Decorated Bone Lime Container from Timor

Item BR13 

This Item Sold on 24 August 2007 for $41


Similar artifacts for sale are often found on the Asian Artifacts web page. 

Historical Pricing information for this item and similar artifacts can be found at: Historical Artifact Prices.


This fine betel nut lime container was purchased on the island of Timor . It is hand carved out of buffalo bone and ornately decorated around the entire perimeter with motif line art (see photo below). The closure cap is adorned with an very interesting and unique carving of a bird. This unusual piece would make a great addition to any collection of Indonesian art. The cross section is a little larger than 3 cm X 2 cm and the height is 17 cm to the top of the bird on the cap. It weighs 88 grams. This piece is in very good condition.

Timor is just one of the many islands that make up the vast Indonesian archipelago. Ethnographic material from this area is rare and highly sought after by museums and collectors. The Atoni groups are thought to be the earliest inhabitants of Timor. With headhunting a popular activity, a theory is that the Tetum pushed them westward. The Atoni from the predominant population of west Timor and, like the Tetum, were divided into numerous small kingdoms before the arrival of Europeans. It is thought that their traditional political and religious customs were strongly influenced by Hinduism, possibly due to visits by Javanese traders, but they held to strong animist beliefs. They were also fragmented into dozens of small states. Skirmishes between them were frequent, with headhunting a popular activity. The First Europeans in Timor were the Portuguese, perhaps as early as 1512, the year after they captured Malaka. Like Chinese and western Indonesian traders before them, The Portuguese found the island a plentiful source of Sandalwood (prized in Europe for its aroma and for the medicinal Santalol made from the oil).



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