What this object tells us.
Grounded in fieldwork, museum holdings, and scholarly literature — told with respect for the context in which this object was made.
NTADI Funerary Maternity Figure (Rare)
A rare steatite funerary maternity figure (12th–16th C., 56 cm) from the Ntadi (Kongo) of DR Congo — a seated mother in cross-legged posture tenderly cradling an infant across her lap, the pale grey stone heavily weathered, abraded, and softened by deep ancient wear.
1. The Mintadi Tradition of Kongo
The mintadi (sing. ntadi) are some of the rarest and most striking lithic sculptures in Central Africa, originating primarily from the Mboma region of the lower Congo.
- Steatite Carving: Soapstone was the chosen material for eternal guardians of chiefly graves — soft enough to carve with precision, durable enough to stand for centuries.
- Matrilineal Power: The maternity theme (pfemba) reflects the matrilineal structure of Kongo society, where royal lineage flows strictly through the female line. The mother embodies the founding female ancestor — eternal fertility and unyielding royal continuity.
2. Guardians of the Royal Dead
Unlike wooden minkisi kept hidden and manipulated by priests, mintadi were public stationary monuments.
- Open Cemetery Placement: Placed openly in royal cemeteries, the figures served as permanent surrogates for the living — perpetually mourning, honoring, and watching over the deceased chief.
- Meditative Serenity: The seated cross-legged posture conveys deep respect and meditative calm, ensuring the ancestral spirit remained at peace and continued to bless the community.
3. Steatite Weathering and Antiquity
The physical condition authenticates the medieval dating.
- Softness Invites Erosion: Steatite is relatively soft and highly susceptible to environmental degradation over centuries.
- Dissolved Detail: Pale chalky oxidation and deep pitting where acidic rains and jungle humidity have slowly dissolved the stone — this geological smoothing is impossible to forge and confirms centuries of cemetery residence.