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CALABAR Anthropomorphic Figure (TL-Tested)
A highly ornate spherical terracotta vessel (700–800 years old, 39 cm) from the Calabar/Cross River region of Nigeria — densely covered in raised spiky bosses and concentric bands, surmounted by an expressive open-mouthed zoomorphic or human head, the dark fired clay intensely encrusted with pale calcified earth. Age verified by thermoluminescence (TL) testing.
1. Pre-Colonial Cross River Complexity
This remarkable terracotta originates from the ancient Calabar/Cross River region of southeastern Nigeria.
- Ornate Surface Tradition: The Cross River tradition is famed for incredibly textured surfaces, contrasting sharply with the smoother styles of the north.
- Encoded Wealth: The dense array of raised bosses and rolled clay collars reflects the complex social stratification and elaborate bodily scarification practices of the pre-colonial Cross River elite.
2. Curative Receptacles or Spirit Houses
The aggressively open mouth is a crucial iconographic detail.
- Breathing Vessel: The open mouth implies the figure is breathing or speaking — actively housing a volatile spirit rather than passively commemorating one.
- Ritual Container: The spherical heavily armored body likely functioned as a container for medicinal or magical substances used by local shamans. The spikes may represent disease (to draw illness out of a patient) or spiritual armor protecting the potent contents from malevolent forces.
3. Thermoluminescence and Deep Calcification
The piece carries scientific verification of age — a rare advantage among ethnographic terracottas.
- TL-Confirmed Dating: Thermoluminescence testing places the firing at 700–800 years ago, providing unambiguous scientific provenance.
- Visual Corroboration: The TL result is visually supported by profound taphonomy — thick pale mineral crust permanently bonded to the dark clay matrix within the deep recesses between the raised spikes, impossible to replicate synthetically.

