Adze (matau ni ivi)

Adze (matau ni ivi)

Fiji, early to mid-19th century

Wood, stone, coir, and fiber
Pitt Rivers Museum,
University of Oxford: 1886.1.1337
Donated by W. Drewett, 1870

EX.8785.191 Photo (c) Museum Associates/ LACMA

Stone-bladed choppers like this were commonly used in the nineteenth century by women to break open the seedpods of the Tahitian chestnut. Ivi nuts, when cooked, provided a significant food source, and were included in exchange gifts presented by a bride’s family at high-status marriage ceremonies, along with headrests, barkcloth beaters, and other items symbolic of establishing a new household.