consul-General [Sir] Ralph Moor and placed at the Foreign Office. During the summer of 1897 the Crown Agents for the Colonies, on behalf of the Foreign Office, agreed a temporary loan of 304 plaques to the British Museum. In September these were placed on public display in the Assyrian basement where they attracted considerable public attention. The Museum initially received 203 of these plaques as a gift from the Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. In the summer of 1898 a further eleven plaques were sent to the British Museum from the Foreign Office and three of these were selected by the Museum and were subsequently presented as a gift. Of the remaining plaques the Foreign Office retained eight and the rest were offered for sale to major museums, collectors and private dealers in Europe and the UK. Today over nine hundred plaques are known to exist in museums and private collections around the world. See Collection File: Af1898,0115.1-203 (previously Eth.Doc.185).
Physical descriptiondescription Relief plaque, lost-wax cast in brass. Wide plaque, rectangular in form with side flanges. Background surface decorated with river leaf patterns and stippling. Two European (Portuguese) figures, heads and torsos in profile, in top corners. Both have long hair, brimmed helmets, sleeveless buttoned doublets and long-sleeved tunics below. Both hold aloft manillas in opposing hands. Nail hole at top right and hole at centre left side. Depicts central standing high-ranking warrior figure, facing front. Wears beaded headdress, deep beaded collar, leopard-head body armour with pendant strips terminating in bells, wrap-around knee-length skirt, leopard's teeth necklace and quadrangular bell. Holds spear in right hand and shield in left. Flanked by two attendants of smaller scale; both wear rounded helmets and wrap-around skirts. Figure on left holds pair of gongs, figure on right blows horn.
The relief brass plaques that used to decorate the Oba's (king's) palace are among the most well-known of all the royal arts of Benin. Although frequently described as 'Benin Bronzes' most plaques are made of leaded brass in various compositions. It is widely accepted that they date to the 16th-17th centuries. In the years prior to the British Expeditionroyal influence in Benin was increasingly under threat from rival powers, both internal and external, with a focus on economic power and control of the important trading monopolies. However, the court and palace remained the political and spiritual centre of the Benin Kingdom. Earlier accounts written by Europeans visiting the city describe its size and scale. The palace complex was set up around atrium courtyards; some had galleries with wooden pillars supporting the roof. Brass plaques, probably made in matching pairs, were fixed to these pillars. The Benin brass plaques represent a distinct and unique corpus of work, unparalleled elsewhere on the continent. They are cast using the cire perdue (lost wax) technique and show significant variation in the depth of the relief. Some of the plaques portray historical events or commemorate successful wars, while others are a vivid depiction of Benin court life and ritual. Several groups of plaques show clear stylistic similarities. William B. Fagg suggested that these plaques represent the work of master brass casters. Fagg, William, 1973, 'Nigerian Images', London: Lund Humphries Gunsch, Kathryn, 2018, 'Benin plaques: a 16th century imperial monument', London: Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group ~Part of Warrior Set 5. Row 3A. Warrior with shield and spear with entourage (Gunsch, 2018).~Read & Dalton 1899: Standing figure dressed much like Af1898,0115.20, but with the broad beadwork collar and anklets. His head-dress resembles that of Af1898,0115.215. He is armed like the figure last described. In the upper corners are busts of long-haired Europeans holding up Manillas; in the lower, two nativemusicians, one blowing a horn, the other holding a pair of "gong-gongs" or clappers. These musicians resemble those of the last figure, but they have plain head-dresses and no bells.
Exhibitions Loans and Displays - Current and Pastexhibition history Exhibited: 2010-2011, London, British Museum, Money Gallery 1970-1973, London, Museum of Mankind, Divine Kingship in Africa