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A Native American Plains Lakota Sioux Swept Back Eagle Feather War Bonnet.

A Skull Cap of Tanned Deer Hide with Sinew Attached Immature Eagle Feathers and Central Flying Plume of Fluff or Breath Feathers a Brow-Band Sewn to the Edge of Cap above the Forehead Trimmed with Glass Seed Beads and with Thirty Golden Eagle Feathers Attached with Strips of Red Trade Cloth all Edged with Red Dyed Horse Hair.

Danglers to each side composed of strips of silk muslin cotton and owl feathers.

North America.

Circa 1870 - 1900.

 

PROVENANCE: Ex Private collection Mario Luraschi, Paris.

Ex Private European collection.

Finch and Co, catalogue no. 24, item no. 1, 2015.

Ex Private U.K. collection.


Nothing is more symbolic of the Plains Indian than the eagle feather headdress worn by chiefs and other high ranking officers in tribal military society. The eagle feathered bonnet signified a warrior’s prowess in battle and is thought to have originated with the Crow or Sioux.

Pictorial evidence indicates that the swept back war bonnet was developed and accepted as a symbol of prestige among the central and Northern Plains tribes by the early 1800’s. A young Pawnee brave Petalesharro was painted by Charles Bird King in 1822 wearing a flaring headdress of eagle feathers trimmed with ermine skins. Edwin Denig, a factor for the American Fur Company in the 1850s, reported that the Assiniboin were willing to pay two horses for two tails of the war eagle, each containing twelve feathers, if the feathers were wrought into a cap.

The feather of an eagle symbolised the highest honour that a warrior could win. An eagle feather war bonnet could only be worn by an individual who had gained the respect of the leading men in the community and who had gained ‘war honours’. The number of feathers indicated the number of captures and scalps taken in battle. The soft downy immature eagle feathers used on the headdress were symbolic of mysterious forces, their continuous fine fluttering movement suggesting communications with the supernatural powers.

Dimensions

approx: 40cm high, 60cm deep, 45cm wide - 15¾ ins high, 23½ ins deep, 17¾ wide

Price on application





By appointment only

The BADA Standard

  • Since 1918, BADA has been the leading association for the antiques and fine art trade
  • Members are elected for their knowledge, integrity and quality of stock
  • Our clients are protected by BADA’s code of conduct
  • Our dealers’ membership is reviewed and renewed annually
  • Bada.org is a non-profit site: clients deal directly with members and they pay no hidden fees
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