IBEJI TWIN FIGURES YORUBA AFRICAN ART - no reserve

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This is a very charming pair of Yoruba Ibiji. The hollowed out headdress is beautifully executed. These are laterexample of Ibeji (probably last quarter of the 20 the century - and the newest of my items for sale) but still powerful and charming figures. Metal rings (iron?) adorn their wrists. Background: The Yorubaof Nigeria and of the Benin Republic are known for having an extraordinarily high rate of multiple births. The rate of twin births is one of the highest in the world, 45 of every 1,000 births (in the United States it is 28.9 of every 1000). T is also a high mortality rate; half of the twins die shortly after birth. In earlier times, new-born twins, or ibeji, as they are called, were believed to be evil, monstrous abnormalities and infanticide was a common practice. However, such beliefs and practices were later superseded and reversed, and by the middle of the 18th century twins came to be seen as a blessing; theywere awarded the status of minor deities, called Orishas, and their arrival was viewed as an omen of good fortune for the family. By the 19th century the cult of the Ere Ibeji was firmly established and continues to this day. The death of one or both twins is regarded as a great calamity for the family, one which requires immediate appeasement of the soul of the deceased child. Though the cause of the high read more