Accession No
TEMP.03699
Description
Nifo'oti. Wooden club with round shaft and rhomboid head. 22 long teeth carved on one edge, a hook downward pointing on the other. Decorated with carved rows of serrated lines.
Place
Oceania; Polynesia; Samoa
Period
Source
Department
Anth
Reference Numbers
TEMP.03699; MAA: No. No. [No number] 3
Cultural Affliation
Material
Wood
Local Term
Nito'oti
Measurements
54mm x 955mm x 190mm
Events
Context (Analysis)
The nifo'oti are a unilaterally toothed club, with a trademark hook curving up and along the non-toothed edge. The name nifo'oti combines from Samoan words for tooth, or teeth; nifo, and death, 'oti. According to Te Rangi Hiroa, Sir Peter Buck, this definition is contentious.
Augustin Kramer states in The Samoan Islands, Vol. II, Material Culture, that the hook (or tooth) was used to drag the corpse of the fallen opponent, after which, the head was to be removed and placed on the hook as a trophy.
This is likely where the name for the club was coined.
These clubs were usually paraded around by the Taupou (experts in Samoan hospitality, dance, ceremony, among other things) of the villiage, and became purely ceremonial as Samoa shifted to a more peaceful existence. Nifo'oti are still used today in Samoan dance, however, these are often made with a steel blade and wooden handle, and without the trademark toothed edge.
Event Date 12/6/2025
Author: jimmy ma'ia'i
Description (Physical description)
Nito'oti. Wooden club with round shaft and rhomboid head. 22 long teeth carved on one edge, a hook downward pointing on the other. Decorated with carved rows of serrated lines.
Event Date 12/6/2025
Author: Guey-Mei Hsu
FM:327013
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