Accession No

Z 1330


Description

Raddled, wooden bullroarer, with string and stick.


Place

Oceania; Australasia; Australia


Period


Source


Department

Anth


Reference Numbers

Z 1330


Cultural Affliation


Material

Wood


Local Term

Churinga


Measurements


Events

Context (Amendments / updates)
Possibly from Central Australia
Event Date
Author: Rachel Hand


Context (Amendments / updates)
huringa are inscribed with sacred designs, which represent a totemic ancestor. Aboriginal women and uninitiated boys are forbidden to see them. Their meaning is only fully divulged to men who are initiated into that totem and who are of elder status. Those with a hole bored in one end (stone ones excepted), for the attachment of a cord, are called bullroarers. When whirled round, they produce a characteristic sound believed to be " spirit talk" . This one is possibly from central Australia and may have been made around 1900
Event Date
Author: Rachel Hand


Context (Amendments / updates)
Churinga are inscribed with sacred designs, which represent a totemic ancestor. Aboriginal women and uninitiated boys are forbidden to see them. Their meaning is only fully divulged to men who are initiated into that totem and who are of elder status. Those with a hole bored in one end (stone ones excepted), for the attachment of a cord, are called bullroarers. When whirled round, they produce a characteristic sound believed to be "spirit talk". This one is possibly from central Australia and may have been made around 1900
Event Date
Author: Rachel Hand


Description (Physical description)
Raddled, wooden bullroarer, with string and stick.
Event Date
Author: maa


Context (Display)
Exhibited: On display in the Maudslay Hall, CUMAA, from 1990-2005.
Event Date 1990
Author: maa


Context (Display)
Presumed removed from display as part of the Australia case redisplay in mid-2005 by Sue Dalgleish and Anita Herle.

The churinga were displayed in a table-top case by the left of the Australia case (Cases 15-16 ). In the late 1990s the curator Anita Herle added a cloth cover to the case. The label description highlighted that these were ceremonial items which were usually only seen by initiated men. Visitors were given the option to choose to view them or not.

Event Date 21/3/2025
Author: Rachel Hand


Context (Amendments / updates)
Z 1326- Z 1334 are annotated in pencil in the Accession Register Z 1 'A plausible date of manufacture might be around 1900. and 'Found in store, not registered, few if any particulars on some labels'.
Initialled by F.J. Hayter and dated 25 October 1928 [month unclear as written '25/11/28'].
Event Date 17/9/2025
Author: Rachel Hand


FM:87699

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