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Xaiv hom lus

Thaum cov lus qhia tsis muab kev txhais lus hauv koj cov lus, lawv feem ntau txhais los ntawm Google. Txawm li cas los xij, qee cov lus qhia tsuas yog muaj nyob hauv lawv cov lus qub.

Cov ntawv sau tseg

Cov lus piav qhia

  • Equestrian, Dogon blacksmith, Wood, metal, Dogon peoples

Equestrian

#1533

Dogon blacksmith

16th–18th century

Wood, metal

Kev piav qhia

Equipped with a sheathed dagger, this rider combatively raises a (now missing) javelin in his right hand. His dynamic stance evokes the active role of Dogon leaders as defenders of their communities. That tradition of guardianship goes back to the Dogon’s founding ancestor, Dyon, who journeyed from Mande in modern-day Guinea in search of a new homeland. This figure may portray a hogon, the leader charged with maintaining order by resolving legal disputes and overseeing sacred agricultural rites.

1533. Equestrian, Dogon blacksmith

Samuel Sidibé

Cov ntaub ntawv ntxiv

Qhov ntev
H. 27 1/2 in. × W. 7 in. × D. 16 3/4 in. (69.9 × 17.8 × 42.5 cm)
Qhuas
The Michael C. Rockefeller Memorial Collection, Bequest of Nelson A. Rockefeller, 1979
Tus lej nkag
1979.206.85

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