South Sea Island War Clubs from polynesia
This article looks at the various types of South Sea Island War Clubs. It has lots of images to help readers identify where their South Sea Island war club comes from and what it is worth.
South Sea Island war clubs are quite beautiful in their own right and are a highly collectible form of tribal artifact. They are not only collected by militaria enthusiasts and the very best clubs can be worth tens of thousands of dollars.
I collect War Clubs and if you have a South Sea Island war club to sell. If you own a Polynesian club and want to know what it is worth please feel free to send me a JPeg. I would love to see it.
Specific articles on Maori short Clubs, Fijian clubs, and Tongan clubs.
South Sea Island war clubs general information
In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, there was no steel or bronze in the Pacific. Hardwood whalebone and stone were the hardest materials. One of the dominant weapons was the club. Simple but deadly effective. In New Guinea, much of the Fighting was with a shield bearing archers. In Polynesia clubs were the weapon of choice. It was the South Sea Island war club that was the most highly prized and intricately decorated warriors’ weapons. In Fiji, weapons were so venerated that some had personal names and given the same treatment as idols
Other offensive weapons used in Polynesian warfare include spears, bows and arrows, slings and bone daggers. There are a huge variety of forms of South Sea Island War Club more so than any other weapon.
Polynesian Warfare
In Polynesian society,
Polynesians trained from a young age to use war clubs and in places, club fighting became almost a martial art. Youngsters spent hours mastering the arm, body and foot moves necessary to use various types of war club effectively.
Each Polynesian culture had distinctive club styles. It is possible to determine where a war club has come from by its shape and form.
South Sea Island War Clubs by Area
Marquesas Islands War Club
The U’u club from the Marquesas islands is one of the holy grails for collectors of Oceanic Tribal Art. They are extremely finely made and decorated with faces as the eyes. The clubs are carved from a dense hardwood. There is very little variation in the shape or form of this type of club. If it looks substantially different to the one in the photos it is probably a later and much less valuable example.
These clubs were not just a weapon. they were a status symbol. An object that defined your status as chief. It is because it is a status symbol that so much work and superb craftsmanship is placed in a single weapon.
FIJIAN WAR CLUBS
Nowhere in the Pacific were war clubs more revered than in Fiji. There are so many different forms of Fijian War Club that I have an article dedicated to them. The majority of Polynesian war clubs that come to the tribal art market are Fijian, especially previlent is the small throwing Fijian Ula.
Fijian Clubs of unusual shapes and with ivory inlays or carved all over tend to be the most valuable.
Rarotongan Clubs
These large heavy almost spear-like clubs have various head shapes as shown. They are all made from an extremely heavy hardwood and are very collectible.
Rarotongan pole clubs seldom come onto the tribal art market but when they do can go for large sums.
They are almost all stone carved and the large broad-headed variety the most sort after.
Pole clubs were capable of being thrust like a pike as well as slung like a club.
Easter Island War Club
Easter Island Clubs are the only clubs to have eyes made with bird bone and black Obsidion. There are some later examples on the tribal art market but they are fairly easy to spot. The face on the club is on both sides in a janus style.
There are two types. A long fighting club similar in proportion to a Maori Tiaha. This club is round on the shaft tapering to a spatula end.
The short club is similar to a maori Patu and was a single handed weapon
They are rare and sort after by collectors.
Niue Clubs
Niue War clubs are long being between 140cm and 180 cm. There are several different types but most are like the one on the Left.
They have a simple but very graceful form and are collectible as art objects as much as war clubs. Niue was once called the savage islands.
The Niuean warrior would attack his enemy by throwing stones located in his war girdle to knock him down. Once down, the victim would die on the sharp end of a club.
Hawaiian Clubs
The majority of the Hawaiian Clubs that come to the market are reproductions or later examples. A good early example though is worth a small fortune. They are the only Polynesian clubs to have shark teeth but should not be mistaken with Micronesian clubs that also have shark teeth.
New Caledonian Clubs
There are a variety of different clubs from New Caledonia. The two shown here are the most common to come onto the market.
The club to the left is referred to as a Phallic club. The one on the right is a bird-headed club
Clubs from New Caledonia are recognizable from the bottom of the handle which flares to a slightly wider diameter.
New Caledonia is technically melanesian but the clubs are more Polynesian in style wood and patina.
Maori Weapons and Warfare
The Maori were also prolific club makers and created a range of long striking clubs and short stabbing clubs.
They were one of the few Polynesian cultures to make clubs from stone. I have a separate article called Weapons of the Maori.
Samoan Clubs
Good old Samoan Clubs are few and far between. Newer 19th century clubs are quite common and not very valuable.
For ecery old genune samoan club there is 100 later copies.
Even the copies are a hundred years old they just are not worth much.
South Sea Island War Clubs Tongan
Tongan Clubs are one of the most collected of the Polynesian club and favored by tribal art collectors due to the superb workmanship.
There are four major types of Tongan clubs. I have a separate article on these clubs
Without knowledge of the different club types, it is very easy to mistake a New Guinea War club or a Solomon island War Club for a Polynesian war club. If you have a strange war club and want my opinion then please just send me some images.
If you enjoyed this article you may also enjoy my article on Aboriginal weapons
All images in this article are for educational purposes only.
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